Syria will export more than 700 000 tons of citrus fruits to Russia
to "fill the gap" left by Moscow's ban on Turkish agricultural products,
officials said on Tuesday.
"We are preparing about 700 000 tons
of citrus, mostly oranges, to send to Russian markets," Fares Chehabi,
head of Syria's Chambers of Industry, told AFP.
Russia, a major
ally of Syria's embattled regime, banned imports of Turkish agricultural
products last month after Ankara shot down a Russian fighter jet near
the Syrian-Turkish border.
"The first shipment has already left for Russia," Chehabi said, without confirming its size. He said other Syrian goods, such as textile products, would also be sent to Russia.
Samer
Debes, head of the Damascus Chamber of Industry, told state news agency
SANA the shipments provided "a real opportunity" for Syrian goods in
the Russian market.
He said Syrian businessmen were preparing for
an upcoming trip to Moscow to "examine the chances of cooperation after
the sanctions that Moscow imposed on Ankara".
These sanctions "create an important gap and suddenly a real opportunity for Syrian products", Debes was quoted as saying. During
the 2014-2015 season, Syria produced more than one million tons of
citrus products, according to the agriculture ministry.
Syria's citrus is grown mostly in the coastal provinces of Latakia and Tartus, which are regime strongholds.

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