1st ship to carry UN's WFP grain to Africa arrives in Ukraine
A harvester collects wheat in the village of Zghurivka, Ukraine, Aug. 9, 2022. (AP File Photo)


The first vessel carrying grain for the people in Africa from Ukraine as part of a recently signed deal mediated by Türkiye and the United Nations to prevent a global food crisis docked in Ukraine on Friday, the United Nations said.

The MV Brave Commander, which left Istanbul on Wednesday, arrived in Yuzhne, east of Odessa on the Black Sea coast.

U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric said the will carry its wheat to the Horn of Africa nation of Djibouti, where it will be unloaded and sent on to Ethiopia.

"The wheat will go to the World Food Program’s operations in Ethiopia, supporting the Horn of Africa drought response as the threat of famine stalks the drought-hit region," he said. "It is one of many areas around the world where the near-complete halt of Ukrainian grain and food on the global market has made life even harder for the families already struggling with rising hunger."

For months, fighting and a Russian blockade meant grain produced in Ukraine, known as the world's breadbasket, piled up in silos, sending food prices sky-high and leading to hunger in Africa, the Middle East and parts of Asia. In recent days, several ships carrying grain have left Ukrainian ports under the new deal – but most of the shipments were of animal feed and went to Türkiye or Western Europe.

But on Friday, European Council President Charles Michel said that the first shipment by the U.N.’s World Food Programme of humanitarian aid for Africa would soon load and then depart, which is being brought to life through the Türkiye-brokered grain corridor agreement between Russia, Ukraine, Türkiye and the U.N. In the afternoon, MarineTraffic, a tracking website, showed the ship headed toward southern Ukraine,

The ship is set to bring grain to Ethiopia. Even though the European Union is not a direct party to the agreement, Michele urged that "cooperation of all involved actors is key" to alleviating food shortages and hunger around the world. The Brave Commander is expected to carry take more than 23,000 metric tons, according to Ukraine's infrastructure ministry – only a tiny portion of some 20 million tons of grain that has languished in Ukraine. The ship was expected to dock in the Horn of Africa nation of Djibouti.

Ethiopia, along with neighboring Somalia and Kenya, is in the grips of the driest drought in four decades in the Horn of Africa. Thousands of people across the region have died from hunger or illness this year. Forecasts for the coming weeks indicate that for the first time, a fifth straight rainy season will fail to materialize. Millions of livestock, the basis of many families’ wealth and food security, have died.

"Millions of households will struggle to cope with these shocks" in Ethiopia, according to a new assessment by the Famine Early Warning Systems Network. "Food assistance needs are at record levels, with up to 15 million people in need of food assistance."

While one shipment is not expected to have a major effect on the crisis, the World Food Program heralded it as an "important step" in getting Ukrainian grain out of the country to the worst-affected countries.

While the news provided a rare glimmer of hope, it was offset by the incessant fighting in the eastern Ukrainian region of the Donbass, where much of the fighting has been centered as the war approaches the six-month mark. The town of Kramatorsk was hit by 11 rockets overnight. Seven people were killed and 14 others were wounded in and around the town, which remains cut off from gas, running water and electricity.

"Three quarters of the population of the region have already been evacuated, because incessant shelling by the Russian army doesn’t leave civilians any choice – it’s either to die from wounds, or from hunger and cold in winter," Donetsk regional Governor Pavlo Kyrylenko told Ukrainian television.

The threat of a nuclear accident also loomed in eastern Ukraine where shelling has hit an area that is home to Europe's largest nuclear plant.

Shelling near the Russian-controlled Zaporizhzhia facility continued overnight. Russian forces fired more than 40 rockets at the city of Marhanets, which is across the Dnieper river from the power plant. Three people were wounded in the most recent shelling, including a 12-year-old boy. The neighboring city of Nikopol was shelled as well, said Valentyn Reznichenko, the governor of the Dnipropetrovsk region.

The U.N. nuclear chief warned late Thursday that "very alarming" military activity at the nuclear plant could lead to dangerous consequences.

International Atomic Energy Agency Director-General Rafael Grossi urged Russia and Ukraine, who blame each other for the attacks at the plant, to immediately allow nuclear experts to assess the damage and evaluate safety and security at the sprawling nuclear complex where the situation "has been deteriorating very rapidly."

He pointed to shelling and several explosions at Zaporizhzhia last Friday that forced the shutdown of the electrical power transformer and two backup transformers, forcing the shutdown of one nuclear reactor.