Tag Archives: Poland

Joint Statement from the Leaders of the United States, Argentina, Austria, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, Colombia, Denmark, France, Germany, Hungary, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Serbia, Spain, Thailand, and the United Kingdom Calling for the Release of the H – The White House

  1. Joint Statement from the Leaders of the United States, Argentina, Austria, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, Colombia, Denmark, France, Germany, Hungary, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Serbia, Spain, Thailand, and the United Kingdom Calling for the Release of the H The White House
  2. Biden, 17 other world leaders issue joint call for Hamas to immediately free hostages The Times of Israel
  3. Joe Biden, 17 other world leaders call for release of hostages held by Hamas USA TODAY
  4. US, 17 other countries urge Hamas to release hostages, end Gaza crisis Reuters.com
  5. Israel-Hamas War Day 202 | Israel-Hamas War Day 202 | Israeli War Cabinet Discusses Gaza Talks Renewal in Tel Aviv as Dozens Rally for Hostage Deal – Israel News Haaretz

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Searchlight Lands Jesse Eisenberg-Directed Topic/Fruit Tree-Produced’ A Real Pain’ In First Big Sundance $10M WW Deal; ‘Succession’s Kieran Culkin Stars In Poland Road Trip Pic – Deadline

  1. Searchlight Lands Jesse Eisenberg-Directed Topic/Fruit Tree-Produced’ A Real Pain’ In First Big Sundance $10M WW Deal; ‘Succession’s Kieran Culkin Stars In Poland Road Trip Pic Deadline
  2. ‘A Real Pain’ Review: Kieran Culkin’s Best Performance of His Career The Daily Beast
  3. A Real Pain review – Jesse Eisenberg and Kieran Culkin lead pat buddy dramedy The Guardian
  4. ‘A Real Pain’ Review: Kieran Culkin Is a Force of Nature in Jesse Eisenberg’s Hilarious, Heartfelt Dramedy Yahoo Entertainment
  5. Kieran Culkin and Jesse Eisenberg disagree strongly on why ‘A Real Pain’ works so well Los Angeles Times

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Estonia To Follow Finland In Closing Border With Russia Over “Hybrid Attacks”? Poland Offers Troops – CRUX

  1. Estonia To Follow Finland In Closing Border With Russia Over “Hybrid Attacks”? Poland Offers Troops CRUX
  2. Finland Closes Russian Border Over Migrant Influx, Estonia Could Follow | VOANews Voice of America
  3. Russia’s ‘cynical’ actions at border aim to sow discord, Finland says POLITICO Europe
  4. Russia “Weaponising Migrants” to Destabilise NATO Neighbour? | Vantage with Palki Sharma Firstpost
  5. “If they close the border, it will be unbearable.” What Russians think about the last open checkpoint The Independent Barents Observer
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Kyiv accuses Poland of ‘populism’ over decision to not arm Ukraine amid grain row • FRANCE 24 – FRANCE 24 English

  1. Kyiv accuses Poland of ‘populism’ over decision to not arm Ukraine amid grain row • FRANCE 24 FRANCE 24 English
  2. Russia-Ukraine war live: Poland will no longer send weapons to Kyiv amid grain row; Russia claims it has downed 22 drones overnight The Guardian
  3. Russia-Ukraine war: Poland stops sending Kyiv arms ‘will see’ about future Al Jazeera English
  4. Ukraine: Poland stops supplying arms, Russian missiles hit Ukrainian cities, Zelenskyy meets Biden euronews
  5. Poland not supplying Kyiv arms now, ‘will see’ about future, says minister Reuters.com
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Poland summons Ukrainian ambassador over Zelenskiy remarks, Kyiv calls for calm – Reuters.com

