Jelenski watches Pope Leo XIV’s inauguration in Vatican

Ukrainian President Volodimir Jelenski will see the inauguration of Pope Leo XIV on Sunday, a top adviser said.
The newly elected Pope will formally accept his share in St. Peter’s Square as the head of the Catholic Church, which is expected to attract a large crowd and world leaders.
Jelensky said he was happy to meet other leaders, as Pope did at the funeral of US President Donald Trump and many European leaders.
The Vatican may play a very important role in the peace process between Ukraine and Russia after Pope Leo has come forward to welcome this week’s peace talks.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said that on Saturday, the Vatican could be a potential place for the Vatican negotiations, and accepted the long -term offer of St. Sevin, promising to “make” all the efforts “to end the war of Pope Leo.
Speaking to journalists in Rome, Vatican’s leader, Ukraine’s chairman, Cardinal Matteo, said that Rubio would discuss the Vatican’s aid forms, “the status of conversations, renewals and the way to follow yesterday.”
Asked if the Vatican could be a peaceful mediator, Rubio replied, “He will not call him the mediator, but it is certainly – I think this is a place for both parties.”
During the US embassy in Rome, Rubio thanked Rubio Jupiter for the humanitarian role of the Vatican, especially the prisoners’ exchange and the arrival of Ukrainian children. US Foreign Ministry spokesman Dummy Bruce said, “Rubio underscore the importance of continuous cooperation under the new leadership of Pope Leo XIV.”
Leo XVI, the first US pope in history on May 8, resumed the appeal of peace in Ukraine in Ukraine on his first Sunday afternoon. He appealed to all sides to do anything to “achieve real, fair and prolonged peace.”
The Vatican Foreign Secretary, Cardinal Piyytro Parolin, repeatedly repeatedly said that the Vatican’s opportunity to work as a place of direct conversation was “tragic” that failed to reach a ceasefire in Istanbul this week.
Asked what the concession would do, Parolin said the Vatican could serve as a place for a direct meeting between the two parties.