Current:Home > reviewsUkraine says Russia hits key grain export route with drones in attack on "global food security" -Pinnacle Profit Strategies
Ukraine says Russia hits key grain export route with drones in attack on "global food security"
View
Date:2025-04-15 06:46:03
Dnipro, Ukraine — Russia unleashed a drone attack Wednesday on a key river port in southern Ukraine, again targeting vital infrastructure used to export grain from the country. The Reuters news agency quoted sources as saying operations at Ukraine's Izmail port, just across the Danube river from Romania, had to be suspended due to damage caused by the strike.
The river port had become the primary route for grain exports from Ukraine since Russia once again blocked shipping from Ukraine's Black Sea ports last month, when Moscow pulled out of a year-long agreement to enable the shipments to continue.
"Unfortunately, there are damages," Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in a social media post after the drone attack on Monday. "The most significant ones are in the south of the country. Russian terrorists have once again attacked ports, grain, global food security."
Reuters said the attack had sent global food prices rising again — a direct impact of Russia's blockade and attacks on Ukrainian ports that officials in the country, in Washington and at the United Nations had warned about since Moscow pulled out of the Black Sea Grain Initiative on July 17.
The U.N. Security Council, currently chaired by the U.S. delegation, was scheduled to hold an open debate on Thursday morning in New York on "famine and conflict-induced global food insecurity," which was likely to focus on Russia's actions in Ukraine and their impact on global food prices.
Ukrainian officials said more than 10 Russian drones were brought down by air defenses over the capital city of Kyiv on Wednesday as the others slammed into the Danube port, which is in the far southwest corner of the country.
The salvo of explosive-laden drones came a day after Ukrainian drones struck a skyscraper in Moscow for the second time in two days. Wednesday was the fourth consecutive day of back-and-forth drone strikes between Russia and Ukraine.
Kyiv's mayor said anti-aircraft units had taken out all of the drones that were aimed at the capital, but debris fell over several districts, causing some damage to the facades of buildings. There were no deaths or injuries reported from the latest Russian aerial assault, however.
In attacks across Ukraine on Tuesday, four Russian drones hit a college in the northeast city of Kharkiv and shelling blew the roof off a hospital in Kherson, in the southeast. That attack killed a doctor on his first day at work and left five of his colleagues wounded, according to Ukrainian officials.
The strikes are seen as Russia's answer to Ukraine's attempt to bring the war to Russian soil, as Zelenskyy himself pledged to do over the weekend. So far, Russia's attacks have proven much deadlier.
- In:
- Food Emergency
- War
- Ukraine
- Russia
- Drone
- Vladimir Putin
- Volodymyr Zelenskyy
- Kyiv
Ramy Inocencio is a foreign correspondent for CBS News based in London and previously served as Asia correspondent based in Beijing.
TwitterveryGood! (34311)
Related
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Daddy Yankee retiring from music to devote his life to Christianity
- Chris Evert will miss Australian Open while being treated for cancer recurrence
- Thousands demonstrate against antisemitism in Berlin as Germany grapples with a rise in incidents
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- A year after lifting COVID rules, China is turning quarantine centers into apartments
- Baku to the future: After stalemate, UN climate talks will be in Azerbaijan in 2024
- Some Seattle cancer center patients are receiving threatening emails after last month’s data breach
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- Texas Supreme Court pauses lower court’s order allowing pregnant woman to have an abortion
Ranking
- Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
- A Soviet-era statue of a Red Army commander taken down in Kyiv
- Divers recover the seventh of 8 crew members killed in crash of a US military Osprey off Japan
- Elon Musk restores X account of conspiracy theorist Alex Jones
- 'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
- The History of Mackenzie Phillips' Rape and Incest Allegations Against Her Father John Phillips
- Workshop collapses in southern China, killing 6 and injuring 3
- Hong Kong holds first council elections under new rules that shut out pro-democracy candidates
Recommendation
Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
What it means for an oil producing country, the UAE, to host UN climate talks
Baku to the future: After stalemate, UN climate talks will be in Azerbaijan in 2024
Where the Republican presidential candidates stand on Israel and Ukraine funding
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
The EU wants to put a tax on emissions from imports. It’s irked some other nations at COP28
Republicans pressure Hunter Biden to testify next week as House prepares to vote on formalizing impeachment inquiry against Joe Biden
'Wait Wait' for December 9, 2023: With Not My Job guest Fred Schneider