On June 20, European Union foreign ministers gathered to discuss ways to free millions of tonnes of grain stuck in Ukraine due toRussia's Black Sea port blockadeat a meeting in Luxembourg.
Reutersreportsthe EU supportsefforts by the United Nationsto broker a deal to resume Ukraine's sea exports in return for facilitating Russian food and fertilizer exports, but that would need Moscow's green light.
Turkey has good relationswith both Kyiv and Moscow, and has said it is ready to take up a role within an "observation mechanism" based in Istanbul if there is a deal.
Germany and other countries are working on enabling grain transport via land routes to release at least some of the crop as the new harvest is starting while part of the old harvest is still sitting in Ukrainian silos.
Last week, President Joe Biden saidthe U.S. will build temporary siloson Poland’s border with Ukraine tofacilitate the export of grainout of the war-torn nation and address surging food prices amid Russia’s invasion.
Diplomat: Russia's blockage of Ukrainian grain is a war crime
According to a relatedReutersreport, a the EU's foreign policy chief said Russia is committing a war crime by blocking the export of millions of tonnes of Ukrainian grain.
"One cannot imagine that millions of tonnes of wheat remain blocked in Ukraine while in the rest of the world people are suffering hunger," he told reporters as he arrived for the talks in Luxembourg. "This is a real war crime."