Russia’s Agriculture Minister, Dmitry Patrushev has been quoted to have confirmed that his country will start delivering its grains to African countries within a month to six weeks.
Russian news agency, Interfax reported on Friday that the food shipping processes were being concluded. “We are now finalising all the documents. I think that within a month – or a month and a half – they will start,” Interfax quoted Patrushev as saying.
President Vladimir Putin promised Africa tens of thousands of tons of grain despite Western sanctions in July at the Russia-Africa summit in St Petersburg. Russia has suffered an economic boycott from most Western countries after it invaded Ukraine in November 2022. According to him, the sanctions made it harder for Moscow to export its grain and fertilizers.
“We will be ready to provide Burkina Faso, Zimbabwe, Mali, Somalia, Central African Republic and Eritrea with 25-50,000 tonnes of free grain each in the next three to four months,” Putin told a Russia-Africa summit at the time.
Meanwhile, the United Nations Secretary-General, Antonio Guterres has called the promised grain “a handful of donations.”
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 has triggered a global food crisis. Russia in July also quit a year-old agreement that had allowed Ukraine to ship grain from its Black Sea ports.
However, Putin, in order to fulfill what he claimed was Moscow’s crucial role in ensuring global food security, had stated that Russia was prepared to replace Ukrainian grain exports to Africa on both a commercial and assistance basis.