MOSCOW: African leaders pressed Russian President Vladimir Putin on Friday to move ahead with their peace plan to end the Ukraine war and to renew a deal on the export of Ukrainian grain that Moscow tore up last week.

While not directly critical of Russia, their interventions on the second day of a summit with Putin were more concerted and forceful than those that African countries have voiced until now. They served as reminders to the Kremlin leader of the depth of African concern at the consequences of the war, especially rising food prices.

“This war must end. And it can only end on the basis of justice and reason,” African Union Commission Chairman Moussa Faki Mahamat told Putin and African leaders in St Petersburg. “The disruptions of energy and grain supplies must end immediately. The grain deal must be extended for the benefit of all the peoples of the world, Africans in particular.”

President Putin gave the African plan that floats a series of possible steps to defuse the conflict a polite but cool reception when African leaders had presented it to him last month. On Friday, he said Moscow respected the proposal and was ‘carefully’ studying it.

Putin says Moscow is ‘carefully’ studying the proposal

New realities

Russia has long said it is open to talks but that these must take account of the “new realities” on the ground, while Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy rejected the idea of a ceasefire now that would leave Russia in control of nearly a fifth of his country.

On the other hand, at least 15 people were injured in an explosion in the Russian city of Taganrog near the border with Ukraine, Rostov region governor Vasily Golubev said.

Also on Friday, Moscow said it downed a second Ukrainian missile over southwestern Russia, shortly after saying it intercepted a missile whose debris fell on the city of Taganrog. “Russian air defence systems intercepted a Ukrainian missile near the city of Azov in the Rostov region. Frag­ments of the downed Ukrainian missile fell in a deserted area,” the defence ministry said.

At the summit in St Petersburg, Congo Republic President Denis Sassou Nguesso said the African initiative “deserves the closest attention, it mustn’t be underestimated...We once again urgently call for the restoration of peace in Europe.”

Senegal’s President Macky Sall called for “a de-escalation to help create calm”, while South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said he hoped that “constructive engagement and negotiation” could bring an end to the conflict.

Responding to Mahamat, Putin said Russia was “grateful to our African friends for their attention to this problem” but it was Kyiv that was refusing to negotiate with him under a decree it passed shortly after he claimed last September to have annexed four Ukrainian regions that Russia partly controls.

Sisi urges grain deal revival

At the summit, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi urged Russia to revive the Black Sea grain deal which, until Moscow refused to renew it last week, had allowed Ukraine to export grain from its seaports despite the conflict.

Sisi, whose country is a big buyer of grain via the Black Sea route, told the summit it was “essential to reach agreement” on reviving the deal.

Putin responded by arguing, as he has in the past, that rising world food prices were a consequence of Western policy mistakes long predating the Ukraine war. He has repeatedly said Russia quit the Black Sea agreement last week because it was not getting grain to the poorest countries and the West was not keeping its side of the bargain.

Since withdrawing from the deal, Russia has bombed Ukrainian ports and grain depots, prompting accusations from Ukraine and the West that it is using food as a weapon of war, and global grain prices have risen again.

Earlier on Thursday, Putin promised to deliver free Russian grain in the next several months to six of the countries attending the summit.

Published in Dawn, July 29th, 2023

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