  1. Poland summons Ukrainian ambassador over Zelenskiy remarks, Kyiv calls for calm Reuters.com
  2. U.N. General Assembly: Zelensky Criticizes the U.N. and Presents Peace Plan to End the War The New York Times
  3. Video: Polish president on what Ukraine must do as Putin’s war rages CNN
  4. NATO Nation Loses Cool On Ukraine; Poland Summons Envoy Over Zelensky Remarks | Kyiv Responds Hindustan Times
  5. Zelenskiy calls for Russia to lose UN veto power; UN chief says ‘humanity has opened gates of hell’ on climate – as it happened The Guardian
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Belarus military exercises raise tensions in Poland and Lithuania – Financial Times

  1. Belarus military exercises raise tensions in Poland and Lithuania Financial Times
  2. Putin Ally Belarus Holds Military Drills Near Poland & Lithuania Border | Russia, NATO War Imminent? Hindustan Times
  3. Belarus begins military drills near its border with Poland and Lithuania as tensions heighten The Associated Press
  4. Tensions rise as Belarus begins military drills near Poland and Lithuania The Guardian
  5. Russia Strikes At NATO’s Doorstep; Unleashes ‘Bastion Missiles’ In A Bold Display Of Military Might EurAsian Times
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South Korea exported weapon components to Poland, knowing they would end up in Ukraine – Yahoo Finance

  1. South Korea exported weapon components to Poland, knowing they would end up in Ukraine Yahoo Finance
  2. Exclusive: Seoul approved Poland’s export of howitzers with S.Korean parts to Ukraine Reuters
  3. South Korea Approves Export of Weapons Components to Ukraine The Wall Street Journal
  4. Exclusive-Seoul approved Poland’s export of howitzers with S.Korean parts to Ukraine, official says ThePrint
  5. At 17.3 Billion Arms Sales In 2022, South Korea Emerges As One Of The Biggest Winners From Ukraine-Russia War EurAsian Times
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Russian ‘megalomania’ in Ukraine war cited at death camp memorial | The World Wars News

The Auschwitz camp memorial director equated Nazi crimes of World War II with Russian forces now in Ukraine.

The director of the Auschwitz Nazi death camp memorial has compared the recent killing of people in Ukraine by Russian forces with similar suffering experienced during World War II.

Marking the 78th anniversary of the liberation of the camp, set up on Polish soil by Nazi Germany and where more than 1.1 million people — most of them Jews — perished in gas chambers and from starvation, cold and disease, the memorial site’s director compared Nazi crimes to those Russians have recently committed in Ukrainian towns such as Bucha and Mariupol.

“Similar sick megalomania, similar lust for power, and similar-sounding myths about uniqueness, greatness, primacy … only written in Russian. Innocent people are dying en masse in Europe, again,” the director Piotr Cywinski said in an address to an audience including Holocaust survivors on Friday.

“Wola district in Warsaw, Zamojszczyzna, Oradour and Lidice today are called Bucha, Irpin, Hostomel, Mariupol and Donetsk,” he said, referring to places where mass killings took place in World War II and sites where Ukraine and its allies accuse Russian forces of committing atrocities.

“Being silent means giving voice to the perpetrators,” Cywinski said. “Remaining indifferent is tantamount to condoning murder,” he said.

“Russia, unable to conquer Ukraine, has decided to destroy it. We see it every day, even as we stand here.”

 

Set up by Nazi Germany in occupied Poland in 1940, the camp became the largest of Adolf Hitler’s extermination centres.

Though the camp was liberated by the Soviet-era Red Army on January 27, 1945, Russian officials were not invited to take part in this year’s commemorations due to its war in Ukraine.

Valentina Matvienko, speaker of Russia’s upper house of parliament, deplored that as a “cynical” move on Friday.

“They refused to invite the liberators so that they could pay tribute to the memory of the victims,” she said. “Of course, this is very worrying.”

In a post on Telegram on Thursday, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova accused the West of trying to rewrite history and said, “the memory of the horrors of Nazism and the Soviet heroes-liberators cannot be erased”.

Russian President Vladimir Putin, who attended observances marking the 60th anniversary of the camp’s liberation in 2005, repeated his claim on Friday that Russian soldiers were fighting against neo-Nazis in Ukraine.

