Russia launches 4th aerial attack in a week against Ukraine's
grain-exporting Odesa region
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[October 11, 2024]
By HANNA ARHIROVA
KYIV,
Ukraine (AP) — A nighttime Russian missile strike on Odesa killed at
least four people including a 16-year-old girl, regional authorities
said Friday, in the latest in a series of attacks this week on the
southern Ukrainian region that are likely intended to disrupt the
country’s grain exports. |
Italian Premier Giorgia Meloni, right, and Ukrainian President Volodymyr
Zelenskyy pose for photographers after the press conference, at Villa
Pamphilj, in Rome, Thursday, Oct. 10, 2024. (AP Photo/Andrew Medichini) |
Four Russian missile and drone attacks on the Odesa region this
week have killed 14 people and wounded around 20, according to
local officials. The strikes have hit merchant ships and damaged
port infrastructure in the region, which is a vital hub for
Ukraine’s agricultural exports through the Black Sea.
An attack on Odesa late Wednesday killed nine people and hit a
container ship sailing under the Panamanian flag — the third
attack on a merchant vessel in four days, according to regional
Gov. Oleh Kiper.
The apparent Russian effort to frustrate Ukraine’s exports,
which bring vital revenue for a national economy battered by
more than two years of war, coincided with a renewed push by
Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to ensure continuing
military and financial support from his country’s Western
partners.
Ukraine’s stretched and short-handed army is currently under
heavy pressure in the country’s eastern Donetsk region. Russian
forces recently pushed it out of the Donetsk town of Vuhledar
and are now in control of about half of nearby Toretsk, local
administration chief Vasyl Chynchyk said Friday. To stop the
losses, Zelenskyy needs to secure more help.
Russia last year tore up an agreement that allowed Ukraine — one
of the world’s biggest suppliers of grain and other food
staples, especially to developing nations — to export produce
safely through the Black Sea.
Months later, and amid successful Ukrainian attacks on Russia’s
Black Sea fleet which forced its navy to back away from the
coast, Ukraine established a shipping corridor that hugs the
coast down to Turkey and opens a way to the Mediterranean Sea.
A special insurance program has provided affordable coverage to
shippers who have carried millions of tons of cargo out of
Ukraine, but the latest attacks could jeopardize that
arrangement.
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