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Cargo ship from Ukraine defies Kremlin naval threat

The departure of the Hong Kong-flagged Joseph Schulte from Odesa raises the spectre of a standoff with Russian warships.

A grain warehouse heavily damaged by a Russian drone strike on the Danube on Wednesday. Picture: Reuters
A grain warehouse heavily damaged by a Russian drone strike on the Danube on Wednesday. Picture: Reuters

Kyiv said a civilian cargo vessel had left its southern port of Odesa on Wednesday despite warnings from Russia that its navy could target ships using Ukraine’s Black Sea export hubs.

The announcement, which raises the spectre of a standoff with Russian warships, came hours after Ukraine said it had ­liberated a village as part of a grinding push against Moscow’s forces along the southern front.

Russia issued its maritime threat after scuppering a key deal last month brokered by the UN and Turkey, which guaranteed safe passage for grain shipments from three Ukrainian ports.

Ukraine’s Infrastructure Minister Oleksandr Kubrakov said the Hong Kong-flagged Joseph Schulte left on Wednesday morning from Odesa, one of the three ports that participated in the now-scrapped grain export deal.

“The first vessel is moving along the temporary corridors ­established for civilian vessels to and from Black Sea ports,” he said.

Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky welcomed the development. “Ukraine has just made an important step toward restoring the freedom of navigation in the Black Sea,” he said on social media.

A damaged warehouses in a port on the Danube river. Picture: AFP
A damaged warehouses in a port on the Danube river. Picture: AFP

The Joseph Schulte was en route to Turkey on Thursday.

Since Russia’s exit from the accord in July, it has stepped up attacks on Ukraine’s Black Sea port infrastructure and facilities that Kyiv uses to export grain through the Danube river.

The governor of the Odesa region said on Wednesday that Russian attack drones had damaged grain facilities at a river port near the Romanian border.

The air force meanwhile said it had downed 13 Russian drones over Odesa and the neighbouring Mykolaiv region.

The incident sparked outrage in EU-member Romania, now a key hub for Ukrainian grain exports abroad since the collapse of the exports deal.

“I strongly condemn the attacks on innocent people, civilian infrastructure, including grain silos in the ports of Reni and Izmail,” Foreign Minister Luminita Odobescu said.

Mr Zelensky, too, condemned the strikes, adding that “every Russian attack on them is a blow to world food prices, it is a blow to social and political stability in ­Africa and Asia”.

“It is unacceptable,” said US State Department spokesman Vedant Patel. “Putin simply does not care about global food security.”

The possibility of a Russian attack on cargo ships in the Black Sea increased after Moscow said it fired warning shots from a warship at a cargo vessel heading towards Izmail last week.

The Joseph Schulte left Odesa hours after Kyiv announced the capture of Urozhaine, a small village in the industrial east.

Hong Kong-flagged Joseph Schulte leaves Odesa on Wednesday. Picture: Reuters
Hong Kong-flagged Joseph Schulte leaves Odesa on Wednesday. Picture: Reuters

“Our defenders are entrenched at the outskirts. The ­offensive continues,” Deputy Defence Minister Ganna Malyar said on social media.

Ms Malyar’s announcement comes a day after Russian Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu said Ukraine’s military resources were “almost exhausted”, despite receiving Western arms deliveries.

Moscow did not confirm the takeover, saying only that its forces were continuing to engage Ukraine’s forces around the village. The Donetsk region, which has faced the brunt of recent fighting, is one of four Ukrainian regions the Kremlin claimed to have annexed last year.

Russian attacks in the past 24 hours killed four people and wounded seven, its governor Pavlo Kyrylenko said. Further west of Urozhaine, Ukrainian forces have also been fighting to push back Russian forces from the north and south of the war-battered town of Bakhmut. Russian troops captured it in May after a months-long battle but Ukrainian forces began clawing back ground around its flanks.

Volunteers help local residents to evacuate a village, near Kupiansk. Picture: AFP
Volunteers help local residents to evacuate a village, near Kupiansk. Picture: AFP

Russian forces have been pushing back in the northern Kharkiv region, spurring local authorities to urge vulnerable residents to evacuate.

“I’m ill, and I have to get my grandson out,” 53-year-old evacuee Vira Vunesku said as she readied to leave the frontline town of Kupiansk.

“My condition is serious. I was in a hospital in Kharkiv, came back home for a bit, and now I have to leave again”.

Russia’s FSB security service said it had “eliminated” four Ukrainian “saboteurs” who tried to cross into Russia’s western Bryansk region from northern Ukraine, Russian news agencies reported.

AFP

Read related topics:Russia And Ukraine Conflict

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/cargo-ship-from-ukraine-defies-kremlin-naval-threat/news-story/517a2a0a5fc1bda4973f4c3564271ff0