Ukraine: World Food Program calls for Odessa ports to reopen

The World Food Program (WFP) on Friday called for the reopening of ports in the Odessa region of southern Ukraine so that products from which millions of people around the world depend can be exported.

“At the moment, Ukraine’s barns are full. At the same time, 44 million people around the world are heading for famine. We need to open these ports so that goods can leave Ukraine,” said UN chief David Beazley. his announcement.

“People are demanding it because hundreds of millions of people around the world are dependent on these supplies,” he said.

“I urge all parties involved to allow these products to leave Ukraine to reach where they are desperately needed, so that we can avoid the imminent threat of famine,” he said.

Ukrainian ports are not operating properly due to the war and millions of tons of cereals remain in barns in Odessa and in other Ukrainian ports on the Black Sea. If the ports do not open, Ukrainian farmers will have nowhere to store the next summer crop, according to the PAM, which will lead to a waste of produce.

An estimated 276 million people worldwide were facing acute hunger in early 2022 and that number is expected to rise by 47 million if the war in Ukraine continues, with the largest increase in sub-Saharan Africa, the PAM said.

Prior to the war, most of Ukraine’s products were exported from the country’s seven Black Sea ports, the UN agency said.

Source: AMPE

Source: Capital

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