"I think we have to continue to talk, and suspending voting rights does not mean we don't want to talk to [the Russian delegation]," Brasseur told journalists. "I think we still can, we must talk together."
The Russian delegation at the assembly was stripped of its voting rights in light of the ongoing tensions in eastern Ukraine, with the West accusing Moscow of escalating the crisis in the country.
"It is not about us, it is not about Russian Duma… It is about the population of Ukraine that is suffering," Brasseur said. "[Russians] always say they are not part of the problem, thus [they are] not part of the solution, but they are."
Despite several delegates' calls not to suspend Russia's voting rights in PACE, the assembly decided to strip the Russian delegation of its rights to vote until its April session.
PACE previously suspended Russia's voting rights in spring 2014 in response to Crimea's reunification with Russia. In protest, the Russian delegation walked out of the PACE spring 2014 session and skipped the summer session.