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Polish farmers anger Ukraine with border

Polish farmers with their tractors block the highway linking Warsaw and Lublin outside the town of Ryki, Lublin region. — AFP
Polish farmers with their tractors block the highway linking Warsaw and Lublin outside the town of Ryki, Lublin region. — AFP
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OKOPY: Protests by Polish farmers sparked anger in neighbouring Ukraine on Tuesday, as Kyiv called on the European Commission to take robust action after demonstrators blockaded the border and opened railway carriages to let grain spill out.


Warsaw has been a staunch supporter of Kyiv in its fight to repel a full-scale Russian attack launched in 2022, but protests from farmers complaining of unfair competition have strained ties that were already on edge after truckers blocked border crossings around the turn of the year.


Tuesday's protests from farmers marked an escalation from previous demonstrations, with a near-total blockade of all Ukrainian border crossings and disruption at ports and on roads nationwide.


Television footage showed protesters at the Medyka border crossing opening railway carriages to allow grain to pour onto the tracks.


"The scattering of Ukrainian grain on the railroad tracks is another political provocation aimed at dividing our nations," Ukrainian Deputy Prime Minister Oleksandr Kubrakov said in a post on X.


Ukrainian Economy Minister Yulia Svyrydenko said Kyiv has informed the European Commission of the actions of Polish protesters at the Ukrainian border and expected a robust response. Agriculture Minister Mykola Solskyi said the grain was headed to Germany and would not have entered the Polish market.


Farmers across Europe have been demonstrating over a range of grievances, including constraints placed on them by European Union measures to tackle climate change, and what they say is unfair competition from abroad, particularly Ukraine, after an EU decision in 2022 to waive duties on Ukrainian food imports.


Protesters' tractors carried banners that read: "With grain flowing from Ukraine, Polish farmers will go bankrupt".


An organiser of the protest at Doruhusk crossing, Marcin Wielgosz, said buses would be allowed to cross once an hour on Tuesday, but no truck would pass from 0800 to 1800 local time.


"In my opinion, the border should be closed. Procedures and systems should be clarified and then maybe it could reopen but not with the rules that we have now. Because right now you can bring whatever you want, however much you want... into Poland," he said.


Kyiv says its agricultural exports through eastern Europe have not damaged EU markets.


Exasperated by the Polish protests, Ukrainian hauliers began their own round-the-clock counter-demonstration at three crossings. Their protest is planned to last till March 15.


Poland's new pro-European government has expressed sympathy for the farmers' demands but has also urged them not to take action that could damage Kyiv's war effort. — Reuters


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