Following the collapse of the Black Sea grain deal, Ukraine’s senior diplomat, Dmytro Kuleba is currently in Liberia on his third wartime tour of Africa.
According to the foreign ministry, Kuleba’s visit is a first for Ukrainian diplomacy and comes as Kyiv makes a deliberate effort to counter Russian influence in Africa and the larger “Global South.”
Moscow is getting ready to convene a meeting with leaders from the continent this week. The Russia-Africa summit will take place in the Russian city of St. Petersburg on Thursday and Friday, and the Kremlin has announced that 17 African heads of state will speak there.
Russia has been accused by Ukraine of ruining its grain industry in order to position itself as a one-of-a-kind grain provider. According to the report, Moscow is applying pressure in an effort to gain the easing of some sanctions and limits, as well as the resumed shipment of Russian ammonia.
Kuleba will hold talks with Liberian leaders to discuss “ensuring the export of Ukrainian grain to Africa” as well as the vision for peace in Ukraine set out by President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, the ministry said.
“Against the backdrop of Russia’s food blackmail, Ukraine is maximizing its consolidation of support from African countries to continue exporting Ukrainian grain to the Black Sea,” Ukraine’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson, Oleg Nikolenko said.
The Black Sea grain deal strives to ensure that Russian and Ukrainian food and fertilizer reach international markets while also helping to stabilize the world’s skyrocketing food prices. Also, it authorizes the commercial export of fertilizer, including ammonia, and food from Ukraine’s three significant Black Sea ports— Odesa, Chornomorsk, Yuzhny/Pivdennyi.