South Africa's president, in Russia as part of a delegation pushing for peace between Kyiv and Moscow, on Saturday told his Russian counterpart the fighting had to stop.
His delegation put forward a set of principles that the Kremlin deemed "very difficult to implement", a day after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky ruled out talks with Moscow.
The delegation brought the voice of a continent that has badly suffered from repercussions of the Ukraine conflict, particularly with rising grain prices.
"This war must be settled... through negotiations and through diplomatic means," South Africa's Cyril Ramaphosa said after talks in the suburbs of Saint Petersburg.
Russian authorities have de-facto banned the word "war" to describe their military operation in Ukraine.
Ramaphosa listed ten principles, which included de-escalation, the recognition of countries' sovereignty, security guarantees for all countries, unimpeded grain exports through the Black Sea, and sending prisoners of war and children back to their countries of origin.
The mission included the presidents of South Africa, Senegal, Comoros and Zambia; and top officials from Uganda, Egypt and Congo-Brazzaville.
- 'Difficult to implement' -
"Any initiative is very difficult to implement," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov was cited as saying by the state-run agency RIA Novosti.
"But President Putin has shown interest in considering it," Peskov said after the leaders held a meeting behind closed doors.
Putin had praised the delegation's "balanced" approach and said he was "open to a constructive dialogue with all those who want to implement peace based on the principles of justice and respect for the parties' legitimate interests".
Moscow has in the past repeated that any negotiations would need to take into account "new territorial realities".
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, speaking Friday after Ramaphosa called for de-escalation following their talks in Kyiv, repeated his position that they must recover territories lost to Russia to achieve peace.
And when an air raid siren sounded in Kyiv shortly after the delegation's arrival earlier Friday, Zelensky said this showed that Putin either did not control his army or was "irrational".
- Focus on the battlefield -
African countries have been divided over their response to the fighting. While some have sided with Ukraine, others have remained neutral or gravitated towards Moscow.
Efforts to secure peace appear increasingly perilous, analysts told AFP, with both Kyiv and Moscow convinced they can win on the battlefield.
Russian officials -- including Putin -- have insisted that Ukraine's long-expected counteroffensive is failing despite Kyiv claiming some gains.
Kyiv said Friday evening that its units were having "tactical success" in nearly all areas where they were fighting in the south.
The Russian army said it had repelled all assaults from Ukraine.
If analysts doubted the African mission could secure a concrete peace, there had been hope it would achieve some concessions.
- 'Negative impact' on Africa -
Securing the future viability of a deal allowing grain from Ukraine to reach the global market would be one potential goal of the delegation.
"This war is having a negative impact on the African continent and indeed on many other countries around the world," Ramaphosa said ahead of formal talks with the Russian president.
Putin said "the crisis on the global food market is by no means a consequence" of the Ukraine conflict.
"We do not believe that shipments of Ukrainian grain supplies can solve the problems of poverty and hunger," Putin said during the meeting.
Zelensky had asked the African leaders to "please, let them release our political prisoners. I think this will be an important result of your mission".
Putin said Saturday: "We are ready to continue this process" on prisoners of war.
In Ukraine, Russian and Ukrainian officials in the area devastated by flooding caused by the destruction of a dam in a Russian-held zone in southern Ukraine, announced revised tolls Saturday.
And in Washington, US President Joe Biden warned that the United States would not make special arrangements for Ukraine to join the NATO military alliance.
"They've got to meet the same standards," he told reporters near Washington. "So we're not going to make it easy.
bur/jj
© Agence France-Presse
Your content is great. However, if any of the content contained herein violates any rights of yours, including those of copyright, please contact us immediately by e-mail at media[@]kissrpr.com.