Moscow to stop imports of some Turkish foods starting next year
MOSCOW, Russia—Russia’s embargo on some Turkish food—from tomatoes to turkey—will come into effect from the start of next year, the government announced Tuesday, as Moscow tries to exact revenge on Ankara over the downing of its warplane.
READ: Putin orders sanctions against Turkey after downing of jet
The government decree signed by Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev makes official the economic sanctions Russia had pledged to slap on Turkey in retaliation for the downing of a Russian Su-24 on the Syrian border last week.
The import of 17 food products—including tomatoes, onions, oranges, pears, peaches, salt and turkey—will be banned starting in 2016, the decree said.
READ: Russia targets Turkish economy over downed warplane
But the ban—which does not apply to products brought into the country for personal consumption—steers clear of other foods Russia massively imports from Turkey, including lemons.
Article continues after this advertisementConsumer products manufactured in Turkey’s light industry sector were also left out of the embargo.
Article continues after this advertisementRussia has halted charter flights between the two countries, stopped the sale of package holidays in Turkey and will scrap its visa-free regime for Turkish visitors from the start of 2016.
The government decree also restricts Turkish construction companies’ ability to take part in tenders for Russian government contracts.
Moscow’s partial embargo on Turkish produce and poultry has sparked fears that food prices—which have already dramatically increased because of spiralling inflation and Russia’s ban on the import of Western food—could skyrocket.
Economists from Russia’s Alfa Bank said Monday that an embargo on Turkish food products could increase inflation by 1.5 points, adding to a figure that already stands at annual rate of over 15 percent.
The government decree said authorities will closely monitor the price of the food products that have landed on the embargo list.