World

Russia, Ukraine extend grain deal to help world's poor

An unprecedented wartime deal that allows grain to flow from Ukraine to countries in Africa, the Middle East and Asia — where hunger is a growing threat and high food prices are pushing more people into poverty — has been extended, officials said Saturday.

Vladimir Putin makes surprise visit to Crimea one day after ICC issued arrest warrant

Several large ships anchored in the sea.
Commercial vessels, including those that are part of Black Sea grain deal, wait to pass the Bosphorus strait off the shores of Yenikapi during a misty morning in Istanbul on Oct. 31, 2022. (Umit Bektas/Reuters)

An unprecedented wartime deal that allows grain to flow from Ukraine to countries in Africa, the Middle East and Asia — where hunger is a growing threat and high food prices are pushing more people into poverty — has been extended, officials said Saturday.

The extension was announced by the United Nations and by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, but neither confirmed its length.

Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Oleksandr Kubrakov said on Twitter that the deal had been extended for 120 days — the length that Ukraine, Turkey and the UN had wanted.

A Russian Foreign Affairs Ministry spokesperson said Russia has notified all parties to the deal that it has been extended for 60 days.

This is the second renewal of separate agreements that Ukraine and Russia signed with the UN and Turkey to allow food to leave the Black Sea region after Russia invaded its neighbour more than a year ago.

The warring nations are both major global suppliers of wheat, barley, sunflower oil and other affordable food products that developing nations depend on.

Russia has complained that shipments of its fertilizers — also critical to the global food chain — are not getting to global markets, which has long been an issue under the deal that first took effect in August and was renewed for another four months in November.

The war in Ukraine sent food prices surging to record highs last year and helped contribute to a global food crisis that is also tied to lingering effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and climate factors, such as drought.

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Rosemary Barton Live speaks with World Food Program's Chief Economist, Arif Husain, about how the year of war is impacting global food security and when to expect an extension of the Black Sea Grain Initiative.

Developing countries in need

That disruption in shipments of grain needed for staples of diets in places like Egypt, Lebanon and Nigeria exacerbated economic challenges and helped push millions more people into poverty or food insecurity.

People in developing countries spend more of their money on basics like food.

Food prices have fallen for 11 straight months, but food was already expensive before the war because of droughts from the Americas to the Middle East — particularly in the Horn of Africa, with thousands dying in Somalia.

Poorer nations that depend on imported food priced in dollars are spending more as their currencies weaken.

Grain being dumped from a truck onto a pile in front of large steel silos.
A truck is seen at a grain terminal during barley harvesting in Ukraine's Odesa on June 23, 2022. (Igor Tkachenko/Reuters)

The crisis has left an estimated 345 million people facing food insecurity, according to the UN's World Food Program.

The Black Sea Grain Initiative has helped by allowing 24 million metric tonnes of grain to leave Ukrainian ports, with 55 per cent of the shipments heading to developing nations, the UN said.

The agreements have also faced setbacks since being brokered by the UN and Turkey: Russia pulled out briefly in November before rejoining and extending the deal. In the past few months, inspections meant to ensure ships only carry grain and not weapons have slowed down.

That has helped lead to backlogs in vessels waiting in the waters of Turkey and a recent drop in the amount of grain getting out of Ukraine. Ukrainian and some U.S. officials have blamed Russia for the slowdowns, which the country denies.

While fertilizers have been stuck, Russia has been exporting huge amounts of wheat after a record crop.

Figures from financial data provider Refinitiv show that Russian wheat exports more than doubled to 3.8 million tons in January from the same month a year ago, before the invasion.

Putin marks annexation anniversary

Meanwhile, Russian President Vladimir Putin arrived in Crimea on Saturday on an unannounced visit to mark the ninth anniversary of Russia's annexation of the peninsula from Ukraine.

Putin was greeted by the Russian-installed governor of Sevastopol, Mikhail Razvozhayev, and taken to see a new children's centre and art school on what the official said was a surprise visit.

Several men, dressed in black clothing, stand in a group looking upward.  A man on the right, wearing black religious clothing, gestures upward with his hand.
Russian President Vladimir Putin, centre, Sevastopol Gov. Mikhail Razvozhayev, left, and Metropolitan Tikhon (Shevkunov), chair of the Patriarchal Council for Culture, visit the state museum-preserve 'Tauric Chersonese' in Sevastopol, Crimea, on Saturday. (Sputnik/Russian Presidential Press Office/Kremlin/Reuters)

State media did not immediately broadcast any remarks from Putin, a day after the International Criminal Court said it had issued an arrest warrant against him and accused him of the war crime of illegally deporting hundreds of children from Ukraine.

Putin has yet to comment publicly on the move.

His spokesperson has called it "null and void," and said that Russia finds the very questions raised by the ICC to be "outrageous and unacceptable."

Russia seized Crimea in 2014, eight years before launching its full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

Ukraine says it will fight to expel Russia from Crimea and all other territory that Russia has occupied in the year-long war.

WATCH | ICC issues arrest warrant for Russian president: 

Putin faces an international arrest warrant

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The International Criminal Court has issued arrest warrants for Russian President Vladimir Putin and his commissioner for children's rights. Both are wanted for alleged war crimes related to the deportation of Ukrainian children during Russia's ongoing invasion.

Wagner Group recruiting more mercenaries

Russia's Wagner Group, a private military company, plans to recruit about 30,000 new fighters by the middle of May, its founder, Yevgeny Prigozhin, said on Saturday.

In an audio message on the Telegram messaging service, he said that Wagner recruitment centres, which he said last week had opened in 42 Russian cities, were hiring on average 500 to 800 people a day.

He gave no evidence to support the numbers, which Reuters could not independently verify.

Prigozhin's men have sustained heavy losses while leading Russian efforts to capture the Ukrainian city of Bakhmut, which has held out since last summer in the longest and bloodiest battle of the year-long war.

A man in a helmet and battle fatigues is shown speaking while looking at a camera.
Yevgeny Prigozhin, founder of Russia's Wagner Group mercenary force, is shown in Paraskoviivka, Ukraine, in this still image from an undated video released on March 3. (Concord Press Service/Reuters)

In January, the United States assessed that Wagner had about 50,000 fighters in Ukraine, including 40,000 convicts whom Prigozhin had recruited from Russian prisons with a promise of a free pardon if they survived six months.

Ukrainian officials have claimed that some 30,000 of Wagner's fighters have deserted or been killed or wounded, a figure that could not be independently verified.

Putin signed a law on Saturday that imposes stiff fines for discrediting or spreading misleading information about volunteers or mercenaries fighting in Ukraine.

The law calls for fining individuals 50,000 rubles ($660 US) for a first offence and up to 15 years in prison for repeated offences.

The measure mirrors one passed in the early days of the war that applied to speaking negatively about soldiers or the Russian military in general.

Fighters from the Wagner Group, who are known for fierce tactics, have taken key roles in Ukraine, particularly in Russia's grinding campaign to seize the eastern Donetsk province town of Bakhmut.

LISTEN | Explaining the Wagner Group and Russian mercenaries fighting in Ukraine: 
Wagner Group is a private army that's been violently advancing Russian interests internationally – but in the shadows – for years. Now as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has stalled, the fighters-for-hire have taken centre stage to fight on Russia’s side. The mercenaries have been involved in some of the bloodiest battles of the entire war. Mary Ilyushina is a reporter covering Russia for the Washington Post. Today on Front Burner, she joins guest host Jodie Martinson to explain the evolution, and growing influence, of the Wagner Group in Russia and other parts of the world.

With files from Reuters