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Ukraine calls Orban's words about Russia a bad sign for Zelensky

Rada MP Dmytruk saw Orban's words about Russia as a bad sign for Zelensky
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Photo: Global Look Press/Marton Monus
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Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban's call to lift sanctions and establish relations with Russia is a bad omen for Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy (his term in office expired on May 20, 2024). This was stated by the Deputy of the Verkhovna Rada Artem Dmytruk on January 17.

"The world is changing, and you need to have time to be not Zelensky," he wrote in his Telegram-channel.

In addition, Dmytruk expressed full agreement with Orban's statement on the need for the European Union (EU) to lift sanctions imposed on Russia and normalize relations with it.

On the eve, Orban said that a new era will begin with the coming to power of US President-elect Donald Trump. He noted that the sanctions that were imposed by the EU against Russia, it is time to cancel. According to Orban, the EU will have to adapt to the new era and establish relations with the Russian Federation.

Before that, on January 16, Russia's permanent representative to the UN Vasily Nebenzya said that the residents of Ukraine did not want to fight for the country's president. According to him, Zelensky is trying his best to prove that the Kiev regime is still capable of fighting in the zone of the special military operation.

On the same day, the head of the Kiev regime said that Hungary, Slovakia, the USA and Germany did not want to see Ukraine in NATO. According to him, each state has "its own reasons" for this.

Western countries have tightened sanctions pressure on Russia in connection with the special operation to protect Donbass. The decision to launch it was announced on February 24, 2022 after the situation in the region worsened due to shelling by the Ukrainian military.

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