Ukraine Says Russian Missile Hit Grain Ship in Black Sea

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If confirmed, the attack would be the first on a commercial vessel since Ukraine secured a shipping route to grain markets abroad last year.

A towering crane is filling a cargo vessel with grain, against a partly cloudy sky.
A cargo vessel being filled with grain at the port of Pivdennyi, Ukraine, in 2022.Credit...Daniel Berehulak for The New York Times

Matthew Mpoke BiggMaria Varenikova

Sept. 12, 2024, 10:47 a.m. ET

President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine said on Thursday that a Russian missile struck a cargo ship in the Black Sea that was carrying wheat to Egypt, and a Ukrainian military spokesman said that the attack took place in Romanian waters.

If confirmed, it would be the first such direct attack on a civilian vessel in open water since Ukraine established a new maritime export route last year.

Mr. Zelensky said on social media that there were no casualties in the attack, which he said had happened overnight. He did not describe the extent of any damage.

There was no immediate independent confirmation of the claim; and Russia’s defense ministry did not mention it on its Telegram channel.

Captain Dmytro Pletenchuk, the spokesman for Ukraine’s southern command said in a telephone interview that the ship had been hit by a missile from a Russian military jet while it was in “the exclusive economic zone waters of Romania. It was not in the grain corridor of Ukraine.” He said the ship was sailing under the flag of a third country, but did not say which.

An attack in the exclusive economic zone waters of Romania, a NATO member, would not be equivalent to an attack on sovereign territory under international law. Rather, the zone is an area where a government can control economic activity, such as oil drilling.


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