Metinvest said in a statement that more than 234,000 tonnes of
steel products manufactured by its Ilyich Steel and Azovstal
factories had been in storage in Mariupol when Russia's invasion
of Ukraine began on Feb. 24.
The two plants have not cooperated with Russian representatives
since Russian and separatist forces took full control of
Mariupol in May, it said.
Russian forces have blockaded Ukrainian ports in the Back and
Azov seas, preventing Azovstal and Ilyich Steel from exporting
products to clients in Europe and the Middle East. But ships
loaded with grain and metals will leave Mariupol soon, a
pro-Russian separatist leader said last week.
"Metinvest enterprises have underlined that there is a high
probability of theft and smuggling of Ukrainian steel products,"
Metinvest said in a statement.
"Metinvest Group's enterprises, therefore, ask all potential
buyers to reject any offers related to the stolen products, as
any purchase thereof would not be considered as having been made
in good faith."
The statement provided no evidence of theft.
Asked why Metinvest considers any of its products that go on
sale are likely to have been stolen, a company spokesperson
provided no further details but said: "Because the occupiers are
already looting it. They have already stolen some of the volumes
and boasted about that in their media".
Russia has previously dismissed Ukrainian allegations of
stealing from territories it has occupied in Ukraine.
Moscow says it is engaged in a "special military operation" to
demilitarise Ukraine and rid it of dangerous nationalists.
Ukraine and its allies dismiss this as a baseless pretext to
launch an unprovoked war of aggression.
(Reporting by Natalia Zinets, editing by David Ljunggren,
Timothy Heritage and Barbara Lewis)
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