Tuesday, September 19, 2023

ZERO OF CROATIAN, POLISH, HUNGARIAN, SLOVAKIAN SOLIDARITY WITH UKRAINE ON UKRAINIAN GRAIN DURING WORST TIMES FOR UKRAINE

Grand Slavic solidarity with "Ukraine" can be seen these days through eyes of Ukrainian

farmers which are facing catastrophe due to dimes lost on CROATIAN, POLISH, HUNGARIAN, SLOVAKIAN home produced grain. IT SEEMS WOULD BE EXTREMELY DIFFICULT FOR CROATIA, POLAND, HUNGARY, SLOVAKIA AND OTHERS TO REPLACE ITS OWN GRAIN ENTIRELY WITH CHEAPER UKRAINIAN GRAIN WHILE OFFERING WORLD OWN GRAIN FOR THE SAKE OF UKRAINE DURING MOST CRITICAL FOR UKRAINE TIMES.

What does it cost you to sell your own grain(even for the same cost or less) to other countries and keep instead Ukrainian grain which is cheaper with idea to ease Ukraine a pain with grain export during crucial for Ukrainian existence times!!????? Few cents lost on grain costs are more expensive than your own sovereignty !!????? West should take in account your SOPHISTICATED F35 ALIKE Polish, Slovak, Croatian, Hungarian grain when selling you own defense features in the future. Its war in case you didn't realize.

@Plenković - Croatia is not transit country, but transitional country with people like yourself rather making it easy for Croatia to reintegrate itself back into a greater than great Serbian chetnik state previously known as Yugo Slavia.




Croatian Prime Minister Andrej Plenković said his country will not import Ukrainian grain and did not rule out a ban on such imports in line with Poland, Hungary and Slovakia.

"Croatia's stance and desire is that we are a transit country, not a country receiving enormous amounts of Ukrainian grain that is cheaper than ours, which would mean our farmers are in trouble," Croatian national broadcaster HINA quoted Plenković as saying.

Kyiv launched legal action on Monday against the three European Union countries at the World Trade Organization, over their refusal to drop a ban on Ukrainian agricultural products.

Poland, Hungary and Slovakia implemented unilateral bans to protect their domestic agricultural industries from a surge in cheap grain exports from Ukraine, defying the European Commission, which last Friday decided to allow Ukrainian grain sales across the EU.

When asked whether Croatia would implement a similar ban, Plenković would not say, but reiterated that Croatian ports were currently facilitating the passage of Ukrainian grain to third countries, according to reports.

Croatia offered use of its seaports to Ukraine while the latter’s access to the Black Sea is blocked by Russia, amid the Kremlin's ongoing war.

It is not known how much grain has been exported via Croatian ports, but the route is “already popular,” Ukraine's First Deputy Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko said earlier this month.

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