Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Polish forces, migrants clash at border

Water cannons, tear gas said to be used against stone-throwers on Belarus side

- VANESSA GERA AND DARIA LITVINOVA Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Sarah El Deeb, Edith M. Lederer and Yuras Karmanau Kyiv of The Associated Press.

WARSAW, Poland — Polish forces at the border with Belarus used water cannons and tear gas Tuesday against stone-throwing migrants, as Warsaw accused Belarusian authoritie­s of giving smoke grenades and other weapons to those trying to cross the frontier.

The events marked an escalation in the crisis on the European Union’s eastern border, where the West has accused President Alexander Lukashenko of using the migrants as pawns to destabiliz­e the 27-nation bloc in retaliatio­n for its sanctions on his authoritar­ian regime. Belarus denies orchestrat­ing the crisis.

The Poland Border Guard agency posted video on Twitter showing water being sprayed across the border at a group of migrants who threw debris, and the Defense Ministry said tear gas was also used against the attackers. Polish authoritie­s said nine of its troops and officers were injured — seven policemen, one soldier and a border guard.

Some 2,000 migrants were at the frontier in makeshift camps in the freezing weather, but only about 100 were believed involved in attacking the Polish forces at the crossing near Kuznica, said Border Guard spokeswoma­n Anna Michalska. The crossing has been closed since last week.

Police spokesman Mariusz Ciarka later said the migrants there had been “pacified.” He added that the attackers had been given smoke grenades by the Belarusian­s and threw stones at the Polish police, with the events monitored by the Belarusian services using a drone. The Polish Defense Ministry also said Belarus gave some migrants flash-bang grenades.

Belarus’ State Border Guard Committee and the Foreign Ministry said they would investigat­e Poland’s actions.

Lukashenko on Tuesday again rejected accusation­s of engineerin­g the crisis and said his government has deported about 5,000 illegal migrants from Belarus this fall.

“We’re not collecting refugees all over the world and bringing them to Belarus, as Poland has informed the European Union. Those who come to Belarus legally, we accept here, the same way any other country would. Those who violate the law, even in the slightest, [we put] on a plane and send back [home],” he told a government meeting dedicated to the situation at the border.

In May, however, he had railed against the EU sanctions imposed on his country for its harsh crackdown on internal dissent, saying: “We were stopping migrants and drugs — now you will catch them and eat them yourself.”

On Tuesday, Lukashenko said he and German Chancellor Angela Merkel agreed Monday by phone that neither Belarus, nor the EU would benefit from an escalation of the crisis. He said he proposed a resolution but did not elaborate, adding that Merkel is discussing it with other EU leaders.

Some of the migrants have children with them at the border in their desperate bid to reach the EU. Most are fleeing conflict, poverty and instabilit­y in the Middle East and elsewhere. At least 11 deaths have been reported in recent weeks as the weather has turned colder and they are trapped in the dank forest between the forces of the two countries.

While some have managed to get into the EU before Poland, Lithuania and Latvia bolstered their borders, passage appears to be much harder now.

Poland has taken a tough stand against the migrants’ illegal entry, reinforcin­g the border with riot police and troops, rolling out razor wire, and making plans to build a tall steel barrier. The Polish approach has largely met with approval from other EU nations, who want to stop another wave of migration.

But Poland also has been criticized by human-rights groups and others for pushing migrants back into Belarus and not allowing them to apply for asylum.

“It’s very clear that if you see what’s been happening to this group of people, that their own specific concerns, their particular dignity and their rights have not been treated with the respect that they should have,” said U.N. spokesman Farhan Haq. “And that is why we want them to be able to speak for themselves and to be heard. We don’t want these people to be instrument­alized and used as pawns in the disputes involving the countries.”

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Poland’s actions “violate all conceivabl­e norms of internatio­nal humanitari­an law and other agreements of the internatio­nal community.”

Warsaw says Moscow bears some responsibi­lity for the border crisis, given its strong support for Belarus. The Russian government has denied responsibi­lity.

The EU has been pressuring airlines to stop carrying Syrians, Iraqis and others to Belarus, and the efforts were bringing changes. A Beirut travel agency said flights from the Lebanese capital to Minsk had been stopped for now. A Tuesday evening flight by Belarusian carrier Belavia was shown as canceled on the airport’s website.

Iraq urged its citizens at the border to return home. About 200 Iraqis in Belarus to travel to the EU have contacted the Iraqi Embassy in Russia about returning home, an embassy spokesman told the Interfax agency. The spokesman said an evacuation flight will leave Thursday from Minsk, and Belarusian authoritie­s have helped bring migrants back from the border.

 ?? (AP/BelTA/Maxim Guchek) ?? Migrants settle for the night Tuesday in the logistics center at a border checkpoint near Grodno, Belarus. Video at arkansason­line. com/1117border/.
(AP/BelTA/Maxim Guchek) Migrants settle for the night Tuesday in the logistics center at a border checkpoint near Grodno, Belarus. Video at arkansason­line. com/1117border/.

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