Orbán later said that the visit had been such a high priority for the notorious Putin sympathiser as “the Hungarian Presidency aims to contribute to solving the challenges facing the European Union.”
Zelensky didn’t contradict him, all the more so as that night much of Ukraine had been subject to air-raid warnings and Orbán could see for himself the danger that the country’s cities faced from Russian missiles.
There was no official prior announcement of the visit, which, for security purposes, has been the case with all state visits since the war began more than two years ago.
Nevertheless, Ukrainian media outlet European Pravda reported that during a brief exchange with Zelensky at a recent EU summit in Brussels caught by TV cameras, Orbán, who appeared friendly and even touched the Ukrainian president on the shoulder, had indicated his readiness to visit Kyiv.