MOSCOW, Russia
Russia laid out conditions on Monday for agreeing to any further extension of the Black Sea grain deal, and President Vladimir Putin said that Moscow could send free grain to African countries if those conditions were not met.
The deal, allowing the safe
export of grain from Ukrainian and Russian Black Sea ports, was renewed on
Saturday for 60 days — half the intended period — after Moscow said any further
extension beyond May 18 would hinge on the removal of some Western sanctions.
Russia's foreign ministry, in
a statement posted on its website on Monday, said Moscow had decided to limit
the extension of the deal to 60 days over what it called "a lack of
progress... on normalization of domestic agricultural exports".
It said the deal's renewal in
May would depend on certain conditions, including the restoration of access to
the SWIFT financial messaging system for Russian state-owned
agriculture-focused bank Rosselkhozbank, a resumption of farm machinery
supplies, and the unblocking of foreign assets and accounts held by Russian
agricultural companies.
The grain deal, brokered last
July by the United Nations and Turkey, aims to combat a global food crisis
partly fuelled by Russia's actions in Ukraine. Both Russia and Ukraine are
major grain exporters.
Ukraine, along with Turkey and
the United Nations, had wanted to extend the deal for 120 days.
Speaking at a Russia-Africa
parliamentary conference in Moscow on Monday, Putin said grain exports under
the Black Sea deal had unfairly prioritised "well-fed European
markets" rather than African countries, and that the renewal of the deal
on Russia's terms was in the continent's interests.
Putin said that if the deal is
not renewed, Moscow could supply free grain to "especially needy African
countries", without elaborating.
So far, exports under the
grain deal have been transported under commercial agreements.
Though the main destinations
for grain shipped under the deal have been China, Spain and Turkey, African
countries have benefited indirectly as increased supply has helped drive down
global grain prices.
In its statement, Russia's
foreign ministry said neither Turkey nor Ukraine had raised formal objections
to the shortened renewal period for the grain deal.
A senior Ukrainian official
told Reuters that Kyiv had objected to Moscow's insistence on
a 60-day extension.
Western powers have hit Russia
with tough sanctions over its actions in Ukraine.
While Russian food and
fertiliser exports are not under sanctions, Moscow says restrictions on
payments, logistics and insurance industries are a barrier to such shipments.
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