World

Ukraine targets grain exports breakthrough at talks

Talks end with outcome unknown as Russia says it has worries on arms smuggling

Russian, Ukrainian and Turkish military delegations meet with UN officials in Istanbul. — Reuters
 
Russian, Ukrainian and Turkish military delegations meet with UN officials in Istanbul. — Reuters
ISTANBUL: Ukraine said on Wednesday that an agreement to resume grain exports blocked by Russia appeared close as Turkey hosted four-way talks, raising hopes of an end to a standoff that has exposed millions to the risk of starvation.

Kyiv believed a deal was just 'two steps away', Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba was quoted as saying before the talks began, though other participants seemed less optimistic and Turkey's defence ministry gave no details of the meeting's outcome after announcing it had ended.

Several Ukrainian cities meanwhile reported heavy Russian shelling and, while not linking a grain deal to progress in talks to end the war, Kuleba was downbeat on prospects for peace.

More than 20 million tonnes of Ukrainian grain are stuck in silos at the Black Sea port of Odesa and dozens of ships have been stranded due to Russia's blockade, part of what Moscow calls its 'special military operation' in Ukraine but which Kyiv and the West say is an unjustified war of aggression.

The talks, in Istanbul between Ukrainian, Russian, Turkish and UN officials, took place behind closed doors at an undisclosed location.

Kuleba told Spanish newspaper 'El Pais' ahead of their resumption: 'We are two steps away from a deal with Russia. We are in the final phase and now everything depends on Russia.'

Igor Konashenkov, a spokesperson for Russia's defence ministry, said Moscow had put forward proposals to resolve the grain issue as soon as possible.

Turkey published a photograph of the meeting showing the Russian and Ukrainian delegations sitting opposite each other looking stony-faced.

Ukraine and Russia are major global wheat suppliers. Russia is also a large fertiliser exporter and Ukraine a significant producer of corn and sunflower oil, so clinching a deal to unblock exports is seen as vital for food security, notably among developing nations and for stabilising markets.

The talks took place as Ukrainian cities reported sustained Russian shelling, including across the Donetsk region, which Moscow aims to capture to complete its seizure of the industrialised Donbas region of eastern Ukraine, much of which was controlled by separatists — labelled Russian puppets by Kyiv — before the war.

Russia also struck 28 settlements in the Mykolaiv region bordering the Black Sea, killing at least five civilians, according to Kyrylo Tymoshenko, deputy head of Ukraine's presidential office.

Russia, which says it does not target civilians, said on Wednesday it had shot down four Ukrainian military jets, an assertion the Ukrainian air force dismissed as propaganda.

Reuters could not independently verify the battlefield accounts.

As the Istanbul talks got under way, Foreign Minister Kuleba told a briefing that Ukraine's overall stance on the war had not changed.

He confirmed there were still no peace talks taking place between Moscow and Kyiv and ruled out ceding territory to Russia as part of any future deal.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy told a conference in Asia via videolink that Russia had launched 2,960 missiles on Ukraine's cities so far.

'Of course this is Russia's tactic... directed at chasing people out of our cities, and so that every Ukrainian feels fear'', he said.

Ukraine and the West have accused Russia of exacerbating a global food crisis by complicating attempts to supply poorer nations with grain and of fuelling inflation. — Reuters