In
a statement, the Russian Foreign Ministry did not address the
question of whether Moscow is ready to renew the Black Sea
initiative agreed in July that allowed Ukraine to resume grains
exports - a deal that expires on Nov. 19.
The U.N. says 10 million tonnes of grain and other foods have
been exported from Ukraine under the agreement, helping to stave
off a global food crisis.
But Russia has repeatedly complained its own grain and
fertiliser shipments, though not directly targeted by Western
sanctions, are effectively blocked because the sanctions cut
shippers' access to finance, insurance and ports.
The statement from Moscow said Ukrainian grain shipments and
"normalization" of Russia's own farm exports were integral parts
of a single package of measures to ensure global food security.
In its readout of Friday's talks, it added: "It was confirmed
that only ensuring unhindered access of Russian food and
fertilizers to world markets would make it possible to achieve
firm price stabilization and guarantee the future harvest."
A U.N. statement on Friday said the participants "remain engaged
in the implementation of the Black Sea Grain Initiative and held
constructive discussions on its continuation".
Ukraine, which Russia invaded on Feb. 24, has accused Moscow of
playing "hunger games" with the world. Russia, whose warships
were blocking access to Ukrainian ports until the July deal came
into force, denies using the grains issue as a tool to gain
leverage in the conflict.
Russia briefly suspended its participation in the deal on Oct.
29 after an attack on its Black Sea fleet but returned to it
just four days later in a U-turn by President Vladimir Putin
after mediation by Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan.
Russia withdrew its troops from the southern Ukrainian city of
Kherson this week, abandoning the only regional capital it had
captured since the February invasion.
(Reporting by Reuters; Editing by Ros Russell)
[© 2022 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2022 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|