Turkey to host Ukraine grain talks next week: report
Turkey next week will host Russian, Ukrainian and UN officials for talks aimed at resuming stalled grain exports across the Black Sea, local media reported Tuesday.
The meeting in Istanbul would be preceded by a visit to Moscow by a Turkish defence delegation this week, NTV television and CNN Turk cited Turkish presidential sources as saying.
A Turkish delegation intends to visit Russia within a week to discuss the "grain issue," Turkish television reported citing sources.
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And a meeting of Turkey, Russia, Ukraine and the UN on the "grain issue" will be held in Istanbul next week, according to the channel's report. pic.twitter.com/39s5oq2cqF
Millions of tonnes of wheat and other grains are currently stuck in Ukrainian ports, either blockaded or occupied by Russian forces, and vessels face the danger of mines.
According to the Turkish foreign ministry, the UN has submitted a plan to facilitate exports that would see safe corridors set up around known mines.
The plan would not require lengthy and complex demining operations, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said last week.
The initiative has been backed by the European Union but received a cautious response from Kyiv, which is looking for ways to export the grain by land, without talking to the Russians.
Cavusoglu this month hosted his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov in Ankara to discuss the issue, but without conclusive results.
The Turkish reports did not specify who would attend next week's meeting.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan discussed grain deliveries with UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Monday.
Turkey is "exerting joint efforts with the United Nations for the export of Ukrainian grain via the Black Sea in a bid to avert a global food crisis," Erodgan's office said on Tuesday.