Hem
Spannmålsfartyg i Ukraina. (Andrew Kravchenko / AP)

Ukraina: Ryssland bryter mot spannmålsavtalet

Spannmålsexporter från den ukrainska hamnen Pivdennyi har upphört eftersom Ryssland inte låtit några fartyg lägga till sedan den 2 maj, säger den ansvarige ministern Jurij Vaskov till Reuters.

Han kallar det ett ”grovt brott” mot det rysk-ukrainska spannmålsavtalet som skrevs under förra sommaren, och som förra veckan förlängdes ytterligare två månader.

– Formellt sett omfattas hamnen Pivdennyi av avtalet, men i verkligheten har den inte varit del av det på en månad. Den har inga ankommande fartyg.

Enligt avtalet måste fartyg som ska lägga till i de tre ukrainska hamnar som avtalet omfattar – Odesa, Tjornomorsk och Pivdennyi – inspekteras av ett team av bland annat ryska inspektörer.

Sedan den 29 april har de ryska inspektörerna vägrat inspektera fartyg på väg till Pivdennyi, enligt Vaskov.

bakgrund
 
Spannmålsavtalet i Svarta havet
Wikipedia (en)
The Initiative on the Safe Transportation of Grain and Foodstuffs from Ukrainian ports, also called the Black Sea Grain Initiative, is an agreement between Russia and Ukraine made with Turkey and the United Nations (UN) during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. The Russian invasion of Ukraine in February led to a complete halt of maritime grain shipments from Ukraine, previously a major exporter via the Black Sea. This resulted in a rise in world food prices and the threat of famine in lower-income countries. To address the issue, discussions began in April, hosted by Turkey (which controls the maritime routes from the Black Sea) and supported by the UN. The resulting agreement was signed in Istanbul on 22 July 2022, valid for a period of 120 days. The July agreement created procedures to safely export grain from certain ports to attempt to address the 2022 food crisis. A joint coordination and inspection center was set up in Turkey, with the UN serving as secretariat. The original agreement was set to expire on 19 November 2022. Russia suspended its participation in the agreement for several days due to a drone attack on Russian naval ships elsewhere in the Black Sea, but rejoined following mediation. On 17 November 2022, the UN and Ukraine announced that the agreement had been extended for a further 120 days. In March of that year, Turkey and the UN announced that they secured a second extension for at least another 60 days. In May 2023, the deal was once again extended for 60 days, expiring on 18 July.By mid-May 2023, more than 950 voyages had successfully left Ukrainian ports carrying over 30 million tonnes of grain and other food products to more than 40 different countries.

Gå förbi betalväggar!

Omni Mer låser upp en mängd artiklar. En smidig lösning när du vill fördjupa dig.

Omni är politiskt obundna och oberoende. Vi strävar efter att ge fler perspektiv på nyheterna. Har du frågor eller synpunkter kring vår rapportering? Kontakta redaktionen