As outlined in the articles -- the Russians have expropriated the farms in Ukraine's occupied territories and given them to Putin's cronies. The original Ukrainian farm owners have been either murdered by the Russians or are now refugees in western Ukraine.
It's a wonder that you can peddle such bullshiat devoid of facts and reality. But then I remember that you're a Russian propagandist and that is your job.
no
articles say just that russia sold ukrainian stolen grain
not in the single article it says how ukrainian grain got to russia and why ukraine considers it own grain
not a single article mentions farm were expropriated
not a single article mentions farm owners were murdered
not a single article mentions farmers are refugees in western ukraine
The fact is Russia just helped ukrainian citizens who lived on their land to sell their own grain
they produced grain while it
Ukraine abandoned their own people and Russia stepped in
the total sales mentioned in your articles just 6 million dollar which is obviously not the size Putin cronies are interested but is lifesaving for ukrainians who grew those grains
Apparently you are incapable of reading comprehension.
What part of theft do you fail to understand?
You make up stories on the fly which doesn't exist in reality
Prove farmers were murdered first
Then we can talk about your other fake claims one by one
A simple search on the web provides over a million results outlining news about Russians murdering and chasing off Ukrainian farmers and then forcefully taking over their land in the occupied territories of Ukraine.
The actions of the Russians were deliberate and systematic. As outlined by the UN and ICJ; these actions by Russia were ethnic cleansing and part of the campaign to eliminate Ukrainians in Ukraine... and replacement them with Russians.
Let's read the beginning of one of the news stories...
Russians wreak havoc on Ukrainian farms, mining fields and stealing equipment
NPR - https://tinyurl.com/2c75c635
BILKA, Ukraine — For Ukrainian farmer Anatolii Kulibaba, this year's planting season comes with anguish. Kulibaba is among many who were forced to flee their land as Russian forces moved in with their tanks.
In the first few days of the war, Russian soldiers delivered an even crueler blow: They killed Kulibaba's son, Oleksandr, as he was traveling to their village of Bilka, 25 miles from the Russian border.
"He was just 45. He had his whole life ahead of him," Kulibaba says.
Two months later, Kulibaba, 70, is still trying to work through the pain, but it's a struggle. He desperately misses his son, who also led most of the farm duties.
(More at above url)
So why don't you get the rest of the article where it says he got back and restarted production?
LOL
You are such a schill