Zelenskyy asks Trump for help with air defences as Russia continues attacks – Europe live


Zelenskyy asks Trump, US for help with air defences as Russia continues attacks

Meanwhile, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy has asked the United States for more ammunition for its Patriot air defence systems to counter Russian ballistic missiles, according to a letter reviewed by AFP.

Zelenskyy asks Trump for help with air defences as Russia continues attacks – Europe live
US president Donald Trump welcomes Ukranian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy at his Mar-a-Lago residence in Palm Beach, Florida in December last year. Photograph: Jim Watson/AFP/Getty Images

In the letter, dated 26 May and addressed to US president Donald Trump, Zelensky asked the US to “help us secure this vital tool of protection against Russian terror – Patriot missiles PAC-3 and additional systems – to stop Russian ballistic missiles and other Russian missile attacks.”

Reuters said the letter, directed also to the US Congress, calls for help addressing the critical lack of air defence missiles in Ukraine, which is particularly acute as Russia threatens more strikes on the country.

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Key events

Hungarian MPs vote to remain member of ICC, overturning decision made by Orbán

Ashifa Kassam

Ashifa Kassam

European community affairs correspondent

Meanwhile, lawmakers in Hungary have voted overwhelmingly for the country to remain a member of the international criminal court, reversing a decision made by the previous government of Viktor Orbán.

Péter Magyar said Hungary would not join China, Israel, Russia and the US in refusing to recognise the ICC. Photograph: Bernadett Szabó/Reuters

Wednesday’s vote came days before the country was poised to become the only EU member state not to recognise the jurisdiction of the global tribunal, which aims to prosecute those accused of war crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity.

In April last year, Orbán announced that Hungary would begin the process of pulling out of what he decried as a “political court”. He made the comments while hosting his Israeli counterpart, Benjamin Netanyahu, a longtime ally and the subject of an ICC arrest warrant, in Budapest.

After Péter Magyar was elected as prime minister in a landslide victory last month, the new leader repeatedly vowed that his government would reverse the withdrawal before it took effect on 2 June.

On Monday, Magyar’s government submitted a bill to the parliament, setting in motion a fast-tracked procedure that resulted in 133 of the 199 lawmakers voting to back the bill.

The legislation must now be signed into law by the president, Tamás Sulyok, an Orbán-era appointee whom Magyar has repeatedly called on to resign.

Earlier this week, the ICC’s legislative body hailed Hungary’s plan to reverse the withdrawal, describing it as “essential” to ensuring accountability for the world’s gravest crimes.

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