Ukraine ambassador to UN voices 2 ways out for "criminal bunker gramps"

Putin has two ways out of the current situation: either to surrender or to repeat the fate of Adolf Hitler, who committed suicide at the end of World War II

This was stated by the Permanent Representative of Ukraine to the United Nations Sergiy Kyslytsya, Ukrinform reports.

"The russist criminal bunker gramps still has two options – either to surrender or to repeat what happened in another bunker on 30 April 1945," Kyslytsia said at a meeting of the UN Security Council, which was convened by Moscow to "condemn the supply of weapons to Ukraine."

The Permanent Representative emphasized that Ukraine will continue to fight "until every Ukrainian citizen and every parcel of our sovereign land are liberated and Russia suffers military defeat in Ukraine. We will continue to forge international solidarity until all Russian war criminals are held accountable."

He added that "It is time for the Russian hordes to withdraw from the occupied territories of Ukraine without any further delay and not by cars stolen from the local Ukrainian population." He also noted that hundreds of thousands of illegal Russian migrants should also leave Crimea.

Sergiy Kyslytsya emphasized that the main element of the formula for a comprehensive, just and lasting peace is compliance with the UN Charter, in particular with regard to the territorial integrity of states.

"If Russia is interested in surviving it should clutch onto this resolution as a lifebuoy and follow the path to peace it charts," he said.

At the end of his speech, Kyslytsya addressed the representatives of the Russian Federation.

"I am forced to address the representatives of the criminal Putin regime in the language of their Deputy Foreign Minister, a certain (Sergei) Ryabkov. It's time to follow the instructions of your boss, who in January last year had the audacity to say what you should have done yourself: "pack your bags and get back across” the 1991 border (in January 2022, Ryabkov said that NATO should "pack its bags and get back across the 1997 border" - Ed.)