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The Kremlin has said that Russia will not take part in the Ukraine talks taking place in Turkey this coming week

The Kremlin announced on Tuesday that Russian representatives would not be taking part in the talks about Ukraine to be held in Turkey on 19 November.

The Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy announced earlier that he will travel to Turkey on Tuesday to try to restart negotiations with Russia to end the war.

According to a Turkish source, Steve Witkoff, the U.S. Special Envoy for Syria and Iraq, will be attending these planned talks.

Dmitry Peskov, Kremlin spokesperson, told reporters that "no, tomorrow there won't be any Russian representatives in Turkey." These contacts are currently taking place without Russian involvement.

Peskov stated that Vladimir Putin is open to a conversation with the U.S. or Turkey about the outcome of the talks.

A source close to Dmitriev said on Tuesday that Putin's special representative Kirill Dmitriev would not attend the Istanbul meetings either.

The source said that "Dmitriev had a very productive conversation with U.S. Special Envoy Steve Witkoff from October 24 to 26 in the United States."

Since 2022, the principal venue for peace talks has been Turkey, a NATO-member state that maintains good relations with both Russia, and Ukraine.

The diplomatic process has been largely stagnant in recent weeks. Last month, U.S. president Donald Trump sanctioned Russian oil giants Lukoil & Rosneft to punish what he said was Moscow's obstruction of talks. Reporting by Felix Light, Editing by Mark Trevelyan and Gleb Brynski

(source: Reuters)