Food: Putin and Erdogan meet in Sochi on the Black Sea

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Putin and Erdogan meet in Sochi on the Black Sea

Kremlin chief Vladimir Putin (r) and Tayyip Erdogan, President of Turkey, at an earlier meeting in Tehran. photo

© Sergei Savostyanov/Pool Sputnik Kremlin/AP/dpa

The Turkish President wants to talk to the head of the Kremlin about resuming the agreement on the export of Ukrainian grain that was suspended in July. This is important for world nutrition.

The Russian President Vladimir Putin and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan are meeting today for talks in Sochi on the Black Sea. It will be about bilateral and international issues, as the Kremlin announced.

A key topic of the talks, which are due to start at noon, is Erdogan’s demand for a return to the agreement to ship Ukrainian grain across the Black Sea. The agreement is important for supplying the world with food.

Kremlin imposes conditions

Turkey is also concerned about security in the Black Sea region, according to Ankara. Putin had set conditions for a return to the agreement negotiated last year through the mediation of the Erdogan government and the United Nations. For example, the sanctions imposed by the West in the course of the Russian war of aggression against Ukraine should be relaxed so that Moscow can once again export its own grain and fertilizers without hindrance. Russian gas supplies through the Black Sea are also important for Turkey.

It is the first meeting between the two heads of state since Erdogan’s re-election in May. Relations between the two countries are by no means unencumbered, and they are not only conflicting parties in the civil war in Syria. In the conflict region of Nagorno-Karabakh, Turkey is on the side of Azerbaijan, which won a war over the area against Armenia in 2020. Armenia, on the other hand, sees itself let down by Putin and the protecting power Russia.

Türkiye not involved in sanctions

In the war in Ukraine, the Turkish President acts as a mediator between Moscow and Kiev and maintains close contacts with both parties to the conflict. NATO member Turkey is not participating in Western sanctions against Russia.

Russia let the grain agreement expire in July. Safety guarantees for shipping traffic with Ukrainian ports have been cancelled. This led to a new naval blockade. Previously, despite the Russian invasion, the agrarian country of Ukraine had exported about 33 million tons of grain and other agricultural products by sea since the summer of 2022. The war-torn country urgently needs export revenues.

Ukraine and Russia are important suppliers of wheat, barley, sunflower oil and other foodstuffs – particularly to countries in Africa, the Middle East and parts of Asia. Before the war began, Russia was also the world’s largest exporter of fertilizers. The disruption of these supplies following the Russian invasion in February 2022 drove up food prices around the world and fueled fears of a hunger crisis in poorer countries.

Cereals important for Africa and Asia

In southern Ukraine, Russia recently hit the Black Sea and Danube ports in the Odessa region with rocket and drone attacks, destroying important infrastructure for grain exports. Ukraine therefore accused Russia of terrorism with the aim of preventing the transport of grain, which is important for world nutrition, to Africa or Asia, for example. No representatives of the UN or Ukraine are present at the talks in Sochi, so a lasting breakthrough is unlikely.

Shortly before new Russian attacks over the weekend, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced that two more cargo ships had passed through the Black Sea grain corridor set up by Kiev. After Russia’s withdrawal from the agreement, Kiev is trying to organize the export despite the risk of Moscow attacks.

Russia had threatened to consider ships calling at Ukrainian ports as carrying military cargo. Selenskyj now called on the western allies once again to deliver even more anti-aircraft systems in order to better protect the region from Russian attacks. Ukraine also wants to regain air sovereignty.

dpa

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