Poland Says Migrants Still Crossing From Belarus As EU Readies New Sanctions

By: - November 23, 2021

Source link

Poland says groups of migrants have made new attempts to illegally cross the border from Belarus, and warned against interpreting recent moves by Minsk to repatriate some of the migrants as a de-escalation of the crisis on the European Union’s eastern frontier.

The Polish officials issued the warning on November 23 as top EU officials said the 27-nation bloc was readying a fifth package of sanctions against Belarus for mounting a “hybrid attack” against the bloc by bringing thousands of men, women, and children from the Middle East and pushing them to cross into the European Union through Poland, Lithuania, and Latvia.

Minsk is accused of trying to destabilize the EU in response to sanctions that Brussels imposed earlier following a brutal and sometimes deadly crackdown by authoritarian leader Akyaksandr Lukashenka against protesters who accuse him of stealing an election in August last year.

Last week, Belarusian authorities cleared migrant camps at the border and allowed the first repatriation flight to Iraq in months.

The Belarusian Interior Ministry said 118 migrants left the country on November 22 and more would depart on November 23.

But authorities in Warsaw said the subsequent incidents at the border showed Lukashenka had not given up his plans to use migrants as a weapon in the standoff with the EU.

“We don’t consider the recent measures taken by the Lukashenka regime as a step back from its long-time strategy. While those [repatriation] flights may seem a symptom of de-escalation, we believe it’s too early to say so,” Poland’s Special Services Ministry spokesman Stanislaw Zaryn told journalists.

Polish authorities estimate at least 10,000 migrants could be still in Belarus, Zaryn said.

About 2,000 people are currently staying at a warehouse facility near the border with Poland. Lukashenka has said a total of 7,000 migrants remain in the country.

Meanwhile, the country’s Border Guards reported 174 illegal attempts to cross the border from Belarus in the previous 24 hours.

“Sixty-six migrants were given expulsion orders which increased the total number of such orders to 1,760, as of October 26,” spokeswoman Anna Michalska said.

Lukashenka, who denies fomenting the crisis, has pressured the EU and Germany, in particular, to accept some migrants while Belarus repatriates others, a demand the bloc has so far flatly rejected.

Officials of the International Organization for Migration and the UN High Commissioner for Refugees’ office met with Belarusian officials in Belarus on November 23 to discuss aid delivery and paperwork needed to repatriate the migrants.

Humanitarian agencies say as many as 13 migrants have died at the border since the crisis began.

In Strasbourg, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said the bloc was standing in solidarity with Poland, Lithuania, and Latvia in the face of Minsk’s destabilization attempts.

“It is the EU as a whole that is being challenged,” von der Leyen told the European Parliament. “This is not a migration crisis. This is the attempt of an authoritarian regime to try to destabilize its democratic neighbors.”

To counter such efforts, she said her commission would draw up a “blacklist” of travel and transport firms involved in trafficking migrants into the EU.

She also said Brussels was coordinating its new package of sanctions against Minsk with Britain, Canada, and the United States.

European Commission Vice President Margaritis Schinas told lawmakers that the commission proposed “a new legal framework which will enable us to adopt targeted measures against transport operators…that knowingly or unknowingly engage or facilitate smuggling or trafficking people into the European Union.”

The proposal would provide the legal tool allowing the bloc to suspend or limit the operations of companies organizing transport by land, air, and sea or even ban them from the EU.

European Council President Charles Michel said the new set of sanctions would include a ban on Belarus airline Belavia to lease planes from EU-based companies.

“The majority of the fleet of Belavia are aircraft leased from EU companies, this will be halted when the decision is taken, which is imminent,” he said.

According to RFE/RL”s Europe editor and former Brussels correspondent Rikard Jozwiak, the EU’s fifth package of sanctions could be adopted “late next week” and includes about 30 individuals and entities.”

With reporting by Reuters, AFP, TASS, and RFE/RL’s Belarus Service

  • RSS WND

    • WATCH: Tucker Carlson: What does nature have to do with leadership?
      One of the most important qualities in a leader is the love of nature and animals. pic.twitter.com/eequghf4oR — Tucker Carlson (@TuckerCarlson) April 25, 2024 For 25 years, WND has boldly brought you the news that really matters. If you appreciate our Christian journalists and their uniquely truthful reporting and analysis, please help us by becoming… […]
    • Leftist reporters pretend they're not partisan news squashers
      Eight years ago, the leftist media took great offense to being dismissed by Donald Trump as "fake news," but they never seemed to grasp this is exactly how they painted the conservative media, as truth-defying propaganda outlets. When the Trump trial turned to the National Enquirer, we could find national unity that the Enquirer defines… […]
    • 4 monumental problems with academia
      The explosion of violent and shockingly anti-Semitic protests on college campuses is just the latest in a series of self-inflicted black eyes for higher education in the United States. In March last year, a group of students at Stanford Law School shut down a talk by federal Judge Kyle Duncan, screaming vulgar epithets and refusing… […]
    • The 'get Trump' groupthink chorus … now on Zoom
      Covering former President Donald Trump's trial on television is a difficult job. There are no cameras in the courtroom, so TV news has to rely on quick messages from staffers watching the trial in an overflow room in the Manhattan courthouse where Trump is being tried for making false bookkeeping entries concerning a nondisclosure agreement… […]
    • Alvin Bragg: Prosecutorial misconduct's poster boy
      Former President Donald Trump's case prosecuted by Alvin Bragg in New York is not about truth and justice, but it is about drama, slander and smear. Bragg's case claims "34 federal charges" are being levied against the former president, which mainstream media repeat over and over again. Truthfully, there's one charge – repeated 34 times.… […]
    • Gaza war: Did Hamas bet correctly?
      What to say about the widespread pro-Hamas protests? Protesters block the highway leading to Chicago's O'Hare International Airport. Protesters stop traffic on San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge. A mob of protesters chanting "Senate can't eat until Gaza eats" march in the Dirksen Senate Office Building and cause the cafeteria to shut down. Something like that… […]
    • Who's to blame for campus chaos?
      Editor's note: The powers that be at WND.com have told Michael Ackley he may submit the occasional column. As Golden State madness has accelerated, Mr. Ackley continues to give in to the urge to stay in the game. Hence, the items below. Remember that his columns may include satire and parody based on current events,… […]
    • How the Left has made gaslighting an art
      In their weekly podcast, Hollywood veteran Loy Edge and longtime WND columnist Jack Cashill skirt the everyday politics downstream and travel merrily upstream to the source of our extraordinary culture. The post How the Left has made gaslighting an art appeared first on WND.
    • The walking debt
      Dear Dave, A few years ago, I had a real problem with credit card debt. Since then, I've gotten much better at handling my money, and I'm making about $80,000 a year. Two weeks ago, I received a letter about a credit card I had in 2020. The amount owed is $7,688. The letter doesn't… […]
    • Facts matter
      The post Facts matter appeared first on WND.
  • Enter My WorldView