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Zelenskyy challenges Putin to meet him for peace talks after Trump and European leaders increase pressure – Europe live | Ukraine

Morning opening: The ceasefire that wasn’t

Jakub Krupa

Despite the renewed offer of an immediate ceasefire, Ukraine said Russia had fired over a hundred drones overnight, hitting residential buildings in the Odesa region, among others.

In the meantime, we await a formal confirmation about potential direct meeting involving Ukraine and Russia in Turkey later this week, after US president Donald Trump and later Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy urged Russia’s Vladimir Putin to attend high-level talks.

Zelenskyy and Putin have not communicated directly since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, and there have been no publicly known talks between Moscow and Kyiv since March 2022, shortly after the war began.

Trump said in a statement on his Truth Social platform that the two sides should “HAVE THE MEETING, NOW!!!”.

Meanwhile, Ukraine’s European allies keep raising pressure on Russia.

After the leaders’ visit in Kyiv over the weekend, foreign ministers from Britain, France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Spain and the EU meeting in London this morning to discuss what’s next for Ukraine and broader security issues.

Britain’s foreign secretary David Lammy addresses the media ahead of the Weimar+ meeting on Ukraine at Lancaster House in London. Photograph: Neil Hall/EPA

I will bring you all the key updates throughout the day.

It’s Monday, 12 May 2025, it’s Jakub Krupa here, and this is Europe Live.

Good morning.

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Updated at 08.35 BST

Key events

West needs to pressure Putin to make him abandon his goals in Ukraine, Poland’s Sikorski says, as he closes Russian consultate after arson claims

Poland’s foreign minister Radosław Sikorski is up now.

In his opening statement, he says “we hope that parties will find a way to cease fire and to have productive, real negotiations about ending this war and bringing back respect for international law.”

Poland’s foreign minister Radosław Sikorski speaks to the media as he arrives for talks on Ukraine and the future of European security hosted by Britain’s foreign secretary David Lammy at Lancaster House in London. Photograph: WPA/Getty Images

But he then goes further.

In Polish, he adds that the collective West needs to keep exerting pressure on Putin to “abandon his goals in Ukraine.”

He later adds in English:

“If he [Putin] yet again rejects it [ceasefire], then the logical conclusion is that pressure should be brought to bear not on the victim of aggression, but on the perpetrator of aggression, until he feels the pain and becomes more reasonable.

Sikorski also mentions the Polish government’s decision to withdraw its authorisation for the Russian consulate in Kraków, forcing it to close.

The move comes after a government-led inquiry into last year’s fire that destroyed a large shopping centre in Warsaw. Poland’s prime minister Donald Tusk confirmed yesterday the fire was “caused by arson ordered by the Russian special services.”

“This is completely unacceptable, so the Russian consultate will have to leave. They will have one more, and if these attacks continue, we will take further action,” Sikorski says.

Responding to the decision, Russia’s foreign ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova said that “an adequate response to these inadequate steps will follow shortly.”

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