E.U. Cries Foul as Poland and
Hungary Ban Ukraine Grain Imports
The European Union lifted tariffs on Ukrainian
grain last year. But farmers say they are suffering from a glut of produce in Europe.
The European
Union has criticized bans by Poland and Hungary on imports of Ukrainian grain and
other foods over the weekend, saying the unilateral moves were “unacceptable.”
The bloc,
of which Poland and Hungary are member states, lifted tariffs on Ukrainian grain
last year to help transport it to the rest of the world amid Russia’s invasion,
but the exports have led to a glut of produce in Europe. As a result, farmers in
Poland, Hungary and other nations have seen their incomes plummet.
Hungary’s
agriculture minister said on Saturday that “in the absence of meaningful E.U. measures,”
his country would follow Poland in restricting Ukrainian grain imports until the
end of June, according to Hungarian news reports. The announcement came after Warsaw
reached a deal with Kyiv on Friday to strictly limit and, for a time, halt Ukrainian
grain deliveries to Poland.
That
deal was expected to affect Ukrainian grain, wheat, corn and some other produce,
but on Saturday, Poland expanded it to include dozens of other types of food. Poland’s
economic development and technology minister, Waldemar Buda, said in a tweet on
Sunday that the measure would also prevent the transit of Ukrainian products through
Poland.
A spokesperson
for the European Commission, the European Union’s executive arm, said in an email
on Sunday that such a trade policy was a matter of “E.U. exclusive competence,”
meaning that only the bloc could adopt legally binding decisions. “Unilateral actions
are not acceptable,” the statement said.
The announcements
from Hungary and Poland come as Russia has expressed doubts about extending the
Black Sea grain deal, which the United Nations and Turkey brokered last year and
was scheduled to expire in the next few weeks. The agreement, which allows wartime
grain shipments to leave Ukraine’s Black Sea ports, has been crucial for alleviating
global food shortages and limiting price increases.
The Black
Sea deal was renewed in March, but the United Nations did not say how long it would
last. Russia, which at the time said the agreement was valid through May 18, has
expressed dissatisfaction with the deal for months because of Western sanctions
that have hindered its own food and fertilizer exports. The agreement would become
even more vital if Ukraine could not ship grain and foodstuffs over land routes
in Eastern Europe, through Poland and Hungary.
There
had been signs in recent weeks that Ukraine’s food exports were becoming a sore
point in relations with Poland, one of its staunchest allies amid the war. Last
month, the prime ministers of Poland, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria and Slovakia called
on the European Union to take steps to curb the influx of Ukrainian produce that
had been pushing down prices and said Europe should consider reinstating tariffs.
Facing
a general election later this year and worried that discontent among farmers could
erode support among its predominantly conservative, rural base, Poland’s governing
Law and Justice party has made solving the grain issue a priority.
Poland’s
new agriculture minister, Robert Telus, whose predecessor
resigned this month, during a state visit to Poland by President Volodymyr Zelensky
of Ukraine, said at a party convention on Saturday that halting grain deliveries
would act as a “shield” for Polish farmers.
Ukraine’s
agriculture minister, Mykola Solskyi,
said on Saturday that Kyiv understood that its agricultural exports represented
“tough competition” for other countries, but added, “The Ukrainian farmer is in
the most difficult situation.” Mr. Solskyi was expected
to travel to Poland on Monday to continue talks on the issue.
As Ukraine
faced pushback on its grain exports, on the battlefield over the weekend, the Russian
assault remained focused on the eastern front near the towns of Lyman and Bakhmut, according to a statement from the Ukrainian Army’s
general staff on Sunday.
“The
battles for the city of Bakhmut do not stop,” the statement
said.
The fight
for the devastated city has been grinding on for months, claiming many lives on
both sides, though the toll so far has most likely been much higher for Russia’s
forces.
Early
on Saturday, Russia’s Defense Ministry claimed that the
Wagner mercenary force had taken control of two areas on the northern and southern
outskirts of Bakhmut. The remaining Ukrainian forces in
the city, the Russian ministry said on the Telegram messaging app, were “retreating
and deliberately destroying the city’s infrastructure and residential buildings
to slow down the advance of Russian troops.”
Those
claims could not be immediately verified.
As of
late last week, Ukrainian soldiers were defending a shrinking half-circle of destroyed
buildings in a western neighborhood of Bakhmut, about 20 blocks wide in the 16-square-mile city.
Ukraine’s
army is determined to hold out, even as allies have quietly questioned the rationale
for sustaining significant casualties in a city that has been reduced to rubble.
For both sides, Bakhmut has taken on a symbolic significance,
military analysts say.
Attention
is also increasingly turning to the war’s southern front, where Russian forces hold
a belt of land along the Sea of Azov in the Zaporizhzhia,
Kherson and Donetsk regions. In recent weeks, Russia has been building up its troop
numbers, planting land mines and erecting defensive barriers along a front line east of the Dnipro River in the expectation that Ukraine
could launch a counteroffensive there.
The Russian
authorities have started to evacuate children from the city of Enerhodar in the Zaporizhzhia region
to Crimea, according to a statement posted by Ukraine’s state nuclear company, Energoatom, on Telegram Sunday. The claim, which could not be
independently confirmed, echoed other recent statements by Ukrainian officials about
evacuations from other parts of the Russian-occupied south. Enerhodar
lies next to the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant, which
is in Russian hands.
Russian
officials have deported thousands of Ukrainian children to Russia or to Russian-held
territory under the guise of evacuating them from the threat of fighting, Ukrainian
officials say. The International Criminal Court last month issued an arrest warrant
for President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia for war crimes, saying he bore criminal
responsibility for the abduction and deportation of Ukrainian children.
Russia,
meanwhile, has continued shelling towns and cities behind the front line. On Friday,
a Russian missile strike on a residential area in the city of Sloviansk in eastern
Ukraine killed 11 people and injured 22 others. The Ukrainian authorities said on
Sunday that four more people remained under the rubble.
Earlier
on Sunday, two teenagers were killed when a missile hit a building in the community
of Snihurivka, in the Mykolaiv region, the head of the
military administration there, Vitaliy Kim, said on Telegram.
Two others
were killed and two more were injured in a strike on Sunday on the part of the Kherson
region under Ukraine’s control, Oleksandr Prokudin, the
head of the region’s military administration, said on Telegram.
Russian
attacks over the past few days have been met with particular outrage in Ukraine,
given that it is Holy Week for Orthodox Christians. In addition, 130 Ukrainian prisoners
of war were returned to the country in an Easter swap with Russia, Andriy Yermak, the head of Mr. Zelensky’s office, said on Telegram.
He did not say how many prisoners had been returned to Russia.
Mr. Zelensky
referred to Easter in an impassioned speech released overnight, in which he held
out hope that the country could reclaim all of the territory it lost.
“The
sun will shine in the south, the sun will shine in the east and the sun will shine
in Crimea,” he said.