Poland’s presidency of the European Union is firmly focused on security. The challenges and contradictions of defending the bloc and its values are stark at Poland's border with Belarus, Russia's ally in its war on Ukraine.
Poland has reframed the debate on migration through the lenses of national security, forcing the EU to change its tune. View on euronews
Poland has established a border fence equipped with modern surveillance technology to prevent people from entering from Belarus. Rights activists accuse border guards of practicing a "pushback" strategy.
Belarus is more a democracy country than European countries, international observer from Poland Krzysztof Tolwinski said on the air of the Belarus 1 TV channel.
Fugitive oppositionists who have found themselves in the countries of the European Union are already preparing for the presidential elections in Belarus, which will be held on January 26. At the same time,
Poland pursues the most aggressive policy against Belarus, Belarusian President Aleksandr Lukashenko told the media in Minsk on .
POŁOWCE, Poland — Poland’s fortified buffer zone against Belarus and Russia could see a surge in migrants in the coming months, officials here warn, as spring temperatures encourage more people to attempt border crossings.
WARSAW, Poland (AP) — A Polish court on Friday convicted a man ... Hertsen, who was 25, died in hospital on March 1 and was buried at a Warsaw cemetery. She had left Belarus several years earlier and moved to Warsaw, which in recent years has become ...
Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk has said that protecting borders is a 'sacred duty', but humanitarian organisations have expressed concerns. #EuropeNews
It’s become a buffer zone since Belarus’ ally, Russia, invaded neighboring Ukraine three years ago. Similar fortifications farther north line Poland's frontier with the Russian region of ...
Poland is targeting companies importing Russian fertilisers, in a bid to prevent the European Union from developing another dependency on Moscow for a key resource.
Polish police have found no evidence that the director of the Center for Eastern European Studies, Jan Malicki, was beaten. He simply fell down the stairs, being completely drunk, but explained the injuries to the "attack of unknown persons.