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Aug 2022
1h 1m

The Grain War and Global Food Crisis: Fr...

Middle East Institute
About this episode

Russia’s war against Ukraine is the largest military conflict Europe has seen since World War II, with 15 million people displaced and thousands of civilian casualties. Russia has waged a war of destruction not just against Ukraine, but also against the world. For months Moscow has prevented the export of Ukrainian grain that countries in the Middle East and Africa depend on. Half of the World Food Programme’s grain comes from Ukraine, meaning the Russian blockade has affected international humanitarian relief efforts. The devastating consequences of food shortages and increased prices are being felt around the world, leading to a heightened risk of famine in the coming months.

How is Russia waging a grain war in the Black Sea region? How are food shortages impacting Middle East countries that depend on Ukrainian grain? What role does the Crimean Peninsula play in Russia’s blockade? What can the international community do to ease the food crisis and prevent a major famine?

Speakers

Mirette Mabrouk
Senior Fellow and Founding Director, Egypt Program, Middle East Institute 

Tamila Tasheva
Permanent Representative of the President of Ukraine in Crimea

Maria Tomak
Coordinator of the Media Initiative for Human Rights in Ukraine

Iulia Joja, moderator
Director, Frontier Europe Initiative; Project Director, Afghanistan Watch, Middle East Institute

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