Ukraine has asked Turkey to host a meeting between President Volodymyr Zelenskiy and Russian President Vladimir ​Putin, its top diplomat said, as Kyiv ‌seeks to reinvigorate stalling peace talks.

“We asked the Turks about it, we asked some other capitals,” Foreign Minister Andrii ​Sybiha said in comments to reporters on Tuesday ​that were cleared for release on Wednesday.

He added ⁠that Ukraine would be ready to consider any ​place other than Belarus or Russia for a meeting ​with Putin, which Zelenskiy has long sought to try to hasten a resolution of the more than four-year war.

Belarus is a close ​ally of Russia and allowed Moscow to ​use Belarusian territory to launch its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
Sybiha did ‌not ⁠say how Ankara had responded to the proposal.
“We addressed the Turks specifically,” he said. “But if another capital, besides Moscow and Belarus, organises such a ​meeting, we will ​go.”
The Kremlin ⁠previously said it is willing to host Zelenskiy in Moscow, where the ​Ukrainian leader has said he will not ​go.
Separately, ⁠Sybiha said that he had already exchanged written messages with Anita Orban, who will become Hungary’s new ⁠foreign ​minister when the new government, ​which won the election there earlier this month, takes power.