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Putin blackmails world with Ukraine’s crops: Morawiecki for BBC

Vladimir Putin has turned Ukrainian grain into a tool to blackmail the rest of the world, Poland’s Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki told the BBC at the World Economic Forum in Davos.

In an interview with the British national broadcaster, PM Morawiecki compared the Russian strongman’s scheme to what “Stalin did in 1933.”

The PM was referring to the so-called Terror-Famine, which was orchestrated by the Soviet dictator, Joseph Stalin, and killed up to 10 million people, according to a joint statement issued in 2003 by 25 UN member states.

Mr Morawiecki said that this was “part of [Putin’s] strategy” tocreate ripple effects in Northern Africa and huge migration waves.”

For her part, the European Commission President, Ursula von der Leyen, told delegates in Davos that Russia was using “hunger and grain to wield power.”

The Polish PM stressed he expected an EU embargo on Russian oil within days or weeks, with some temporary exemptions for the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary and Austria — the four EU countries that are highly dependent on Russian hydrocarbons.

Mr Morawiecki also called for the Nord Stream 1 gas pipeline from Russia to Germany to be shut down this year, similarly to its newer stretch, Nord Stream 2, the opening to which was scratched in response to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

The PM said that “Russia is under real pressure” from the sanctions already in place, but warned that they will have their full effect in the mid-to-long-term.

Putin hopes that high prices of energy will exert pressure on Western societies and force their leaders to seek a compromise, according to Morawiecki.

“We have to explain to the public what the consequences of the war are,” he said, adding that “Putin’s main tool is intimidation, fear, illusions and propaganda.”

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