Ukraine-Pakistan ties have gradually deepened amid the ongoing war with Russia. Islamabad started importing wheat from Kyiv earlier this year and is reportedly shipping weapons and other defence items to the war-hit nation. Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba had also made a day trip to Pakistan last month - the first ministerial visit from Ukraine since the establishment of diplomatic ties between the two countries in 1993.
The developments have not gone down well with Moscow, with officials stating that ‘very explicit anti-Russia actions’ could not be ignored. “Yes, there have been reports and information about such instances, we take this information very seriously. Such examples, if confirmed, is a very explicit anti-Russia actions that we cannot ignore.
And as I said, we have watched very closely the news and the reports and take them very seriously because they influence the situation on the ground very directly and do not go contrary to the efforts aimed towards the quickest and fastest, peaceful resolution of the conflict," said Russian Ambassador to India Denis Alipov. Islamabad has also been building ties with Moscow in recent months and began importing discounted Russian crude oil to meet local demands earlier this year. Pakistan – whose ailing economy is getting a $3 billion International Monetary Fund bailout – was hit hard when food prices surged after Russia's invasion.
Moscow withdrew from the Black Sea grain deal – which allowed for the export of grain from Ukrainian ports – last month. It contends that the international community had failed to ensure Russia was also able to ship its own grain and fertiliser exports under the accord due to the effects of Western sanctions. (With inputs from
. Read more on livemint.com