“This is evidenced by the crimes against civilians, ethnic cleansing and punitive actions organised by neo-Nazis in Ukraine. It is against that evil that our soldiers are bravely fighting,” Putin said.

“Forgetting the lessons of history leads to the repetition of terrible tragedies,” he said.

During Friday’s commemorations, Holocaust survivors wearing hats and scarves in the blue and white stripes of camp uniforms laid candles on the ruins of a gas chamber.

 

 



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Poland could send tanks without approval – DW – 01/23/2023

Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki has said Warsaw could send Kyiv Leopard 2 tanks without Germany’s permission.

“We will ask for such permission, but this is an issue of secondary importance,” Morawiecki said. “Even if we did not get this approval, we would still transfer our tanks together with others to Ukraine.”

 “Even if Germany is not in this coalition, we will hand over our tanks, together with the others, to Ukraine.”

Morawiecki said German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock’s statement on Sunday that Berlin would not obstruct Polish efforts to send German-made tanks to Ukraine represented a “spark of hope” that Germany might join the coalition of countries ready to send Ukraine tanks.

“We are constantly exerting pressure on the government in Berlin to make its Leopards available,” the Polish premier said. He added that Germany has “more than 350 active Leopards and about 200 in storage.”

Here are other updates on the war in Ukraine on Monday, January 23:

German MP says battle tank decision needs more time

Speaking to DW on Monday, German Bundestag member Ralf Stegner said Germany’s hesitation on sending battle tanks to Ukraine is not based on an an “implicit” refusal to do so, and emphasized that the government is taking its time in order for details to be agreed upon in coordination with Germany’s allies.

“It’s not Germany on the brakes, but it’s different countries with different opinions,” said Stegner, who is a member of German Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s center-left Social Democrats (SPD).

“If you compare the government of Poland, for instance, or what the government of France says, there are different sides to that,” he said, adding that providing fighting tanks is a “very difficult decision.”

“We want to make those decisions with our allies together, not as a loan decision from Germany,” he added.

Stegner also chimed in on the public statements made by German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock on Sunday, in which she said Germany would not stand in the way of Poland if it wished to send its German-made Leopard tanks to Ukraine.

He explained that although it is not “surprising” that Germany would not want to stand in the way of other countries providing tanks, “it’s just not usual to communicate” this kind of issue without following procedure. 

“I don’t know why the foreign minister said something public,” he said. 

The lawmaker said these kind of decisions are made in a “confidential meeting of a relevant special committee, after which results would be made public.”

Poland willing to send Leopard tanks to Ukraine

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EU foreign ministers agree to €500-million aid package

EU foreign ministers have agreed to another €500 million ($545 million) tranche of military aid for Ukraine.

The amount earmarked for Ukraine’s military from EU coffers has risen to €3.6 billion. This amount is separate from national spending by individual member states. 

In total, European countries have pledged over €11 billion on weapons for Ukraine. 

Ministers are also expected to discuss using Russian assets frozen under sanctions to help finance reconstruction in Ukraine. This includes €300 billion worth of Russian central bank reserves.

British business daily Financial Times reported on Monday that European Council President Charles Michel urged the bloc to push forward with talks on the measure.

Michel wants to explore the idea of managing the Russian central bank’s frozen assets to generate profits, which would then be earmarked for reconstruction efforts, the Financial Times reported him as saying.

Kyiv says it needs ‘several hundred’ tanks

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s chief of staff has said Ukraine needs “several hundred” tanks to push back Russian forces amid Berlin’s hesitancy over Leopard 2 deliveries.

“We need tanks — not 10-20, but several hundred,” Andriy Yermak wrote on Telegram. “Our goal is [restoring] the borders of 1991 and punishing the enemy, who will pay for their crimes.”

Ukraine declared its independence from the Soviet Union in 1991. Russia took over the Crimean Peninsula in 2014, and claimed to have annexed parts of the southern and eastern Ukraine in September 2022.

