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NATO, Ukraine to discuss Black Sea grain issue at Zelensky's request

NATO and Ukraine are scheduled to hold discussions next week, focusing on security matters concerning the Black Sea. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky specifically requested this meeting to address concerns related to the operation of a corridor for grain exports in the region.

Reuters DIPLOMACY
Published July 23,2023
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NATO and Ukraine are to discuss security in the Black Sea next week, particularly the operation of a corridor for grain exports, at the request of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, the Western alliance said on Saturday.

NATO spokesperson Oanu Lungescu said the NATO-Ukraine Council, set up at this month's alliance summit, would discuss the situation following Russia's withdrawal from the year-old deal overseeing grain exports from Ukrainian ports.

Zelenskiy said he had requested the meeting in a telephone conversation with NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg.

Lungescu said the two men discussed Russia's pullout from the deal and its "continued attempts to weaponise food, which are affecting millions of vulnerable people around the world".

The meeting, she said, would take place at the level of ambassadors. The council's inaugural meeting, at NATO's summit in Vilnius, was attended by heads of state or government.

Zelensky, in his nightly video address, had said earlier that the council brought cooperation with NATO "to a new, more advanced level, the NATO-Ukraine Council, and this mechanism can have an impact.

"I proposed to Jens that the council be convened without delay for relevant crisis consultations. The meeting will take place in the coming days. We can overcome the security crisis in the Black Sea."

Russia said it had withdrawn from the accord on grounds that Western countries had ignored its demands to ensure Moscow's food and fertilizer exports. Moscow said ships heading to Ukraine's Black Sea ports could be considered military targets.

The United Nations' aid chief told the U.N. Security Council on Friday that a spike in grain prices since Russia quit the deal "potentially threatens hunger and worse for millions of people."