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4-way meeting in Istanbul agrees to set up coordination center to facilitate Ukrainian grain exports


A meeting between Turkish, Ukrainian, Russian and UN officials on Wednesday agreed to establish a coordination center in Istanbul to facilitate Ukrainian grain exports, the Turkish defense minister said.

The four-way meeting held in Istanbul was “positive and constructive,” Hulusi Akar said after the meeting.

“In today's meeting, an important step was taken to contribute to the solution of the food crisis, all details regarding the safe shipment of grain and other food-loaded vessels by sea were discussed,” Akar said.

He said the participants found common ground with regards to the technical issues, such as navigational safety on transfer routes and joint controls at entry and exit of ports.

Representatives of Ukraine and Russia are set to gather in Türkiye next week to review the details of the agreement and also sign relevant documents, making the deal official, he added.

"We see that the parties are willing to sort this problem out," Akar said. "We will try to reach a conclusion by carrying out this (plan) in coordination with the UN."

Türkiye, which has made contributions to regional and world peace, continues to fulfill its responsibility to resolve the food crisis, Akar said, and thanked the Russian, Ukrainian and UN delegations for their input.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy welcomed the progress made in the meeting and expressed gratitude to the UN and Türkiye.

"We are indeed making significant efforts to restore the supply of food to the world market," Zelenskyy said in a statement. "And I am grateful to the United Nations and Turkey for their respective efforts."

"The success of this story is needed not only by our state, but also, without exaggeration, by the whole world," he added.

“If it is possible to remove the Russian threat to shipping in the Black Sea, it will remove the severity of the global food crisis,” the Ukrainian president said.

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