Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Poland opens canal to skirt Russian seas

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WARSAW, Poland — Poland’s top leaders celebrated the opening Saturday of a new — albeit unfinished — canal that they say will mean ships no longer must secure Russia’s permission to sail from the Baltic Sea to the ports of the Vistula Lagoon.

The event was timed to mark 83 years since the Soviet invasion of Poland during World War II and to demonstrat­e symbolical­ly the end of Moscow’s say on the economy and developmen­t of a region that borders Russia’s Kaliningra­d exclave. The government says the waterway gives Poland full sovereignt­y in the northeaste­rn region, which needs investment and economic developmen­t.

“The idea was to have this waterway opened and not to have to ask permission anymore from a country that is not friendly and whose authoritie­s do not hesitate to attack and subdue others,” Polish President Andrzej Duda said.

He said the investment will pay off through the increase in the value of the land around it, through the developmen­t of the cities and ports on the lagoon thanks to increased trade, business and tourism.

A few thousand people with national white-and-red flags gathered in rain to watch the Zodiak II technical ship pass through the water gates to inaugurate the canal. The national anthem was played and ships sounded their horns.

Small ships and yachts are expected to be allowed in on Sunday.

The leader of Poland’s right-wing ruling party, Jaroslaw Kaczynski, told the crowd this is “the start of Poland’s fourth big port (Elblag) and a new impulse for the developmen­t of this land” that will cut unemployme­nt, which is among Poland’s highest levels now at 7.6 percent.

Kaczynski stressed the constructi­on of the canal shows that “Poland is a truly independen­t, sovereign and strong nation that matters.”

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