Poland and Ukraine agree on date for Zelensky's visit to Warsaw

The Chancellery of the President of Poland said it was in talks with Kyiv regarding a possible visit by Volodymyr Zelensky to Warsaw. At the same time, it denied reports of a meeting in the Volyn region.

844
Share:

Talks on the date

Ukraine and Poland are coordinating the timing of a possible visit by President Volodymyr Zelensky to Warsaw for a meeting with Karol Nawrocki, Marcin Przydacz, head of the Bureau of International Policy at the Chancellery of the President of Poland, said.

We are in contact with the Ukrainian side; I even spoke yesterday. We are working on the date of this meeting and possible arrangements

– Marcin Przydacz, head of the Bureau of International Policy at the Chancellery of the President of Poland

Location and agenda

Przydacz said that, if the meeting takes place, it will be held in Warsaw. The Polish side's agenda will include security issues, in particular discussions of peace agreements, as well as bilateral topics that Poles consider important — historical and economic.

The chancellery representative also dismissed rumors about organizing the meeting in the Volyn region, saying that such an option is not envisaged.

  • On June 28 Volodymyr Zelensky said that Ukraine will continue to work on strengthening relations with Poland's new authorities and intends "to do everything within its power".
  • On July 1 Karol Nawrocki said that he will meet with the Ukrainian president "with full confidence".
  • On July 27 Bodnar reported that Nawrocki had been invited to Ukraine and that preparations for the visit are ongoing.
  • At the end of October Nawrocki's headquarters said that Zelensky should come to Warsaw if he wants to meet with the Polish president.

World News

War

# Organization Verified Over 340 Damaged Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Sites, But Official Statements Don't Name Attack Perpetrators. Culture Minister Berezhna Demands Change in This Practice — Backed by Solid Diplomatic Logic An organization has verified more than 340 damaged cultural heritage sites in Ukraine, yet its official statements refrain from identifying who carried out the attacks. Culture Minister Berezhna is calling for a change in this practice — and there is substantial diplomatic reasoning behind her position.

4 days ago