The Mercury News

At least 2 hurt after Russia attacks Ukraine river port

- By Vivek Shankar and Constant Méheut

Russian forces launched waves of drones at the Odesa region of southern Ukraine in an hourslong overnight assault, officials said Sunday, the latest bombardmen­t to target port infrastruc­ture since Moscow pulled out of a deal allowing safe passage for Ukrainian grain through the Black Sea.

Serhii Bratchuk, a spokespers­on for the Odesa military administra­tion, said that port facilities on the Danube River had been hit and that two workers were injured in the attack, which lasted more than three hours and involved more than two dozen drones. Ukraine's air force said it shot down 22 out of 25 attack drones and the State Emergency Service posted photos of firefighte­rs in the region trying to extinguish a blaze.

Bratchuk did not specify where exactly the strikes landed, but local Ukrainian media reported explosions in the port city of Reni on the Danube, just across the water from Romania. Russia's ministry of defense claimed that its drones had struck fuel storage facilities there; the claim could not be independen­tly verified.

Andriy Yermak, the head of the Ukrainian president's office, condemned the overnight attack. In a statement on the Telegram messaging app, he accused Russian forces of targeting ports “in the hope they will be able to provoke a food crisis and hunger around the world.”

Ukraine's main Danube ports represent a potentiall­y perilous tripwire, because they lie so close to Romania, a member of NATO, and therefore to territory covered by the alliance's commitment to collective security. On Sunday, Romania's defense ministry said it had been monitoring the overnight drone attacks in real time and denounced what it called “unjustifie­d” assaults on infrastruc­ture in Ukraine.

For years, Ukraine's Danube ports played a secondary role, with the primary conduit for the country's grain exports being Black Sea ports such as the one in the city of Odesa. But that changed when Russia pulled out of the Black Sea grain agreement in July, threatenin­g all ships moving to and from Ukraine.

The Danube delta became an immediate alternativ­e waterway for grain ships. But then Russia began attacking the smaller ports on the river as well, bombing Ukrainian grain-loading facilities there. In mid-August, granaries and warehouses in Reni and Izmail, another port on the river, were damaged as a result of Russian attacks.

In an attempt to get exports of grain and other goods moving again, Ukraine establishe­d a temporary corridor through the mines it has deployed along the coast, allowing ships to reach the territoria­l waters of Romania and then Bulgaria and Turkey, NATO members all. That has begun to allow civilian ships that have been stuck in Ukrainian ports since before Russia's full-scale invasion to finally depart the country.

 ?? THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Ukrainian media reported explosions in the port of city of Reni on the Danube River over the weekend. The delta has become an alternativ­e waterway for grain shipments.
THE NEW YORK TIMES Ukrainian media reported explosions in the port of city of Reni on the Danube River over the weekend. The delta has become an alternativ­e waterway for grain shipments.

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