Kremlin claims it did not invite foreign leaders to Victory Day parade, but some "decided to come anyway"
The Kremlin has claimed that it did not invite any foreign guests to this year's Victory Day celebrations on 9 May. [Victory Day is a Russian holiday commemorating the Soviet victory over Nazi Germany in 1945 – ed.]
Source: Kremlin-aligned Russian news agency RIA Novosti, citing Yuri Ushakov, an aide to Kremlin leader Vladimir Putin
Quote: "We deliberately did not invite foreign guests to the celebrations, unlike last year."
Details: According to Ushakov, several foreign leaders decided to attend on their own initiative. The Kremlin website has published a list of guests who are expected to attend the parade.
Among them are:
- Badra Gunba, self-proclaimed president of the Russian-backed separatist region of Abkhazia
- Alexander Lukashenko, self-proclaimed president of Belarus
- Thongloun Sisoulith, President of Laos
- Sultan Ibrahim, King of Malaysia
- Robert Fico, Prime Minister of Slovakia
- Alan Gagloyev, so-called "president" of the self-proclaimed Republic of South Ossetia (Georgia)
- Siniša Karan, President of Republika Srpska.
Background:
- There will be no military parades marking Victory Day in a third of Russia's regional capitals. In another 37 regions parades will be held without military equipment or with other restrictions, and in at least 15 regions celebrations have been cancelled entirely.
- On 4 May, Russia's Ministry of Defence unilaterally declared a "truce" for 8 and 9 May and warned that if the Victory Day parade in Moscow on 9 May is "disrupted", it will launch a large-scale missile strike on central Kyiv.
- Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova has urged diplomats to evacuate from Kyiv ahead of a Russian "retaliatory strike on decision-making centres".
- Despite the Kremlin's public threats to attack Kyiv again, the European Union said it would not change its position or presence in the Ukrainian capital.
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