Ukrainian PresidentVolodymyr Zelenskyon Thursday welcomed theEuropean Union's approval of a 90 billionloan forUkrainethat had been stalled byHungary's outgoing prime ministerViktor Orban.
"Today is an important day for ourdefenceand for our relations with the European Union. The European support loan for Ukraine has been unblockedEUR90 billion over two years," Zelensky said on X.
"It matters that Ukraine is securing this level of financial certainty after more than four years of full-scale war," he added, urging for the first tranche to be disbursed by May or June.
Thefunds were blockedafter a bitter row broke out betweenOrbanand Zelensky.
Orban said he would only lift his veto after Ukrainefixed a pipelinedamaged by a Russian strike. After 16 years in power, Orban suffered a crushing election defeat to pro-EU opposition figurePeter Magyarin an election this month.
And the standoff was resolved when Zelensky said Tuesday repairs had been completed and officials said the next day that Ukraine had restarted pumping oil to Hungary andSlovakia.
Moscow ally Orban has frequently been a thorn in the EU's side over Ukraine and EU officials hope on issues related to Kyiv, decisions will be made faster without his opposition.
Read moreOrban ousted: What Magyars victory means for Hungary and the EU
Diplomats were relieved by Wednesday's green light. One EU diplomat said Zelensky's Cyprus visit was "symbolically important" now that the EU money will help support Kyiv against Russia in 2026 and 2027.
Zelensky pushed back on remarks about the symbolism of his visit, saying Thursday that Ukraine should be granted full membership to the European Union and not merely a "symbolic" one.
"Ukraine does not need symbolic EU membership," Zelensky told journalists, including from AFP, in a recorded voice message, adding: "We are defending common European values. I believe that we deserve full-fledged EU membership."
Orban, who will only step down next month, will not attend meetings in Cyprus on Thursday and Friday, which are informal.
Beyond Ukraine
Ukraine will not be the only conflict on the menu during the talks in Cyprus, which holds the rotating EU presidency.
They will also discuss theMiddle Eastwar and its fallout, including skyrocketing energy prices.
Cyprus was sucked into the war in March after a drone strike on a British base on the Mediterranean island.
Read moreBaltic Sea strikes: How Ukraine aims to undermine Russia's oil profits from Iran war
European leaders will be joined on Friday by their regional counterparts for what a senior EU official described as "intensive dialogue".
Expected to join them are Lebanese PresidentJoseph Aoun, Egyptian PresidentAbdel Fattah al-Sisi, Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa and Jordanian Crown Prince Hussein bin Abdullah.
During a working lunch, they will discuss the situation inLebanon, where there is currently aceasefire. More than 2,400 people have been killed and more than a million displaced in Israeli strikes in the country since Iran-backedHezbollahdrew the nation into the war on March 2.
A key issue for Europe is theStrait of Hormuzwhose effective closure has sent oil prices soaring and affected supply of jet fuel in Europe.
The official said the bloc was "ready to contribute" to keep the strait open "when the conditions are met", noting that any assistance depended on "events".
"We certainly hope that the ceasefire is kept and maintained."
Budget
The European Union's 2028-2034 budget will also be discussed for the first time, with hopes of securing a final agreement by the end of 2026.
The EU executive wants a bigger budget worth around two trillion euros though governments are reluctant to pay more.
That's why despite the energy shocks, the EU has little wiggle room to spend more as it must find money to pay off Covid-era loans.
But as with anything related to money in the EU, France and Germany are diametrically opposed, with Paris calling for more European investment and Berlin arguing for fiscal restraint.
The clock is ticking however. European officials fear that without a deal before France's presidential election next year, there is a risk that a far-right leader could cut contributions to the EU by France, the bloc's second-biggest economy.
(FRANCE 24 with AFP)
Originally published on France24














