President Vladimir Putin defended Russia’s withdrawal from the Black Sea grain deal at a summit with African leaders whose nations are feeling the impact of rising food prices stoked by his war in Ukraine.
(Bloomberg) — President Vladimir Putin defended Russia’s withdrawal from the Black Sea grain deal at a summit with African leaders whose nations are feeling the impact of rising food prices stoked by his war in Ukraine.
“We understand the importance of an uninterrupted food supply to African countries” including for political stability, Putin said at the opening Thursday of the Russia-Africa summit in St. Petersburg.
He blamed Western countries for the global food “crisis,” accusing them of “obstructing” Russia’s agricultural exports even as it’s shipping record volumes of wheat and fertilizer deliveries are recovering to pre-war levels.
Putin is meeting African leaders 10 days after Russia ended the Ukraine grain-export deal brokered by the United Nations and Turkey that had ensured safe passage of almost 33 million tons of crops via the Black Sea, helping to cool surging world food prices. The collapse of the accord threatens to intensify food-security concerns in Africa, where almost half of nations import more than a third of their wheat from Ukraine and Russia, according to the International Centre for Migration Policy Development.
“We are confronting a food crisis which is partly caused by the war between Russia and Ukraine,” the head of the African Union’s executive arm, Chadian politician Moussa Faki Mahamat, told Putin at a round-table meeting. “Africa is suffering negative consequences from this conflict.”
Wheat futures climbed Thursday after Ukraine said Russia fired two Kalibr cruise missiles at port infrastructure in the Odesa region, damaging equipment at a cargo terminal and increasing concerns over Black Sea grain supplies. They later steadied, but have risen more than 3% this week after Russia targeted a key river port in Ukraine with drones on Monday.
Putin told the summit’s plenary session that Russia is ready to send 25,000 to 50,000 tons of grain for free to Burkina Faso, Zimbabwe, Mali, Somalia, Central African Republic and Eritrea in the next three to four months.
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In contrast to the first Russia-Africa summit in 2019 when Putin met 43 African heads of state, the Kremlin said just 17 are due to attend the two-day event this time. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov blamed “unprecedented pressure” by the US and its allies for the low turn-out, while Putin’s foreign policy aide Yuri Ushakov highlighted participation by lower-level officials representing 49 countries.
It’s Putin’s first in-person gathering with foreign leaders since the mutiny by Wagner mercenaries in June that posed the most serious challenge to his nearly quarter-century rule. The future of Wagner’s activities in Africa, which has given the Kremlin a low-cost instrument to wield influence on the continent, is also in question amid the political fallout from the revolt.
Russia had repeatedly threatened to quit the grain agreement, claiming commitments to facilitate exports of Russian grain and fertilizers weren’t being fulfilled. Russia’s agriculture sector itself has not directly been sanctioned, though some exporters initially faced issues with financing and logistics due to the penalties.
Egypt, whose president, Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi, is attending the summit, criticized Russia’s withdrawal. A top Kenyan official labeled Putin’s decision a “stab on the back” for drought-afflicted African countries hit by rising food prices.
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, who’s due to meet with Putin on Saturday, has also previously highlighted the issue in talks with his Russian and Ukrainian counterparts.
Ramaphosa, whose ruling African National Congress has close ties to Moscow dating back to Soviet support for the anti-apartheid movement, called the summit a chance to “foster mutually beneficial cooperation” between Russia and Africa.
The Kremlin said Putin plans bilateral talks with all the African heads of state participating in the summit.
“Putin is imitating the Soviet Union but Putin’s Russia isn’t the USSR — it doesn’t have the soft power or money to buy loyalty,” said Andrei Kolesnikov of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. “His new friends in Africa are not proving reliable.”
The Russian leader conceded last week that he can’t travel to South Africa for a meeting in August of BRICS states, amid concerns over the risk of possible arrest for alleged war crimes in Ukraine under a warrant issued by the International Criminal Court. A peace initiative in Russia and Ukraine begun by a group of African leaders in June also appears to be going nowhere.
The limit of Russia’s reach is indicated by its Africa trade reaching only $18 billion in 2022, dwarfed by China’s $282 billion in commercial exchanges that year with African nations. Putin said trade had risen almost 35% in the first half of this year.
The St. Petersburg summit is important for the Kremlin despite the reduced attendance from African leaders, said Maria Snegovaya, senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington.
“Showcasing their remaining ties with certain regions is of crucial importance to Putin just to demonstrate that, first of all, Russia is not isolated; it remains an important international player, a great power,” she said.
African leaders will be looking to impress on Putin the need to resume grain exports through the Black Sea, said Sanusha Naidu, a Cape Town-based political analyst with the Institute for Global Dialogue.
“It is going to be problematic if this is just a summit that is mainly about Russia and not about Africa,” she said.
–With assistance from Julius Domoney, Mike Cohen, Paul Richardson, S’thembile Cele and Áine Quinn.
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