The Hamilton Spectator

Afghans expected to be used as ‘new act’ in border crisis

Polish PM expects Belarus to exploit guilt over military pullout

- LIUDAS DAPKUS

Poland’s leader on Sunday warned against more possible migrant pressures on the European Union’s border with Belarus, this time coming from Afghanista­n and Uzbekistan.

Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki spoke in Vilnius, the capital of Lithuania, following talks with Lithuanian Prime Minister Ingrida Simonyte about ways of solving the “very difficult situation” at the borders of EU members with Belarus. He was on a one-day tour of meetings with the prime ministers of EU members Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia, which have also been hit by the migrant pressures.

All leaders stressed the need for acting jointly and said the border crisis created by Belarus has strengthen­ed their co-operation.

The EU says the new surge of migrants on its eastern borders has been orchestrat­ed Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko’s regime in retaliatio­n for EU sanctions placed on Belarus after its crackdown on peaceful democracy protesters. It calls the move “a hybrid attack’’ on the entire 27-nation bloc. Belarus denies the charge.

Poland’s Border Guard said Sunday it prevented a forceful illegal entry by some 100 “very aggressive foreigners” on Saturday who had been brought to the fenced border near the village of Czeremcha by Belarus forces.

Morawiecki said he expected the migrant pressures on Poland and the EU to continue, but now from a different region, claiming knowledge of “diplomatic” contacts that Belarus and Russia had with Uzbekistan and Afghanista­n.

“There is a threat of an even more difficult scenario,” Morawiecki said. “There will most probably be an attempt at using the crisis in Afghanista­n as a new act in the migration crisis, putting to use the West’s remorse related to the disorderly pullout from Afghanista­n.”

In Latvia’s capital of Riga, Morawiecki said “only the full pullback of the migrants and steps toward deescalati­on can lead back to any kind of a constructi­ve scenario with Lukashenko.”

Earlier in Tallinn, the capital of Estonia, Morawiecki said Poland was ready to contribute financiall­y to return flights home for migrants who have been stranded at the border’s damp forest for weeks. He said Warsaw was also ready to close all border crossings with Belarus to step up the economic pressure on Lukashenko’s regime. The Polish road crossing near Kuznica was closed last week.

Lithuania’s Simonyte stressed that the EU should co-ordinate all further actions on Belarus with countries at the forefront of these attacks — Poland, Lithuania and Latvia.

“The European Commission has now taken over the technical talks with Minsk. It is very important that no decisions are taken that will not allow the situation to be resolved,” Simonyte told reporters, warning against any separate Poland-Belarus discussion­s.

Poland is pushing the migrants back, saying it is protecting the border for all of Europe and NATO.

A few migrants have died in the forests straddling the border. Others have abandoned hopes of reaching Europe and were flown back to their home countries last week.

The EU Commission on Sunday leveled further accusation­s against Lukashenko.

“In the crisis, Lukashenko behaved like an unlicensed tour operator who sold expensive travel packages to the EU, only for them to collapse on arrival,” EU home affairs commission­er Ylva Johansson told Germany’s Welt am Sonntag newspaper.

Lukashenko behaved like an unlicensed tour operator who sold expensive travel packages to the EU, only for them to collapse on arrival.

YLVA JOHANSSON EU HOME AFFAIRS COMMISSION­ER

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