50 of the 100 ships intercepted after Russia’s massive invasion of Ukraine left Ukrainian ports.
As of September 26, only half of the 100 ships intercepted after the start of the massive Russian invasion remained in Ukrainian ports. This was announced by the head of the Monitoring Group of Sanctions and Freedom of Navigation at the Institute of Black Sea Strategic Studies, Andrei Klimenko, on Facebook.
“29 of them are in the ports of the Nikolaev region, 14 – in Kherson, five – in Mariupol. For various reasons, two vessels from the 41 intercepted on February 24 remain in the ports of the region of Odessa, “he. wrote.
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Of the 50 ships, 15 belong to ship owners from EU countries (Greece – eight, Malta – three, one ship each from Bulgaria, Germany, Estonia, Denmark), 14 – owners of the ship from Turkey, eight – from Ukraine.
Other shipowners whose ships were intercepted in Ukrainian ports include companies from Norway, China, Great Britain, Montenegro, Bangladesh, Marshall Islands, Lebanon, Egypt, and Singapore.
The bulk carrier Emmakris III, which was detained in July 2022 at the request of the Prosecutor General’s Office as part of the investigation against its Russian owner, also remains in the port of Chernomorsk.
Let’s remember that at the time the Russian Federation began its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, there were 100 commercial vessels in sea trading ports in the Black and Azov Seas, in addition to the temporarily occupied Crimea (not including the ports fleet vessel). The ships could not leave the ports under the blockade of the Russian navy. 34 of the 100 ships are owned by ship-owning companies from EU countries, another 24 are owned by ship-owners from Turkey.
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Source: korrespondent

I’m Liza Grey, an experienced news writer and author at the Buna Times. I specialize in writing about economic issues, with a focus on uncovering stories that have a positive impact on society. With over seven years of experience in the news industry, I am highly knowledgeable about current events and the ways in which they affect our daily lives.