Sixteen ships loaded with grain were set to depart from the Ukrainian port of Odesa, as tensions flair up again over a missile attack that killed dozens of Ukrainian prisoners of war.
The office of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on Saturday the departure of the ships was imminent.
Al Jazeera’s John Hendren, reporting from Odesa, said that 25 million tonnes of grains were set to be sent to Africa, the Middle East and other parts of the world as part of a UN-backed grain export deal signed between Moscow and Kyiv on July 22,
“They’ve got a safe channel mapped out for those ships to leave Ukraine,” Hendren said, adding
Zelenskyy visited the Chernomorsk port in the Odesa region on Friday to watch crews prepare to export grain.
“The first vessel, the first ship is being loaded since the beginning of the war,” Zelenskyy told reporters.
Despite the Ukrainian leader’s hopeful words, no ships have yet left Ukrainian ports.
“One of the issues that they may be facing is that those waters are mined and people have been injured and killed,” Hendren said.
Sailing the ships “also requires a certain amount of trust between warring nations,” he added, which was further undermined on Friday by an attack on a pre-trial detention centre in Olenivka, in the separatist-held region of Donetsk.
Russia accused Kyiv of hitting the jail with US-made HIMARS missile system, killing dozens of detainees, including some whom Kyiv had considered war heroes for defending Mariupol’s Azovstal steel plant.
Source: Al Jazeera

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