Daily News

Missile fired ‘from Ukraine’

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POLAND yesterday said a deadly blast that killed two people in a village near the border with Ukraine was likely caused by a stray Ukrainian air defence missile launched against a Russian barrage.

Polish President Andrzej Duda played down internatio­nal fears of a further escalation in the war in Ukraine saying there was “no indication that this was an intentiona­l attack on Poland”.

Duda said it was “very likely” the Soviet-era missile was launched by Ukraine in what he called an “unfortunat­e accident” but he said the blame lay with Russia because of its attacks on Ukraine.

After emergency talks of the Nato military alliance, its chief Jens Stoltenber­g also said there was “no indication of a deliberate attack” on Poland.

The blast occurred in the village of Przewodow in eastern Poland on Tuesday, killing two farmworker­s.

“I’m scared. I didn’t sleep all night,” Anna Magus, a 60-year-old teacher at the local elementary school, said. “I hope it was a stray missile because otherwise we’re helpless.”

An image released by police showed investigat­ors working inside a large crater next to an overturned vehicle.

Nato member Poland put its military on heightened alert and summoned Russia’s ambassador late on Tuesday but had cautioned against reaching any hasty conclusion­s as to the origin of the Soviet-era missile.

Western powers voiced solidarity with Poland in intensive rounds of diplomacy, including on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Indonesia’s Bali.

Nato ambassador­s held emergency talks in Brussels, while the Kremlin said it had “nothing to do with” the missile blast.

“Photograph­s of the wreckage ... were unequivoca­lly identified by Russian military experts as fragments of a guided anti-aircraft missile of a Ukrainian S-300 air defence system,” the Russian defence ministry said.

It added that its own strikes “were carried out on targets only on the territory of Ukraine and at a distance of no closer than 35 kilometres from the Ukrainian-polish border.”

Ex-president Dmitry Medvedev, deputy head of Russia’s security council, said on Twitter that the incident “proves just one thing: waging a hybrid war against Russia, the West moves closer to the World War”.

Poland is protected by Nato’s commitment to collective defence – enshrined in Article 5 of its founding treaty – but the alliance’s response will likely be heavily influenced by whether the incident was accidental or intentiona­l.

Warsaw has said it may invoke Article 4 of the treaty under which any member can call urgent talks when it feels its “territoria­l integrity, political independen­ce or security” are at risk.

Russia invaded Ukraine on February 24 and still holds swathes of territory despite a series of recent battlefiel­d defeats.

The conflict has caused deep unease in neighbouri­ng Poland where memories of Soviet domination are still very

raw. Poland shares a 530km border with Ukraine and has taken a lead in providing military and humanitari­an aid to Ukraine and sanctionin­g Russia. Despite the likelihood a Ukrainian missile was involved, the Polish government was clear it still held Russia responsibl­e.

Polish Deputy Foreign Minister Pawel Jablonski told RMF radio that “in all likelihood, we are dealing with a consequenc­e of Russia’s actions”.

He also responded to criticism of Poland’s own air defences. “Missile defence systems around the world are never 100% effective systems that protect each millimetre of every country’s territory,” he said.

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba had on Tuesday rejected as a “conspiracy theory” the idea that it may have been a Ukrainian missile.

President Volodymyr Zelensky sent “condolence­s over the death of Polish citizens from Russian missile terror”.

The explosion came after a wave of Russian missiles hit cities across Ukraine, including Lviv, near the border with Poland. Zelensky said the strikes cut power to some 10 million people, though it was later restored to 8 million of them, and also triggered automatic shutdowns at two nuclear power plants.

He said Russia had fired 85 missiles at energy facilities across the country, condemning the strikes as an “act of genocide” and a “cynical slap in the face” of the G20.

Meanwhile, yesterday Russia hailed the G20 leaders’ declaratio­n, which mentions the “immense human suffering” caused by the war in Ukraine, as a “balanced text” that Russian diplomats worked hard to influence. The Russian invasion of Ukraine dominated the G20 summit in Bali, Indonesia, with wrangling over the wording of a final document lasting until the final hours of the summit.

 ?? | Reuters ?? A DAMAGED vehicle lies next to a crater formed at the site of an explosion in Przewodow, a village in eastern Poland near the border with Ukraine.
| Reuters A DAMAGED vehicle lies next to a crater formed at the site of an explosion in Przewodow, a village in eastern Poland near the border with Ukraine.

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