First humanitarian food aid set to leave Ukraine for Africa
A U.N.-chartered vessel being loaded with
grain is set to transport the first shipment of humanitarian food from Ukraine
to Africa.
The vessel, which docked in Ukraine Friday,
will carry 23,000 tons of grain bound for Ethiopia. It’s part of a U.N.-backed
plan to move grain trapped by Russia’s war on Ukraine and to help relieve a
global food crisis.
Previous ships with grain were allowed to
leave Ukraine under the deal but were not humanitarian, and their cargoes had
been purchased by other nations or vendors.
Oleksandr Kubrakov, Ukraine’s minister of
infrastructure, wrote in a tweet that the newly docked vessel would also supply
grain for Somalia and Kenya, which are also facing the worst drought in four
decades.
“The wheat grain will go to the World Food
Program’s operations in Ethiopia, supporting WFP’s Horn of Africa drought
response as the threat of famine stalks the drought-hit region,” U.N.
spokesperson Stephane Dujarric said Friday.
The ship MV Brave Commander arrived Friday in
Yuzhne, Ukraine, east of Odesa on the Black Sea coast. After being loaded with
wheat it will travel to Djibouti, where the grain will be unloaded and sent to
Ethiopia, according to the United Nations.
Meanwhile, two more ships left from Ukraine's
Black Sea ports Saturday, said Turkey's defense ministry. So far, 16 cargo
vessels have left the county under the U.N.-brokered agreement.
The Barbados-flagged Fulmar S left Ukraine's
Chornomorsk port, carrying 12,000 tons of corn to Turkey's southern Iskenderun
province, it said. The Marshall Island-flagged Thoe departed from the same port
and headed to Turkey's Tekirdag, carrying 3,000 tons of sunflower seeds.
The statement added that another ship would
depart from Turkey on Saturday to Ukraine to buy grains.
Ukraine's infrastructure ministry said
Saturday that 16 ships carrying 450,000 tons of agriculture products had
departed from Ukrainian sea ports since early August under the deal, which
ensured safe passage for the vessels.
About 20 million tons of grain has been
unable to leave Ukraine since Russia's February invasion of the country.
Ukraine hopes to increase its maritime exports to more than 3 million tons of
grain and other agriculture products per month in the near future.
On July 22, Kyiv and Moscow signed a landmark
agreement brokered by the United Nations and Turkey to unblock Black Sea grain
deliveries.
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