Poland faces months of migration pressure from Belarus, minister says
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[November 17, 2021]
By Gabriela Baczynska
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The crisis on Poland's
border with Belarus will last months, the Polish defence minister said
on Wednesday, as several thousand migrants remained stranded on the EU's
eastern frontier in what the bloc calls a deliberate blackmail campaign
by Minsk.
Nine Polish service members were injured on Tuesday and Poland used
water cannons against small groups of migrants throwing stones across
the barbed wire border fence.
Belarusian state news agency BELTA said on Tuesday evening border guards
had started moving some migrants to a reception centre away from the
frontier. Belarusian and Polish border guards said on Wednesday around
2,000 migrants remained at the fence.
European countries accuse Minsk of flying in thousands of migrants,
mainly from the Middle East, and pushing them to cross the border
illegally, as a tactic to punish Europe for sanctions imposed over a
Belarusian crackdown on pro-democracy protesters.
Belarus calls the accusation it created the crisis absurd, but says the
EU must lift sanctions if it wants to resolve it.
"We have to be prepared that this situation on the Belarusian border
won't settle swiftly, we have to be prepared for months; I hope not
years," Defence Minister Mariusz Blaszczak told a morning interview with
Polish public radio.
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Thousands of migrants have been camped out in the woods as winter
approaches, suffering from frost and exhaustion, and barred either from
entering Poland or returning into Belarus. At least eight have died
since the crisis started this summer.
The EU has called on Russia to push Belarus leader Alexander Lukashenko
to resolve the crisis. Moscow denies any direct role though it has
offered to act as an intermediary. It has staged military exercises
jointly with Belarus near the border, while calling on the West to
resolve differences directly with Minsk.
Europe has shunned Lukashenko since an election last year which his
opponents say was stolen, but Germany's outgoing Chancellor Angela
Merkel spoke by telephone to him on Monday to demand relief for migrants
stuck at the border.
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Migrants gather to receive humanitarian aid near Bruzgi - Kuznica
checkpoint on the Belarusian-Polish border in the Grodno region,
Belarus November 17, 2021. Leonid Scheglov/BelTA/Handout via REUTERS
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EU IN A BIND
The EU has so far largely supported Poland's nationalist government
in taking a hard line at the border, for fear that allowing migrants
to cross would cause many more to try to enter and travel on to
wealthier countries.
Preventing uncontrolled immigration has been a central political
issue for the bloc since 2015, when more than a million people
arrived from the Middle East and Africa, straining security and
welfare systems. Hostility to lax borders was blamed for a surge in
nationalist political movements across the bloc, and even Britain's
vote to quit.
The EU has since tightened external borders and given money to host
migrants in countries such as Turkey, and stop them along migration
routes in Libya, Tunisia and elsewhere.
Rights groups decry the EU's restrictive tactics as aggravating
human suffering. They say those at the Polish border are entitled to
humane treatment and to have any asylum claims heard.
Police in Germany - a top destination for immigrants once they reach
the EU - said on Nov. 15 they had registered 9,549 illegal entries
from Belarus via Poland this year. They reported only 26 such cases
between January and July, rising to 474 arrivals in August, 1,903 in
September and 5,285 in October.
(Additional reporting by Sabine Siebold, Pawel Florkiewicz, Anna
Wlodarczak-Semczuk, Mark Trevelyan; Writing by Gabriela Baczynska;
Editing by Peter Graff)
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