Ukraine questions legal basis of Crimea’s grain exports

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Published: July 10, 2014

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Moscow | Reuters — Ukraine protested over recent grain exports from Crimea on Thursday, questioning their legal basis following Russia’s annexation of the region and fuelling tensions between the two countries.

Russia and Ukraine are the region’s main global grain exporters and rivals to supply customers in North Africa and the Middle East. Russia announced export deals from Crimea earlier on Thursday to Saudi Arabia and Cyprus.

Crimea has supplied 22,648 tonnes of barley to Saudi Arabia and 4,603 tonnes of barley to Cyprus for the period starting from June 23, Russia’s Veterinary and Phytosanitary Surveillance Service (VPSS) said in a statement on its website.

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Michelle Ross is a research officer with the Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics at the University of Saskatchewan. She and Richard Gray, professor at the University of Saskatchewan and Canadian Grain Policy Research Chair, are working on an agronomy resources survey that measures whether farmers and agrologists are aware of free tools like the Fusarium Headblight Maps, the Prairie Pest Monitoring Network and the Test Monitoring Network. The research will help direct producer funds to future agricultural science clusters.Photo Credit: Supplied

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VPSS did not name the supplier or whether other exports were planned from the region during the 2014-15 marketing year, which started July 1.

Ukraine questioned the legality of the exports.

“How they managed to export I don’t know, because it’s a sovereign territory of Ukraine,” Ukraine’s news agency Unian quoted Agriculture Minister Ihor Shvaika as saying.

“One can’t do it without our phytosanitary certificates.”

Crimea, which has several ports, is ready to export 400,000 to 500,000 tonnes of grain this year, or about half its expected harvest, the regional farm ministry has said.

— Reporting for Reuters by Polina Devitt in Moscow.

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