Pakistan urges Russia to restore Black Sea grain deal
KARACHI, Pakistan (AA): Pakistan has urged Russia to restore the Black Sea grain deal to ensure the food security of the developing world.
Addressing a press conference with his visiting Ukrainian counterpart Dmytro Kuleba in Islamabad, Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Bilawal Zardari observed that the suspension of the UN and Türkiye-brokered deal will further raise inflation and food security challenges in the developing countries.
“The Black Sea grain initiative was heralded at the time of its signing, and most of the developing world breathed a sigh of relief,” Zardari added.
“The grain deal was a positive undertaking. It is not only in our interest but in the interest of the entire developing world that the initiative is restored,” he maintained.
Islamabad is a major importer of Ukrainian grain.
He called upon all the stakeholders, including the UN, Russia, Ukraine, and Türkiye, to work together to restore the deal.
The Ukrainian top diplomat, for his part, accused Russia of trying to increase its share in global grain exports by withdrawing from the Black Sea grain initiative.
Just two days after withdrawing from the accord, he went on to charge that Moscow had bombed Ukraine’s key port involved in grain exports under the accord.
“On one terminal alone, Russian jets destroyed 60,000 tons of grain,” he alleged.
Earlier on Monday Russia had suspended its participation in the deal, which it signed last July along with Türkiye, the UN and Ukraine to resume grain exports from three Ukrainian Black Sea ports paused after the Russia-Ukraine war began in February last year. Even when renewing the deal in previous months, Moscow complained that the Russian part of the agreement was not being implemented.
‘No arms supplies’
Islamabad’s top diplomat said his country wants a peaceful solution to the Russia-Ukraine conflict through “dialogue and diplomacy.”
Replying to a question, Zardari and Kuleba rejected reports regarding arms supplies to Kyiv by Islamabad during its war against Russia.
“These are baseless and unfounded reports by a certain section of the media,” Zardari said, insisting that Islamabad has not concluded any defense agreement with Kyiv since the beginning of the conflict, and will continue to maintain its “nonpartisan” position.
“I can confirm that,” Kuleba emphasized.
Although the two countries have had military and technical cooperation since 1996, there is no recent arms deal with Islamabad, Kuleba said.
“We want Pakistan to live by our side in a way it finds suitable for itself. We know that Pakistan supports our territorial integrity,” he maintained.
Kuleba hailed Pakistan for sending humanitarian aid for the war-torn Ukrainian people, which “was not an easy decision in terms of the domestic economic situation.”
He also offered his country’s assistance to Islamabad in the fields of food security and digitalization.
Kyiv’s top diplomat had arrived in Islamabad on Thursday on a two-day official visit to Pakistan.
Kuleba, who is the first-ever Ukrainian foreign minister to visit Pakistan since the establishment of diplomatic relations in 1992, was received by his Pakistani counterpart upon his arrival at the Foreign Ministry, an official statement said.
The two planted a “tree of friendship,” in the Foreign Ministry’s garden.
Later, the two foreign ministers led their countries’ respective delegations in official talks.