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		Ukraine's president reiterates readiness to talk to Putin
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		 [May 13, 2022] By 
		Natalia Zinets 
 KYIV (Reuters) - Ukrainian President 
		Volodymyr Zelenskiy has reiterated an offer to hold direct talks with 
		Russian President Vladimir Putin, and said Russia's withdrawal from 
		Ukraine should be the starting point for any discussions.
 
 "As president, I am ready to talk to Putin, but only to him. Without any 
		of his intermediaries. And in the framework of dialogue, not 
		ultimatums," he told Italy's RAI 1 television in an interview shown in 
		Ukraine on Friday.
 
 Ukraine and Russia have not held face-to-face peace talkssince March 29. 
		Russian chief negotiator Vladimir Medinsky was quoted by Interfax news 
		agency on Monday as saying peace talks were being held remotely.
 
 Putin told German Chancellor Olaf Scholz by telephone on Friday that 
		progress in negotiations over an end to the conflict had been 
		"essentially blocked by Kyiv," the Kremlin said. Kyiv blames Moscow for 
		the lack of progress.
 
 
		
		 
		In his fullest public comments for weeks on the prospects of peace 
		talks, Zelenskiy said Ukraine would not compromise over its territorial 
		integrity.
 
 He ruled out suggestions - which he attributed to Paris - that Ukraine 
		should make concessions for the sake of securing a peace agreement that 
		would allow Putin to save face.
 
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			Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelenskiy attends a session of a 
			parliament where British Prime Minister Boris Johnson addresses 
			Ukrainian lawmakers via videolink, as Russia's attack on Ukraine 
			continues, in Kyiv, Ukraine May 3, 2022. Ukrainian Presidential 
			Press Service/Handout via REUTERS 
            
			
			
			 
            "Get out of this territory that you have occupied 
			since February 24," he said. "This is the first clear step to 
			talking about anything." 
            Russian forces have taken control of the southern 
			city of Mariupol but are struggling to make headway in Ukraine's 
			north and east after abandoning a push towards Kyiv.
 Russia also controls the Crimea peninsula, which it seized and 
			annexed in 2014, and Russia-backed separatists have declared 
			"people's republics" in areas they control in two provinces in the 
			Donbas region of eastern Ukraine.
 
 Zelenskiy said Kyiv had offered to keep Crimea out of talks for now 
			if it complicated efforts to end the war or made talks between him 
			and Putin more complicated. But he added: "We will never recognise 
			Crimea as part of the Russian Federation."
 
 (Editing by Timothy Heritage)
 
            
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