Berlin to follow ‘well-established procedures’ for tank requests — spokesman

German government spokesperson Steffen Hebestreit said Berlin will follow “well-established procedures” in considering requests to supply Kyiv with tanks.

“I would perhaps like to put it this way: If such a request were to be made in Germany, which is not the case at the moment, then there are well-established procedures for answering such a request. And we all abide by them,” he said.

“We have passionate debates and these passions occasionally lead to exaggerations on all sides,” he said, referring to the debate around tank deliveries.

Former Wagner commander in Norway not facing deportation — lawyer

Andrei Medvedev, a former commander of the Wagner mercenary group who fled to Norway, is in no risk of being deported, according to his lawyer.

“The risk of him being deported? It is zero,” Medvedev’s Norwegian lawyer Brynjulf Risnes told the Reuters news agency.

Risnes said that Medvedev had been detained as there was “disagreement” between Medvedev and police on measures taken to ensure his safety.

Earlier on Monday, the Gulagu.net rights group said that Medvedev was detained and handcuffed on Sunday evening and told he would be deported. 

The former commander said he feared for his life after witnessing the killing of Russian deserters who had been brought to Ukraine by the Wagner Group. He claimed his four-month contract had been repeatedly extended without his consent.

“We do not whitewash Medvedev. He has done many bad things in his life,” Gulagu.net said. “But he has seen the light, he has realized this, he is ready and willing to cooperate with the world, with the international investigation and with the authorities of Norway, he wants to live and testify [against Wagner].”

Russia, Estonia downgrade diplomatic ties over Ukraine tensions

Moscow has said it is downgrading diplomatic relations with Estonia and ordered its ambassador to leave, with Tallinn responding in kind.

Estonia has argued strongly in favor of Germany providing Leopard battle tanks to Kyiv.

The Russian Foreign Affairs Ministry said it had told Estonia’s envoy he must leave next month. Both countries will be represented in each other’s capitals by an interim charge d’affaires rather than an ambassador, the ministry said.

Estonian Foreign Affairs Minister Urmas Reinsalu said that Tallinn told the Russian ambassador to leave by February 7.

“We will continue to support Ukraine as Russia is planning large-scale attacks, and we call on other like-minded countries to increase their assistance to Ukraine,” Reinsalu said.

“In recent years, the Estonian leadership has purposefully destroyed the entire range of relations with Russia,” said a statement from Russia’s Foreign Ministry. “Total Russophobia, the cultivation of hostility toward our country have been elevated by Tallinn to the rank of state policy.”

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said: “The Estonian regime has gotten what it deserved” in having ties downgraded.

Russian intelligence accuses Kyiv of storing arms at nuclear power stations

Russia’s Foreign Intelligence Service SVR has accused Ukraine of storing Western-supplied arms at nuclear power stations.

The Reuters news agency said it could not verify the claims.

“The Ukrainian armed forces are storing weapons and ammunition provided by the West on the territory of nuclear power plants,” the SVR said in a statement.

Ukraine: Kiev is dangerous after dark

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Russia: No date set for START talks with US

Moscow has said no date has been set for talks with the United States on the New START treaty, which aims to limit the number of nuclear warheads in the two countries.

“The situation does not, frankly speaking, allow for setting a new date, taking into account this escalation trend in both rhetoric and actions by the United States,” Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov was cited by the state Interfax news agency as saying.

In November, Russia said it had “no other choice” but to cancel talks with the US over inspections under the New START treaty. The accord is set to expire in February 2026.

Zelenskyy pledges action following corruption scandal

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has promised “powerful steps” to be taken to counter alleged corruption in Kyiv.

“Society will receive full information, and the state will take the necessary powerful steps,” the Ukrainian head of state said.

“I don’t want to announce [the steps] now, but it will all be fair,” he said. “I want this to be clear: there will be no return to what used to be in the past.”

