Wheat prices
have risen sharply on global markets after Russia said it would treat ships
heading for Ukrainian ports as potential military targets.
Moscow pulled
out of a UN deal on Monday that ensured safe passage for grain shipments
crossing the Black Sea.
For the past
three nights Russia has bombarded Ukraine's grain facilities in Odesa and other
cities.
Moscow also
warned that from Thursday any ships going there would be seen as siding with
"the Kyiv regime".
White House
spokesman Adam Hodge suggested Russia was planning to hit civilian ships and
blame Ukraine.
Russia had laid
more sea mines in the approaches to Ukrainian ports, he said, as part of a
co-ordinated Russian effort to justify attacking civilian ships.
A
The Kremlin did
not immediately respond to the allegation.
Wheat prices on
the European stock exchange soared by 8.2% on Wednesday from the previous day,
to €253.75 (£220; $284) per tonne, while corn prices were up 5.4%.
US wheat futures
jumped 8.5% - their highest daily rise since just after Russia's February 2022
invasion of Ukraine.
Earlier
President Vladimir Putin said he would return to the international grain
agreement immediately if his demands were met. They include lifting sanctions
on sales of Russian grain and fertiliser and reconnecting Russia's agricultural
bank to a global payment system.
Russian air
strikes on the Black Sea coastal cities meanwhile continued for a third night,
leaving more than 20 people wounded in Odesa and Mykolaiv.
Mykolaiv
regional governor Vitaliy Kim said 19 people had been hurt in the regional
capital, including children. Apartment blocks were targeted and in one building
the second and top floor were partially destroyed.
Several people
were also wounded in Odesa, when a four-storey building was badly damaged.
Odesa was targeted for the third night running |
Russian-occupied Crimea was also hit overnight, according to its Russian-appointee leader Sergei Aksyonov.
A teenage girl
was killed when a drone hit four administrative buildings in the north-west of
the peninsula.
Crimea has been
hit on three consecutive days. A suspected Ukrainian drone attack from the sea
damaged a bridge from the occupied peninsula to southern Russia on Monday. Part
of a key motorway was also shut on Tuesday because of explosions at a nearby
munitions depot.
Ukraine's
President Volodymyr Zelensky has accused Russia of deliberately targeting grain
export infrastructure and putting vulnerable countries at risk.
Agriculture
Minister Mykola Solskyi said strikes had destroyed 60,000 tonnes of grain and
damaged considerable parts of the grain export infrastructure.
The defence
ministry in Moscow said that from Thursday all vessels sailing on the Black Sea
to Ukrainian ports would be regarded as "potential carriers of military
cargo" and that the ships' "flag states... will be considered to be
involved in the Ukrainian conflict on the side of the Kyiv regime".
A grain ship that left a Ukrainian port earlier this week |
On Wednesday Mr Putin accused the West of using the grain deal as "political blackmail". Moscow has accused Ukraine of using the Black Sea grain corridor for "combat purposes".
Ukraine's
options for exporting grain by rail are also very limited: rail capacity is
smaller than shipping volumes and several EU countries in Eastern Europe are
blocking Ukrainian grain, in order to protect their own farmers.
Marex Capital
analyst Charlie Sernatinger said Russia's threatened escalation could "cut
all of the waterborne grain shipments off from the Black Sea, both Russian, and
Ukrainian", which would cause a similar situation to that at the start of
the war.
Ukrainian MP
Oleksiy Goncharenko called on the UK, US, France and Turkey to protect the
grain ships with military convoys and provide Odesa with air defences.
"Clearly
Putin has an aim to disrupt food security and cause a peak in world food
prices, which in the developed countries will lead to inflation, but in
developing countries that will lead to social destabilisation, starvation and
new waves of migrants."
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