EU warns that Russia aims to create new dependencies with cheap grain

Turkish-flagged bulker TQ Samsun, carrying grain under UN’s Black Sea Grain Initiative, is pictured in the Black Sea, north of Bosphorus Strait, off Istanbul, Turkey July 17, 2023. (Reuters)
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Updated 03 August 2023
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EU warns that Russia aims to create new dependencies with cheap grain

  • The EU has spared no effort to ensure that sanctions have no impact on the food security of third countries

UNITED NATIONS: The European Union has warned developing countries that Russia is offering cheap grain “to create new dependencies by exacerbating economic vulnerabilities and global food insecurity,” according to a letter seen by Reuters on Wednesday.
EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell wrote to developing and Group of 20 countries on Monday to urge them to speak “with a clear and unified voice” to push Moscow to return to a deal that allowed the safe Black Sea export of Ukraine grain and to stop targeting Ukraine’s agricultural infrastructure.
The Black Sea deal was brokered in July 2022 by the United Nations and Turkiye to help ease a global food crisis following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. After Russia quit last month it began targeting Ukrainian ports and grain infrastructure on the Black Sea and Danube River and global grain prices spiked.
“As the world deals with disrupted supplies and higher prices, Russia is now approaching vulnerable countries with bilateral offers of grain shipments at discounted prices, pretending to solve a problem it created itself,” Borrell said.
“This is a cynical policy of deliberately using food as a weapon to create new dependencies by exacerbating economic vulnerabilities and global food insecurity,” he added.
Russian President Vladimir Putin told African leaders last week that Russia was ready to replace Ukrainian grain exports to Africa on both a commercial and aid basis to fulfill what he said was Moscow’s critical role in global food security.

‘SPARED NO EFFORT’
Russia has said that if demands to improve its own exports of grain and fertilizer were met it would consider resurrecting the Black Sea agreement. One of Moscow’s main demands is for the Russian Agricultural Bank to be reconnected to the SWIFT international payments system. The EU cut it off in June 2022.
“The EU has spared no effort to ensure that sanctions have no impact on the food security of third countries. There are no sanctions on Russia’s exports of food and fertilizer to third countries,” Borrell wrote.
He added that “the EU has been fully committed to preventing over-compliance and de-risking activities” and outlined some of those.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said last month that UN officials had “recently brokered a concrete proposal” with the European Commission to enable a subsidiary of the Russian Agricultural Bank to regain access to SWIFT.
Borrell did not mention that proposal in his letter. He said the EU would “continue to support the tireless efforts” of the United Nations and Turkiye to revive the Black Sea grain deal.
Borrell shared the July 31 letter with his EU counterparts on Wednesday, saying it aimed “to counter Russian disinformation around global food security and the impact of EU sanctions.”
He said it was key that EU countries continued lobbying the rest of the world on food security, particularly ahead of the annual gathering of world leaders at the United Nations in New York next month.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is due to chair a UN Security Council meeting on Thursday on famine and global food insecurity caused by conflict.


Ukraine sanctions Belarus leader for supporting Russian invasion

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Ukraine sanctions Belarus leader for supporting Russian invasion

  • Ukraine on Wednesday sanctioned Belarus’s long-time leader Alexander Lukashenko for providing material assistance to Russia in its invasion and enabling the “killing of Ukrainians.”
KYIV: Ukraine on Wednesday sanctioned Belarus’s long-time leader Alexander Lukashenko for providing material assistance to Russia in its invasion and enabling the “killing of Ukrainians.”
Lukashenko is one of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s closest allies and allowed his country to be used as a springboard for Moscow’s February 2022 attack.
Russia has also deployed various military equipment to the country, Ukraine alleges, including relay stations that connect to Russian attack drones, fired in their hundreds every night at Ukrainian cities.
“Today Ukraine applied a package of sanctions against Alexander Lukashenko, and we will significantly intensify countermeasures against all forms of his assistance in the killing of Ukrainians,” President Volodymyr Zelensky said in a statement.
Russia has also said it is stationing Oreshnik missiles in Belarus, a feared hypersonic ballistic weapon that Putin has claimed is impervious to air defenses. It has twice been fired on Ukraine during the war — launched from bases in Russia — though caused minimal damage as experts said it was likely fitted with dummy warheads both times.
Zelensky also accused Lukashenko of helping Moscow avoid Western sanctions.
The measures are likely to have little practical effect, but sanctioning a head of state is a highly symbolic move.
Ukraine and several Western states sanctioned Putin at the very start of the war.
Lukashenko has at times tried to present himself as a possible intermediary between Kyiv and Moscow.
Initial talks on ending Russia’s invasion in the first days of the war were held in the country.
But Kyiv and its Western backers have largely dismissed his attempts to mediate, seeing him as little more than a mouthpiece for the Kremlin.