First UN-chartered ship brings Ukraine wheat to Ethiopia; UN chief to visit Ukraine
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Rome/New York, August 16 – A ship chartered by the World Food Program (WFP) is bringing the first humanitarian cargo of 23,000 metric tons of Ukraine’s wheat grain to Ethiopia, a milestone achievement in the global efforts to fight high food prices since Russian troops invaded Ukraine.

The UN-chartered MV Brave Commander has left Ukraine’s Yuzhny (Pivdennyi) Port in Odesa as part of the Black Sea Grain Initiative. The UN established a Joint Coordination Center on July 27 to begin exporting millions of tons of Ukraine’s grains and foods and Russian fertilizers which had been blocked since the war broke out on February 24 this year.

In New York, a UN spokesman said UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres will attend a meeting in Kyiv on August 18 with Turkeye’s President Recept Tayyip Erdogan at the invitation of Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.

“The Secretary-General will then go on to Odesa, where he will visit the port that is one of the three being used as part of the Black Sea Grain Initiative,” Stephane Dujarric said.  

“Before returning to New York over the weekend, the Secretary-General will be in Istanbul to visit the Joint Coordination Centre (JCC) set up to implement the initiative. This initiative is part of a deal that also includes the facilitation of Russian grain and fertilizer exports on to the global market.”    

WFP Executive Director David Beasley said, “Getting the Black Sea Ports open is the single most important thing we can do right now to help the world’s hungry. It will take more than grain ships out of Ukraine to stop world hunger, but with Ukrainian grain back on global markets we have a chance to stop this global food crisis from spiraling even further.”

WFP said in a news release that the shipment to Ethiopia is part of its humanitarian response to the hunger crisis in the Horn of Africa.

It said a record 345 million people in 82 countries are now facing acute food insecurity while up to 50 million people in 45 countries are right on the edge of famine and risk being tipped over without humanitarian support.

Since the JCC began its operations in Istanbul on July 27, it has authorized a total 21 outbound and 15 inbound ships through what is known as a maritime humanitarian corridor in the Black Sea, which allows safe exports of Ukraine’s grains and Russian fertilizers.

Countries that have received those commercial shipments so far included Türkiye, South Korea, China, Ireland, Italy, Djibouti and Romania.

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By J. Tuyet Nguyen

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