The Citizen (KZN)

Ukrainian wheat sets sail for Africa

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Ukraine – The first United Nations-chartered vessel set to transport grain from Ukraine under a deal to relieve a global food crisis was loaded with 23 000 tons of wheat yesterday and is ready to depart, Kyiv announced.

The MV Brave Commander will “head to Africa” and “Ethiopia will be the last country where the ... cargo ... will be delivered”, Ukrainian Infrastruc­ture Minister Oleksandr Kubrakov said at the Black Sea port of Pivdennyi in Yuzhne city.

“I hope that other ships chartered by the [UN’s] World Food Programme (WFP) will come to our ports. I hope there will soon be two, three more ships,” Kubrakov added.

The minister later said on Twitter the ship was fully loaded and ready to leave but did not say when it would depart.

The MV Brave Commander docked at the Pivdennyi port, close to Odessa, last Friday.

According to the Ukrainian infrastruc­ture ministry, it will leave for Djibouti before proceeding to Ethiopia.

It will be the first shipment of food aid since Kyiv and Moscow agreed a deal brokered by the UN and Turkey last month to unblock Black Sea grain deliveries after Russia’s February invasion of Ukraine.

The agreement lifted a Russian blockade of Ukraine’s ports and establishe­d safe corridors through naval mines laid by Kyiv.

“We are definitely planning other ships to leave the ports of Ukraine, to help people around the world... This should just be the first of many humanitari­an ships to leave the ports,” Marianne Ward, WFP deputy country director in Ukraine, told journalist­s.

The first commercial ship carrying grain left on 1 August and 16 have departed from Ukraine since the deal, according to Kyiv.

Ukraine and Russia are two of the world’s biggest grain exporters.

The WFP says up to 50 million people in 45 countries are on the brink of famine and risk being tipped over the edge without humanitari­an support.

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