Russia sticks to demands on Black Sea grain deal, rejects UN proposal
The Black Sea deal was brokered by Türkiye and the United Nations in July 2022 to enable Ukraine export grain by sea and help ease a global food crisis.

Turkish President Erdogan has backed Russia's concerns over the grain deal. Photo: Reuters
Russia has said that it was sticking to its conditions for a return to the Black Sea grain deal which it quit in July.
In particular, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Saturday, Russia needed its state agricultural bank - and not a subsidiary of the bank, as proposed by the United Nations - to be reconnected to the international SWIFT bank payments system.
"All our conditions are perfectly well known. They do not need interpretation, they are absolutely concrete and all this is absolutely achievable," Peskov said.
"Therefore Russia maintains its responsible, clear and consistent position, which has been repeatedly voiced by the president."
The Black Sea deal was brokered by Türkiye and the United Nations in July 2022 to enable Ukraine to export grain by sea despite the war and help ease a global food crisis.
It was accompanied by an agreement to facilitate Russia's own exports of food and fertiliser, which Moscow says has not been fulfilled. Since quitting the grain deal, Russia has repeatedly bombed Ukrainian ports and grain stores.
Moscow's restatement of its position came five days after President Vladimir Putin met his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan and discussed the grain issue.
Erdogan said after the meeting that Ukraine should "soften its approaches" in talks over reviving the deal, and export more grain to Africa rather than Europe.
Ukraine said it would not alter its stand and would not be hostage to "Russian blackmail".
Banking issue
Russia says its grain and fertiliser exports, though not specifically sanctioned by the West, face barriers in practice because of sanctions affecting port access, insurance, logistics and payments - including the removal of agricultural bank Rosselkhozbank from SWIFT.
The UN has proposed that a Luxembourg-based subsidiary of Rosselkhozbank could immediately apply to SWIFT to "effectively enable access" for the bank within 30 days.
"The agreements say that SWIFT should be open to Rosselkhozbank, and not to its subsidiary. That is, we are talking about the need to r eturn to the basics, to the agreements that were in place originally and which we were promised would be fulfilled," Peskov said.
"The president clearly said that the moment they are fulfilled, then the deal will immediately resume. But not vice versa," he added.