Key events Show key events only Please turn on JavaScript to use this feature
Russian leadership 'stuck in another century', rejects postwar world order, Zelenskyy says as he suggests need to 'change regime'
Over the last half hour, Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy addressed the Finnish Helsinki+50 conference marking the 50th anniversary of the 1975 Helsinki accords.
He said that “Russia keeps launching such attacks, even when the whole world is calling on it to stop the war, a war that Russia started, a war that Russia keeps dragging on, a war that only the Russian leadership wants.”
He did not mince his words as he accused Russian leadership of being “mentally stuck in another century, a time of brutal violence … [and] total disregard for human rights and equality.”
“We know that such ideas and such times must never return to Europe,” he said.
He said that “a total rejection of the post-second world war world … is the foundation of the current regime in Russia,” but that Moscow “can be pushed to stop this war.”
“We need to fully block Russia’s war machine, cut off its arms industry, limit its energy profits, and finally, put every frozen Russian asset including stolen wealth … to work, defending against the Russian aggression.
It’s time to confiscate the Russian assets, not just freeze them … to use them to serve peace, not war.”
But he warned:
“But if the world doesn’t aim to change the regime in Russia, that means, even after the war ends, Moscow will still try to destabilise neighbouring countries.”
Zelenskyy also pointedly helped Finnish president Alex Stubb and US president Donald Trump, saying that “Trump is truly interested in ending the war and we have to do everything we can to make sure the US and Europe act together for security.”
Morning opening: 'Showcase killings' in Kyiv as Ukraine calls on Trump to act now
Jakub Krupa
Another night, another series of attacks on Ukrainian cities as Russia appears unfazed by the US threat of sanctions and secondary tariffs on its allies if it does not stop its invasion of Ukraine.

At least six people died, including a six-year-old boy, and 50 were injured in overnight attacks in Kyiv and across the country.
The Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, called the attacks “showcase killings” as he urged Ukraine’s allies to push Moscow “to come to a real negotiating table” saying “all the tools needed for this are in the hands of our partners.”
We are counting on everything now being voiced by America and Europe toward this goal to be fulfilled.

Zelenskyy’s most senior aide, Andriy Yermak, went further in his comments, calling Russia “a terrorist state.”
He added:
“Putin is showing the world that he’s not afraid and intends to keep killing our people — our children.
Sanctions and weapons are what’s needed.
I’m confident the U.S. and President @POTUS will stand by the principle of ‘peace through strength.’”
Ukraine’s foreign minister, Andrii Sybiha, called on Trump to not wait until 8 August and reduce his deadline for a Russian ceasefire “to zero”.
“Putin does it on purpose. He does not care about any attempts to put an end to the killing. He only seeks to destroy and kill. Because the entire existence of this war criminal is based on this senseless war, which he cannot win but refuses to end. He must face justice.
It’s time to make him feel the pain and consequences of his choices. It’s time to put maximum pressure on Moscow. It is time to synchronise all sanctions steps. It’s time to achieve peace through strength.”
I will bring you all key updates from across Europe here.
It’s Thursday, 31 July 2025, it’s Jakub Krupa here, and this is Europe Live.
Good morning.