Kremlin accuses West of trying to sabotage its showcase Russia-Africa summit

Russian President Vladimir Putin is expected to hold intensive one-on-one talks with individual African leaders focusing on everything from trade to security, arms deals and grain supplies. File photo.
Russian President Vladimir Putin is expected to hold intensive one-on-one talks with individual African leaders focusing on everything from trade to security, arms deals and grain supplies. File photo.
Image: Sputnik/Gavriil Grigorov/Kremlin via Reuters

The Kremlin on Tuesday accused the West, and in particular the US, of trying to sabotage its showcase Russia-Africa summit later this week by pressuring African countries not to take part.

The summit, which will take place in St Petersburg on Thursday and Friday, will be attended by Russian President Vladimir Putin, who is expected to hold intensive one-on-one talks with individual African leaders focusing on everything from trade to security, arms deals and grain supplies.

The event, which is expected to see agreements signed, follows Moscow’s first Russia-Africa summit in 2019 and is part of a concerted push for influence and business on a continent where mercenaries from Russia's Wagner Group remain active despite an abortive mutiny at home last month.

Forty-nine African delegations have confirmed their participation, about half of whom will be represented by their heads of state or government, Russian diplomat Alexander Polyakov was cited as saying by the state TASS news agency earlier this month.

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said on Tuesday the West was doing its best to wreck the Russian event.

“Virtually all African states have been subjected to unprecedented pressure from the US, and French embassies on the ground have not been sleeping along with other Western missions who are also trying to do their bit to prevent this summit from taking place,” Peskov told reporters.

“In essence they do not accept the sovereign right of African states to independently determine their partners for co-operation and mutual interaction in different fields.”

US President Joe Biden hosted a US-Africa leaders summit in Washington last year, seeking to bolster alliances amid growing Russian and Chinese presence on the continent.

Speaking in April after Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov complained the West was trying to wreck this week's Russia-Africa summit, the US state department said Washington " (doesn't) want to limit African partnerships with other countries. We want to give African countries choices”.

Peskov said Russia's event would be crucial to be able to discuss grain supplies and what he called Moscow's responsible behaviour and efforts to support world markets.

Moscow announced last week it was leaving the Black Sea grain deal which allowed Ukraine, which it and much of the West say is fighting an existential war against Russia, to safely export grain from its seaports despite what Russia calls its “special military operation” against it.

Russia has spoken of the possibility of supplying cheap or free grain to Africa's poorest nations to replace Ukrainian grain and make up for any shortfalls.

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