ROME (Reuters) – Former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi would not seek a meeting with Volodymir Zelenskiy if he were still head of government, because he blames the Ukrainian President for the war with Russia, he said on Sunday.
Berlusconi, 86, often boasted of his friendship with Russia’s President Vladimir Putin until Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and created a storm last September when he said Putin had been pushed into the war and wanted to put “decent people” in charge of Kyiv.
Berlusconi, leader of the conservative Forza Italia party that is part of the country’s ruling coalition, was speaking after Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni on Friday accused France of jeopardising EU unity on Ukraine by organising a Franco-German dinner in Paris with Zelenskiy that excluded other European allies.
“I would never have gone talking to Zelenskiy because we are witnessing the devastation of his country and the slaughter
of its soldiers and civilians,” Berlusconi told journalist after voting at a polling station for a regional election in Lombardy.
Berlusconi said that if Zelenskiy had stopped attacking the two separatist republics of the Donbass the war would not have happened. “So I judge, very, very negatively, the behaviour of this gentleman”, Berlusconi added.
Meloni’s office said the Italian government’s support for Ukraine is “firm and convinced, as clearly stated in the programme and as confirmed in all the parliamentary votes of the majority supporting the executive”.
(Reporting by Giselda Vagnoni; Editing by David Holmes)