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France 24
France 24
Politics

Russia, NATO weigh in as migrant crisis worsens at Belarus-Poland border

Hundreds of desperate migrants are trapped in freezing weather on the Belarusian-Polish border, where the presence of troops has raised fears of a confrontation. © Leonid Shcheglov, Belta/AFP

The European Union accused Belarus on Wednesday of mounting a “hybrid attack” by pushing migrants across the border into Poland, paving the way for widened sanctions against Minsk in a crisis that threatens to draw in Russia and NATO.

Russia took the rare step of dispatching two nuclear-capable strategic bombers to patrol Belarusian airspace in a show of support for its close ally. Poland briefed fellow NATO allies at a closed-door meeting and they pledged their support, an alliance official said.

Migrants from the Middle East, Afghanistan and Africa trapped in Belarus made multiple attempts to force their way into Poland overnight, Warsaw said, announcing that it had reinforced the border with extra guards.

UN human rights chief Michelle Bachelet called on states to reduce tensions and resolve the “intolerable” crisis.

“These hundreds of men, women and children must not be forced to spend another night in freezing weather without adequate shelter, food, water and medical care,” she said.

The Debate: How far will Belarus-Poland border showdown go?

Reporting from the eastern town of Hajnowka in Poland, near the border with Belarus, FRANCE 24’s Gulliver Cragg said groups of migrants are still crossing over into Poland, despite border guards' claims to the contrary.

“Some of them are now hiding in the woods,” he said, adding that he met two migrants who told him they intended to try make their way to Germany.

“Humanitarian workers are telling us that more and more migrants are refusing to ask for asylum in Poland because they know that Poland has officialised a policy of push-backs, so their chances of getting their asylum applications considered are not very high even if they might have solid grounds for applying for asylum,” Cragg added. “So that means they are really risking their lives by staying in the freezing woods around here.”

More Belarus sanctions in the works

The EU, which has repeatedly sanctioned Belarus for human rights abuses, accuses Minsk of luring migrants from war-torn and impoverished countries and then pushing them to cross into Poland to try to sow violent chaos on the bloc’s eastern flank.

“We are facing a brutal hybrid attack on our EU borders. Belarus is weaponising migrants’ distress in a cynical and shocking way,” EU Council President Charles Michel said.

The bloc’s 27 ambassadors agreed this constituted a legal basis for further sanctions, which could come as early as next week and target some 30 individuals and entities including the Belarusian foreign minister and the national airline.

“Very rapidly at the beginning of next week there will be a widening of the sanctions against Belarus,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen told reporters after a meeting with US President Joe Biden in Washington.

“We will look into the possibility of sanctioning those airlines who facilitate human trafficking towards Minsk and then the EU-Belarus border,” she added.

Biden and von der Leyen addressed the humanitarian situation on the European Union’s border with Belarus and expressed “deep concern about the irregular migration flows”, the White House said. Separately, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said: “The idea that Belarus would weaponise migration is also profoundly objectionable.”

He said Washington will keep pressure on Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko “as long as the regime is refusing to respect its international obligations, or commitments, as long as it’s undermining peace and security in Europe through its actions and as long as it continues to repress and abuse people...”

Belarus, Russia say West 'provoking' migrant crisis to impose new sanctions

Lukashenko and Russian President Vladimir Putin have pinned the blame on the EU.

The Kremlin accused Europe of failing to live up to its own humanitarian ideals and trying to “strangle” Belarus with plans to close part of the frontier. Moscow said it was unacceptable for the EU to impose sanctions on Belarus over the crisis.

Pressure point

The crisis strikes the EU in a vulnerable area.

In 2015, the bloc was deeply shaken by an influx of over a million people fleeing conflict in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan that led to deep rifts between member states, strained social security systems and fanned support for far-right parties.

The EU appears more united this time but there are signs of internal friction: some in Brussels have warned Poland that it should not use EU funds to erect border walls and razor wire while others argue the bloc needs to help defend its borders. Michel said on Wednesday the EU needed to make up its mind.

Compared with 2015, the current crisis has an added geopolitical dimension as it is unfolding on the dividing line between NATO to the west and Russia-allied Belarus to the east.

The Tupolev Tu-22M3 bombers that Russia sent to overfly Belarus are capable of carrying nuclear missiles, including hypersonic ones of the kind designed to evade sophisticated Western air defences.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said he hoped responsible Europeans would “not allow themselves to be drawn into a spiral that is fairly dangerous”.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel told reporters she urged Putin in a phone call to use his influence on Lukashenko “because people (migrants) are being used, they have become, so to speak, victims of an inhumane policy – and something has to be done about it”.

The Kremlin said Putin told Merkel that the EU should talk directly to Belarus.

Stranded families

Thousands of people have converged on the border this week, where makeshift razor wire fences and Polish soldiers have repeatedly blocked their entry. Some of the migrants have used logs, spades and other implements to try to break through.

“It was not a calm night. Indeed, there were many attempts to breach the Polish border,” Defence Minister Mariusz Blaszczak told broadcaster PR1.

Video from the border obtained by Reuters showed young children and babies among the people stuck there.

“There are lots of families here with babies between two and four months old. They have not eaten anything for the past three days,” the person who provided the video told Reuters, saying they were a migrant themselves and declining to be identified.

FRANCE 24's Cragg said that a lot of Poles “are extremely concerned” about the humanitarian crisis that is unfolding on their doorstep, “but the Polish government says this is the only way to dissuade Alexander Lukashenko and make him stop bringing the migrants to Belarus and sending them across the border under the false illusions that they’re going to have an easy passage to the European Union.”

Some migrants have complained of being repeatedly pushed back and forth by Polish and Belarusian border guards, putting them at risk of hypothermia, lack of food and water.

Syrian migrant Youssef Atallah said he feared he would die in the forest at the border after being stranded for days, unable to breathe through his nose after it was broken in what he said was an assault by a Belarusian soldier.

Atallah, who finally reached safety in a migrant centre inside Poland on Wednesday, described almost giving up after being blocked in both directions at the border.

“We told (Belarusian guards) we want to go back to Minsk, we don’t want to continue this trip,” he told Reuters. “They told us there is no going back to Minsk for you. Just go to Poland.”

(FRANCE 24 with REUTERS)

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