Ukraine says Russia eyes a 'vast area from Warsaw to Sofia'
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[June 15, 2022]
PRAGUE (Reuters) - Ukrainian President
Volodymyr Zelenskiy urged the European Union on Wednesday to let his
country start on the road to membership of the bloc, warning that
Russia's territorial ambitions stretched from Warsaw to Sofia.
In a speech to both chambers of the Czech parliament via a video link,
Zelenskiy also called for more EU sanctions against Russia over its
invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24.
"Russia is not interested only in our (cities of) Mariupol,
Sievierodonetsk, Kharkiv and Kyiv. No, its ambitions are directed on a
vast area from Warsaw to Sofia," he said, without citing evidence for
his assertion.
"As in the past, the Russian invasion of Ukraine is the first step that
the Russian leadership needs to open the way to other countries, to the
conquest of other peoples."
The EU has adopted six rounds of sanctions against Russia, and Ukraine
is seeking a seventh round to increase pressure on Russia to end the
war.
The European Commission is expected to announce a decision on Ukraine's
request for candidate status this week ahead of an EU summit next week.
Having candidate status would be a preliminary step in a long process to
accession.
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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy attends a joint statement
with European Commission President Ursula, as Russia's invasion of
Ukraine continues, in Kyiv, Ukraine June 11, 2022. REUTERS/Valentyn
Ogirenko
"To grant Ukraine candidate status now is to prove
that European unification is real and that European values really
work and are not just indicated in certain documents," Zelenskiy
said.
He said the Czech people - following Nazi German occupation during
World War Two and decades of Soviet domination after the war - knew
how compromise ends and what comes of concessions to tyranny.
"The person who wants to seize everything will never stop at taking
only part of what they want," Zelenskiy said.
Russia did not immediately comment on his remarks. Moscow calls the
war in Ukraine a special military operation against Ukraine's
military and what it portrays as dangerous nationalists.
(Reporting by Pavel Polityuk, Editing by Timothy Heritage)
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