Ukraine, Russia set to sign deal to reopen grain export ports
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[July 22, 2022]
By Ezgi Erkoyun and Max Hunder
ISTANBUL/KYIV (Reuters) - Russia and
Ukraine will sign a deal on Friday to reopen Ukrainian Black Sea ports
for grain exports, Turkey and the United Nations said, raising hopes
that an international food crisis aggravated by the Russian invasion can
be eased.
Russia and Ukraine, both among the world's biggest exporters of food,
will send their infrastructure and defence ministers respectively to a
1330 GMT signing ceremony in Istanbul, three sources told Reuters.
The Kremlin confirmed Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu would sign the
Turkish and U.N.-brokered accord, hours after Ukrainian President
Volodomyr Zelenskiy said he expected his country's seaports would soon
be unblocked.
U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and Turkish President Tayyip
Erdogan were to attend the ceremony.
The blockade by Russia's Black Sea fleet has worsened global supply
chain disruptions and, along with Western sanctions imposed on Moscow,
stoked high inflation in food and energy prices since Russian forces
swept into Ukraine on Feb. 24.
Full details of the accord were not immediately released. But Russian
state news agency TASS, citing an unnamed source, said that three
Ukrainian ports including the biggest export hub Odesa would be
reopened.
Some 20 million tonnes of grain are stuck in silos at Odesa, and dozens
of ships have been stranded by Moscow's offensive.
Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu tweeted on Thursday that
Friday's gathering in Istanbul would mark "the first step to solve the
current food crisis".
The United States welcomed the deal and said it was focusing on holding
Russia accountable for implementing it.
'PACKAGE' DEAL
Moscow has denied responsibility for the worsening food crisis, blaming
instead a chilling effect from Western sanctions for slowing its own
food and fertiliser exports and Ukraine for mining the approaches to its
Black Sea ports.
The United Nations and Turkey have been working for two months to broker
what Guterres called a "package" deal - to restore Ukraine's Black Sea
grain exports while easing Russian grain and fertiliser shipments.
Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova said the European
Union had proposed relaxing some earlier sanctions to shore up global
food security. Moscow hoped this would create conditions for unhindered
exports of grain and fertilisers.
Diplomats said last week details of the plan included Ukrainian vessels
guiding grain ships through mined port waters, with Turkey overseeing
inspections of ships to allay Russian concerns they might smuggle
weapons to Ukraine.
Turkey, a NATO member that has good relations with Russia and Ukraine
alike, controls the straits leading into the Black Sea and has acted as
a mediator on the grain issue.
UKRAINE EYES TURNING THE TIDE
Zelenskiy met senior commanders on Thursday to discuss weapons supplies
and intensifying attacks on Russians.
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A tanker truck drives past Ukrainian border guard boats docked in
the Black Sea port of Odessa, Ukraine November 26, 2018. REUTERS/Yevgeny
Volokin
"(We) agreed that our forces have the strong
potential to advance on the battlefield and inflict significant new
losses on the occupiers," he said in his video address.
Kyiv hopes that gradually increasing supplies of
precision, longer-range Western weaponry, such as U.S. High Mobility
Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS), will allow it to counter-attack
and recapture lost eastern and southern territories.
Russia's defence ministry said on Friday its forces had destroyed
four HIMARS systems between July 5-20. Reuters could not verify the
assertion.
Ukraine has accused the Russians of intensifying missile and rocket
strikes on cities in recent weeks in a deliberate attempt to
terrorise its population.
Cities and towns have been devastated by Russian bombardment during
the conflict, with some far from front lines hit by missiles. Moscow
denies deliberately firing on civilians and says all its targets are
military.
However, there is a high chance of Russian longer-range weaponry
missing their intended targets and causing civilian casualties
because Moscow is increasingly using long-range air-defence systems
to compensate for a shortage of ground-attack missiles, according to
British military intelligence.
Such air-defence systems, tipped with smaller warheads to shoot down
aircraft and missiles, are not likely to be able to penetrate
hardened military structures on the ground and their crews will have
little training for such missions, Britain's defence ministry said
in an intelligence update on Friday.
There have been no major breakthroughs on front lines since Russian
forces seized the last two Ukrainian-held cities in eastern Luhansk
province in late June and early July.
Russian forces are now focused on capturing all of neighbouring
Donetsk province on behalf of separatist proxies who have declared
two breakaway mini-states covering the wider industrialised Donbas
region.
In its morning update, Ukraine's general staff said Russian forces
backed by heavy artillery fire continued seeking gains towards the
cities of Kramatorsk and Bakhmut and the Vuhlehirska thermal power
plant in Donetsk province, but made no notable progress on the
ground.
Russia says it is waging a "special military operation" to
demilitarise its neighbour and rid it of dangerous nationalists.
Kyiv and the West say Russia is mounting an imperialist campaign to
reconquer a pro-Western neighbour that broke free of Moscow's rule
when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991.
The biggest conflict in Europe since World War Two has killed more
than 5,000 people, driven more than 6 million out of Ukraine and
left 8 million internally displaced, according to the United
Nations.
(Reporting by Reuters bureaux; writing by Mark Heinrich; Editing by
Stephen Coates and Nick Macfie)
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