'Sulky liver sausage': Olaf Scholz slammed after refusing to visit Kyiv

The Ukrainian ambassador to Germany has slammed Chancellor Olaf Scholz for refusing to go to Kyiv following Russia's invasion.

Scholz made it clear on Monday that he wouldn't be travelling to Ukraine anytime quickly, simply weeks after Kyiv allegedly refused to ask German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier.

Ukraine's outspoken ambassador in Berlin, Andrij Melnyk, responded on Tuesday by calling Scholz's snub “not very statesmanlike".

Talking to the DPA information company, Melnyk stated the Chancellor had acted like a "sulky liver sausage".

“That is about probably the most brutal struggle of extermination for the reason that Nazi invasion of Ukraine, it’s not kindergarten,” he added.

Scholz had criticised Ukraine's refusal to welcome Steinmeier in an interview with public broadcaster ZDF late on Monday.

“It will probably’t work that a nation that gives a lot navy support, a lot monetary support ... you then say that the president can’t come,” Scholz stated.

A lot of different European leaders -- together with UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson and European Council President Charles Michel -- have visited Ukraine in current weeks.

Scholz has traded barbs with Ukrainian officers in current weeks over his stance on the Russian invasion.

However the SPD chief has denied responding hesitantly to the struggle, saying he has "at all times made fast selections ... in a level-headed and prudent method".

Final week, the German authorities did vote to ship heavy weapons to Ukraine, regardless of critics arguing that the transfer dangers the nation being drawn right into a battle with Russia.

In the meantime, Germany's conservative opposition chief Friedrich Merz travelled to Kyiv on Tuesday for conferences with Ukrainian officers and to see the destruction brought on by the Russian military.

He's anticipated later to fulfill with Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal, the chairman of Ukraine’s unicameral parliament, Ruslan Stefanchuk, and different senior politicians in Kyiv.

Merz's go to to Kyiv comes days earlier than two German regional elections during which his Christian Democratic Union (CDU) is hoping to retain energy.

Post a Comment

Previous Post Next Post