Deputy Infrastructure Minister Vasyl Losynskii was detained earlier this week by Ukraine’s National Anti-Corruption Bureau. He is accused of taking a bribe for the purchase of power generators. Zelenskyy said Losynskii has since been released.

Ukraine’s president also addressed media reports that civil servants have enriched themselves while soldiers have been sold overpriced food.

Zelenskyy, who heads the Servant of the People party, was elected in 2019 on an anti-corruption platform.

More DW coverage on the war in Ukraine

DW takes a look into how Russian state media portrays Germany and its leadership.

A number of German politicians have criticized Berlin’s hesitancy to supply Kyiv with Leopard 2 tanks.

sdi/rc (AP, AFP, Reuters, dpa)

While you’re here: Every Tuesday, DW editors round up what is happening in German politics and society. You can sign up here for the weekly email newsletter Berlin Briefing.

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Germany would not block Poland from sending tanks to Ukraine, minister says

PARIS, Jan 22 (Reuters) – Germany’s foreign minister said on Sunday her government would not stand in the way if Poland wants to send its Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine, in a possible breakthrough for Kyiv which wants the tanks for its fight against Russia’s invasion.

Ukrainian officials have been calling on Western allies to supply them with the modern German-made tanks for months – but Berlin has so far held back from sending them, or allowing other NATO countries to do so.

Asked what would happen if Poland went ahead and sent its Leopard 2 tanks without German approval, Annalena Baerbock said on France’s LCI TV: “For the moment the question has not been asked, but if we were asked we would not stand in the way.”

Her remarks appeared to go further than German Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s comments at a summit in Paris earlier on Sunday that all decisions on weapons deliveries would be made in coordination with allies including the United States.

Germany has been under heavy pressure to let Leopards go to Ukraine. But Scholz’s Social Democrat party is traditionally sceptical of military involvements and wary of sudden moves that could cause Moscow to further escalate.

German defense minister Boris Pistorius said on Sunday that he expected a decision soon on the tanks, though he kept up a note of caution.

Pistorius told ARD TV that Germany would not make a hasty decision because the government had many factors to consider, including consequences at home for the security of the German population.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy repeated his long-standing plea for the tanks at his Sunday meeting with former British Prime Minister Boris Johnson who was visiting Kyiv.

A Leclerc XLR battle tank manufactured by Nexter is displayed at the Eurosatory international defense and security trade fair in Villepinte, near Paris, France June 13, 2022. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier/File Photo

“We need more weapons: tanks, aircraft, long-range missiles,” Zelenskiy said, according to a statement on his website.

Ukraine says the heavily armoured Western battle tanks would give the Ukrainian ground troops more mobility and protection ahead of a new Russian offensive which Kyiv expects in the near future. It would also help Ukraine retake some of the territory that has fallen to Russia.

After the Paris summit, Scholz told a news conference that all weapons deliveries to Ukraine so far had taken place in close coordination with Western partners. “We will do that in the future,” he said.

Speaking at the same news conference, French President Emmanuel Macron said he did not rule out the possibility of sending Leclerc tanks to Ukraine.

Macron said that sending tanks must not escalate the situation, must take into account the time to train Ukrainians to be effective, and must not endanger France’s own security.

“Regarding the Leclercs, I asked the Army minister to work on it, but nothing has been ruled out,” Macron said, adding that the move would have to be coordinated with allies such as Germany in the coming days and weeks.

German sources have told Reuters they would allow German-made tanks to be sent to Ukraine to help its defence against Russia if the United States agrees to send its own tanks. But U.S. officials have said President Joe Biden’s administration is not poised to send its own tanks, including the M1 Abrams.

The Kremlin’s spokesman said on Friday that Western countries supplying additional tanks to Ukraine would not change the course of the conflict and that they would add to the problems of the Ukrainian people.

Reporting by Andreas Rinke and Leigh Thomas; Additional reporting by Tom Sims, Lidia Kelly and Humeyra Pamuk; Editing by David Holmes, Andrew Heavens and Diane Craft

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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