Grain ships sail despite Moscow's pullout from deal; missiles rain on
Ukraine
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[October 31, 2022]
By Pavel Polityuk
KYIV (Reuters) -Twelve ships carrying grain
left Ukrainian ports on Monday despite Russia having abandoned a
U.N.-backed deal to guarantee exports from the war zone, suggesting
Moscow had stopped short of reimposing a blockade that might have caused
world hunger.
Air raid sirens blared across Ukraine and explosions rang out in Kyiv as
Russia rained missiles down in renewed air attacks. Ukrainian officials
said energy infrastructure was hit, knocking out power and water
supplies in several areas.
But the resumption of food exports from Ukrainian ports suggested that
at least one dire scenario had been averted for now. International
officials had feared that Moscow would reimpose a blockade on Ukrainian
grain, after Russia announced on Saturday that it was withdrawing from
the U.N.-backed programme that escorts cargo ships through the Black
Sea.
"Civilian cargo ships can never be a military target or held hostage.
The food must flow," tweeted Amir Abdullah, the U.N. official who
coordinates the programme.
Shortly after, Ukraine confirmed that 12 ships had set sail. The 354,500
tonnes of grain they carried was far more than typically leave in a
single day, suggesting a backlog was being cleared after exports were
interrupted on Sunday.
HUNGER
Ukraine and Russia are both among the world's largest exporters of food.
For three months, the U.N.-backed deal has guaranteed Ukrainian exports
can reach markets, preventing what international officials had said
could have been global famine.
The news that Moscow was pulling out of the deal had sent global wheat
prices soaring by more than 5% on Monday morning.
Moscow said it was forced to pull out of the shipping deal after blaming
Kyiv for explosions that damaged Russian navy ships in a Crimean port on
Saturday.
Ukraine has neither confirmed nor denied it was behind those blasts but
says Russia's navy is a legitimate military target. Moscow said the
blasts were caused by a fleet of sea and air drones.
The United States accused Russia of using food as a weapon, and
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy said Moscow was "blackmailing
the world with hunger". Russia denied those accusations but said that
with its naval forces damaged it was no longer able to guarantee safe
shipping.
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Smoke rises on the outskirts of the city
during a Russian missile attack, as Russia's invasion of Ukraine
continues, in Kyiv, Ukraine October 31, 2022. REUTERS/Gleb Garanich
The ships that sailed on Monday included one hired by the U.N. World
Food Programme to bring 40,000 tonnes of grain to drought-hit
Africa.
"Even if Russia behaves hesitantly because it didn't receive the
same benefits, we will continue decisively our efforts to serve
humanity," Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan, who helped mediate the
grain deal, said in a speech.
"Our effort to deliver this wheat to countries facing the threat of
starvation is evident. With the joint mechanism that we established
in Istanbul, we contributed to the relief of a global food crisis,"
he said.
MISSILE STRIKES
Russia's missile strikes during the Monday morning rush hour
repeated a tactic it has pursued this month of targeting Ukrainian
civilian infrastructure, especially power stations.
Ukraine's Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal said 18 targets, mostly
energy infrastructure, were hit in missile and drone strikes on 10
Ukrainian regions.
"Another batch of Russian missiles hits Ukraine's critical
infrastructure. Instead of fighting on the battlefield, Russia
fights civilians," Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said.
"Don’t justify these attacks by calling them a 'response'. Russia
does this because it still has the missiles and the will to kill
Ukrainians."
Foreign ministry spokesman Oleg Nikolenko said the missiles had
caused electricity and water outages.
"Russia is not interested in peace talks, nor in global food
security. Putin’s only goal is death and destruction," he said.
There was no immediate response from Moscow.
The U.S. ambassador to Kyiv, Bridget Brink, tweeted: "Like millions
of Ukrainians, our @USEmbassyKyiv team is once again taking shelter
as Russia continues its callous and barbaric missile strikes on the
people of Ukraine in an effort to leave the country cold and dark as
we approach winter."
(Reporting by Reuters bureaux; Writing by Michael Perry and Peter
GraffEditing by Gareth Jones)
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