Sabotage Disrupts Poland Rail Line Used for Ukraine Aid
Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said two Ukrainian nationals working with Russian intelligence orchestrated sabotage targeting a key rail line for Ukraine aid, with no injuries reported.
- On Tuesday, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk told parliament that two Ukrainians suspected of acting for Russian intelligence carried out railway sabotage between Saturday and Monday, damaging a line used to supply Ukraine.
- Tusk said the attacks likely aimed to trigger social and political consequences by fueling anti-Ukrainian sentiment, while Andriy Sybiga, Ukrainian Foreign Minister, suggested Monday the sabotage tested responses.
- Both suspects crossed into Poland from Belarus this autumn and are believed to have fled back shortly; one was convicted by a Lviv court for acts of sabotage, the other is from Russian‑occupied Donbas.
- Authorities reported 23 arrests linked to sabotage, European leaders showed solidarity, and Tusk said names may be released later Tuesday; the Kremlin accused Poland of `Russophobia`.
- Poland's role as a transit hub means military and humanitarian aid to Ukraine faces heightened risks, with Prime Minister Donald Tusk calling it `perhaps the most serious national security situation in Poland since the outbreak of the full-scale war in Ukraine`.
369 Articles
369 Articles
All indications are that Russian agents are responsible for Sunday's bomb attack on a railway line in Poland, said Jacek Dobrzynski, a spokesman for Poland's internal security service. Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk later said that the suspects in the attack were two Ukrainians working for Moscow.
The Prime Minister of Poland, Donald Tusk, stated that two Ukrainians were suspected of having committed sabotages on the railway under Warsaw, who had cooperated with Russian intelligence services, and he referred to this in the Seimas and referred to RMF24.
Poland Says 2 Ukrainians Working for Russia Suspected in Railway Sabotage
Two Ukrainians acting on behalf of Russian intelligence agencies are suspected of carrying out separate acts of railway sabotage in Poland, Prime Minister Donald Tusk told parliament on Tuesday.
'Operating and cooperating with Russians': Tusk says two Ukrainians suspected in Polish rail sabotage
Two Ukrainians working for Moscow have been identified as suspects in two cases of rail line sabotage in Poland, Prime Minister Donald Tusk said during a speech in parliament on Tuesday
Donald Tusk has pointed out "two Ukrainian citizens who have been operating and collaborating with Russian services for a long time" as material authors of the attack on railway infrastructure
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