"This is not an interesting topic": Zelensky on Russian ex-leader's call to "eliminate" him
Ukraine's president Volodymyr Zelensky has said the threats to "physically eliminate" him are of no interest during a briefing in The Hague.
As Zelensky emphasized, now Russia is demotivated on the battlefield. There is also no strong society that would support the forward movement of Russian troops.
We see various radical groups brandishing something nuclear, calling for something to be done against our country, the president said.
He said Ukraine would not talk to such people about anything. They have to think about how to change the climate in their own country and their regime, and then they can prepare their society for any diplomatic possibilities to end this war.
On May 3, Dmitriy Medvedev, Russia's ex-president, called for the "physical elimination" of Ukraine's leader and his entourage.
Russian president's press service announced the repulse of an attempted drone attack on the Kremlin. It regards the attempted attack as "a planned terrorist action and an attempt on the President of the Russian Federation on the eve of Victory Day."
The Office of the President denied Ukraine's involvement in the attack on the Kremlin residence.