• UN expresses hope it will be the first of many
• Russia hails ship departure, blames Ukraine for risks
The first ship to carry Ukrainian grain through the Black Sea since Russia invaded Ukraine five months ago left the port of Odessa for Lebanon yesterday under a safe passage deal described as a glimmer of hope in a worsening global food crisis.
The sailing was made possible after Turkiye and the United Nations brokered a grain and fertiliser export agreement between Russia and Ukraine last month - a rare diplomatic breakthrough in a conflict that has become a drawn-out war of attrition.
The Sierra Leone-flagged ship Razoni will head to the port of Tripoli, Lebanon, after transiting the Bosphorus Strait linking the Black Sea, which is dominated by Russia’s navy, to the Mediterranean. It is carrying 26,527 tonnes of corn.
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on February 24 has led to a worldwide food and energy crisis and the United Nations has warned of the risk of multiple famines this year.
UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said he hoped today’s departure would be the first of many such cargos and that the UN would charter a ship to replenish supplies of aid.
“People on the verge of famine need these agreements to work, in order to survive,” Guterres told reporters in New York. “Countries on the verge of bankruptcy need these agreements to work, in order to keep their economies alive.”
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba called it a “day of relief for the world, especially for our friends in the Middle East, Asia, and Africa.”
Ukraine, known as Europe’s breadbasket, hopes to export 20mn tonnes of grain in silos and 40mn tonnes from the harvest now underway, initially from Odessa and nearby Pivdennyi and Chornomorsk, to help clear the silos for the new crop.
Moscow has denied responsibility for the food crisis, blaming Western sanctions for slowing its exports and Ukraine for mining the approaches to its ports. The Kremlin called the Razoni’s departure “very positive” news.
Turkish Defence Minister Hulusi Akar said the vessel would anchor off Istanbul today afternoon and be inspected by Russian, Ukrainian, United Nations and Turkish representatives.
“It will then continue as long as no problems arise,” Akar said.
Before the Razoni left, Ukrainian officials said 17 ships were docked in Black Sea ports with almost 600,000 tonnes of cargo, mostly grain. Countries expressed hope more would follow.
“This is a glimmer of hope in a worsening food crisis,” a German foreign ministry spokesperson told a government briefing.
France welcomed the shipment while condemning what it called “indiscriminate” Russian strikes against Ukraine, including on Odessa’s port, which it said were undermining the agreement. Russia struck what it said was military infrastructure in the port the day after the deal was agreed. Ukraine said the strikes landed near a pumping station.
A junior engineer on the vessel, Abdullah Jendi, said the crew were happy to be moving after their prolonged stay in Odessa and that he, a Syrian, had not seen his family in more than a year.
“It is an indescribable feeling to be returning to my home country after suffering from the siege and the dangers that we were facing due to the shelling,” he said.
He said he was scared the ship might hit a mine in the hours it would take to leave regional waters.
The US embassy in Kyiv also welcomed the shipping resumption and said the world would be watching out for more.
Chicago wheat and corn prices fell amid hopes that Ukraine’s cereals exports could resume on a large scale. Procedures must still be worked out for empty vessels to collect grain, Neil Roberts, head of marine and aviation insurance with Lloyds Market Association, told Reuters.
Elsewhere, the war continued, with three civilians reported killed by Russian shelling in the eastern Donetsk region — two in Bakhmut and one in nearby Soledar — in the last 24 hours, regional governor Pavlo Kyrylenko said.
An industrial city and transport hub, Bakhmut has been under Russian bombardment for the past week as the Kremlin’s forces try to occupy all of Donetsk after seizing most of the neighbouring region, Luhansk, last month.
Russian strikes also hit Kharkiv — Ukraine’s second biggest city and near the border with Russia, regional governor Oleh Synegubov said. Two civilians were wounded, he said.
After failing to quickly capture the capital Kyiv early in the war, Russia has been aiming to capture the eastern Donbas region, made up of Donetsk and Luhansk and partially occupied by separatists before the invasion, and more of the south, where it annexed Crimea from Ukraine in 2014. Ukraine, which has launched a counter-offensive in the south, has pleaded with the West to supply more long-range artillery as it tries to turn the tide in the conflict.
Ukraine’s defence minister said Kyiv had received four more US-made HIMARS rocket systems from the United States. A third multiple rocket launcher system — the MARS II MLRS — had also arrived from Germany.
Moscow says Western arms supplies to Ukraine only drag out the conflict and the supply of longer-range weapons justifies Russia’s attempts to expand control over more Ukrainian territory for its own protection.
Russia invaded Ukraine in what it called a “special operation” to demilitarise its neighbour. Ukraine and Western nations have dismissed this as a baseless pretext for war.