Putin calls for review of Ukraine grain deal, accuses West of deception
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[September 07, 2022]
By Pavel Polityuk
KYIV (Reuters) - President Vladimir Putin
said on Wednesday he wanted to discuss reopening a U.N.-brokered deal
that allows Ukraine to export its grain via the Black Sea after accusing
Kyiv and the West of using it to deceive developing countries and
Russia.
Putin's criticism, which alleged that the deal was delivering grain,
fertiliser and other foodstuffs to the European Union and Turkey at the
expense of poor countries, is likely to raise fears that the pact could
unravel if it cannot be successfully renegotiated.
Ukraine, whose ports had been blockaded by Russia since it invaded in
February, said the terms of the agreement were being strictly observed
and there were no grounds to renegotiate it.
The agreement, facilitated by the United Nations and Turkey in July,
created a protected export corridor via the Black Sea for Ukrainian
grain after Kyiv lost access to its main export route when Russia
attacked Ukraine via land, air and sea.
The agreement, designed to help ease global food prices by increasing
supplies of grain and oilseeds, has been the only diplomatic
breakthrough between Moscow and Kyiv in more than six months of war.
Moscow said at the time that one of the main reasons it signed the deal
was because it wanted to help developing countries stave off food
shortages.
But Putin said on Wednesday that Ukraine and the West were not honouring
its terms and that most of the grain was going to the EU, not to poorer
countries, something the Russian leader said would have to change if
what he called an "unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe" was to be
averted.
"I met with the leaders of the African Union, with the leaders of
African countries, and promised them that we would do everything to
ensure their interests and facilitate the export of Ukrainian grain,"
Putin told an economic forum in Russia's Far East region.
But if shipments to Turkey as an intermediary country were excluded he
said that only two out of 87 shipments had fallen under the U.N. World
Food Programme, representing just 60,000 tonnes or 3% of the total 2
million tonnes exported so far.
"We are honouring the agreements. (But) it turns out....that they (the
West) have just royally screwed us over and not just us but the poorest
countries whose interests were the pretext for doing all this."
There were roughly 70 ships stranded in Ukraine when Russia invaded in
February, some of which had already been loaded with grain, with
contracts already signed. Some of those contracted cargoes have been the
first to move.
Putin spoke about possibly restricting grain and food exports to the EU
and promised to discuss the matter with Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan,
who helped broker the original deal.
OTHER COMPLAINTS
A Ukrainian presidential adviser responded by saying that Russia had no
grounds to review the landmark pact and that the terms of the wartime
agreement were being strictly observed.
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A grain terminal at the sea port in
Odesa, Ukraine August 19, 2022. REUTERS/Valentyn Ogirenko/File Photo
"I believe that such unexpected and groundless statements rather
indicate an attempt to find new aggressive talking points to
influence global public opinion and, above all, put pressure on the
United Nations," said Mykhailo Podolyak, the adviser.
Ukraine hopes to export 60 million tonnes of grain in eight to nine
months, presidential economic adviser Oleh Ustenko said in July,
cautioning that those exports could take up to 24 months if ports do
not function properly.
According to the United Nations, 88 ships have sailed or are due to
sail from Ukraine under the deal so far, and of those two have been
World Food Programme ships – one of which went to Djibouti, the
other to Yemen.
Of those 88 ships the most grain – 368,407 tonnes – has gone or is
due to go to Turkey. Around 757,697 tonnes in total is listed as
going to European Union members though some shipments are also going
to other countries including China, India, Iran, Egypt and Sudan.
Putin complained that another part of the deal meant to ease
restrictions for Russian food exporters and shippers was not being
implemented either.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov cast doubt on the deal too a
day earlier, accusing Western states of failing to honour reciprocal
pledges to help facilitate Moscow's shipments.
UKRAINIAN BATTLEFIELD SUCCESS?
Ukrainian officials meanwhile remained guarded about how a counter
offensive on the battlefield was faring.
Luhansk region Governor Serhiy Gaidai told Ukrainian television,
without giving locations, that a "counter-attack is underway and ...
our forces are enjoying some success. Let's leave it at that".
But an official with the pro-Moscow self-proclaimed Donetsk People's
Republic on Tuesday offered more detail and said there was fighting
at Balakliia, an eastern town of 27,000 people that lies between
Kharkiv and Russian-held Izyum, a city with a major railway hub used
by Moscow to supply its forces.
"Today, the Ukrainian armed forces, after prolonged artillery
preparation ... began an attack on Balakliia ... " Daniil Bezsonov
said on Telegram, adding that if the town were lost, Russian forces
in Izyum would become vulnerable on their northwest flank.
"At this time, Balakliia is in operative encirclement and within the
firing range of Ukrainian artillery. All approaches are cut off by
fire," he said.
Russia says it has repelled an assault in the south and has not
reported any territorial losses.
Reuters was unable to independently verify those battlefield
accounts.
(Reporting by Reuters; Writing by Andrew Osborn; Editing by Philippa
Fletcher)
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