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Putin might have started food fight but rest of the world can still win

Ukraine's Black Sea ports are blocked by mines to protect the shoreline from attack by Russia's navy, which is also bottling up shipments

poverty, food, grain
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Wealthy nations sanctioning Russia must make clear they recognize that the concern over global hunger is not unfounded, freedom is not free.

Clara Ferreira Marques | Bloomberg
Russian forces have bombed grain silos and farms and plundered Ukrainian wheat, which US diplomats say Moscow is now trying to sell on. Ukraine’s Black Sea ports are blocked by mines to protect the shoreline from attack by Russia’s navy, which is also bottling up shipments. And yet, if President Vladimir Putin is to be believed, Western selfishness and sanctions are to blame for the current food crisis that is driving up prices — not Russia’s invasion of one of the world’s largest exporters of wheat, maize and sunflower oil.
 
Putin is attempting to blackmail the West into lifting punitive

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