Putin promises African leaders free grain despite ‘hypocritical’ Western sanctions

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MOSCOW – Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday told African leaders he would gift them tens of thousands of tonnes of grain within months despite Western sanctions, which he said made it harder for Moscow to export its grain and fertilisers.

Speaking at a summit in St Petersburg devoted to Russian-African ties, he said Russia was expecting a record grain harvest in 2023, and was ready to replace Ukrainian grain exports to Africa on both a commercial and aid basis and honour what he said was Moscow’s critical role in global food security.

“We will be ready to provide Burkina Faso, Zimbabwe, Mali, Somalia, Central African Republic and Eritrea with 25,000 to 50,000 tonnes of free grain each in the next three to four months,” Mr Putin told the summit, whose participants reacted with applause.

“We will also provide free delivery of these products to consumers.”

The event, which is expected to see various agreements signed, follows Moscow’s first Russia-Africa summit in 2019 and is part of a concerted push for influence and business on a continent where mercenaries from Russia’s Wagner Group remain active despite an abortive mutiny at home in June.

Responding to Western criticism of Russia’s decision last week to quit the Black Sea grain deal, an arrangement that allowed Ukraine to safely export its grain, Mr Putin reiterated that Moscow left because none of the promises it was given about facilitating its own grain and fertiliser exports had been fulfilled.

Some Western politicians have said Russia’s exit is irresponsible and will result in the suffering of millions of people in poor countries.

But Mr Putin told the summit that over 70 per cent of Ukrainian grain exported thanks to the now-lapsed deal had gone to high-income or above-average income countries, including in the European Union, and that poor countries like Sudan had been “screwed over” and received less than 3 per cent of the shipments.

He said Western sanctions, imposed over Russia’s war in Ukraine, which it calls a “special military operation”, had even prevented Russia from supplying free fertilisers to poor nations.

“A paradoxical picture is emerging. On the one hand, Western countries are obstructing supplies of our grain and fertilisers (via sanctions), while on the other, they hypocritically blame us for the current crisis situation on the world food market,” said Mr Putin.

Russia says 49 of the continent’s 54 states are represented at the St Petersburg summit, including 17 by their heads of state and four by heads of government.

That is fewer than half the number of leaders who took part in the last such event in 2019 – a fall that the Kremlin has blamed in part on what it called “brazen” efforts by the United States, France and other countries to dissuade leaders from attending.

The summit programme includes an array of panel discussions on topics ranging from security, nuclear energy and artificial intelligence to education and sport.

Visiting dignitaries are also invited to visit Russia’s imperial palaces or watch a gala match between Russian and African “football legends”. REUTERS

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