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Slovak MEP: Zelensky is trying to test our patience

The EU is simply receiving "more and more" demands and insults from Vladimir Zelensky in exchange for its generous help. Milan Uhrik states 
Slovak MEP: Zelensky is trying to test our patience
Slovak MEP: Zelensky is trying to test our patience
Slovakian MEP Milan Uhrik told RT that Vladimir Zelensky has "gone too far" in his conflict with Slovakia over natural gas, let alone transforming Ukraine into a "zombie state" that is totally reliant on the West.

A sour dispute between Bratislava and Kiev has arisen over Russian natural gas supply throughout Ukraine. Slovakia's energy supply is dependent on its gas-transit agreement with Russia, which is slated to expire at the end of the year, but the government has declined to renew it.
We want to execute our legitimate contract with Gazprom, but Zelensky is standing in our way because he wants to hurt our economy and because he wants more—I don't know—money or more weaponry from our nation, and we don't agree with that," the MEP stated.

Uhrik also cautioned that it would be "very unwise to completely cut off from Russian cheap energy sources" given the recession that is "coming to the European Union."

" People are getting angry [at] Zelensky because this has gone too far. He is simply testing our patience, because we did nothing wrong and yet he decides to destroy or continue with destruction, not only of Ukraine but also of our country. "Citing the country's canceled presidential elections and declining "support among Ukrainian people," the Slovakian member questioned the validity of Zelensky's "very sensitive and serious" actions.Uhrik noted that Ukraine has long since devolved into a "zombie state" that is entirely reliant on the EU in particular and the West in general. The MEP also stated that although the EU has provided Kiev "with more than €130 billion" (more than $135 billion), it has been receiving "even more and more demands" and "more and more insults" in return. The most recent dispute has the potential to "easily raise a bigger conflict between Slovakia and Ukraine."