The first time President Zelenskyy talked about the peace formula was at the G20 summit, and then it was the UN General Assembly that made the resolution.
What Ukraine offered to every country was a peace plan that is actually is based on international rules and order. This is the basis for what Ukraine offered to all of the countries to work on, and Ukraine is open to many of the countries to join in working together on this peace plan.
We are open and encouraged, and we are grateful to Canada for supporting the efforts of this peace plan, along with many other countries. I would say that Ukraine wants a very stable but also a very fair peace. All of the negotiations that could come to the different platforms need to stick to the basic principles: respect of the sovereign country, respect of the sovereign borders, and justice, because without justice, we cannot be assured that it will not be repeated.
It needs to exclude food security, because food security is not only an issue with Ukraine. It's also a global issue, which we have already faced. There's also what's now happening with the grain initiative, which is once again at risk. Nuclear security is important for everybody, as is countering ecocide, because that is also happening in Ukraine.
Ukraine set the important milestones on what we feel needs to be restored. That platform is open for discussion, but it is precisely based on this recognized principle of the UN Charter.