Poland’s migration border crisis pays political
dividends for the government
The government says an emergency decree is needed to
keep the country safe from threats to the east.
BY MARIA WILCZEK
September
7, 2021 12:05 am
https://www.politico.eu/article/poland-belarus-migration-border-crisis-politics/
WARSAW —
The Polish government’s imposition of a state of emergency on the border with
Belarus turned into a political flashpoint Monday, with the opposition accusing
it of trying to block the media from reporting on how troops and border guards
are responding to migrants trying to cross the frontier.
The
government says the state of emergency — the first such measure since the
communist regime’s martial law decree in 1981 — is needed to stem migrants,
mostly from Iraq and Afghanistan, illegally entering from Belarus. Despite not
having a solid majority in parliament, the government got the backing of most
MPs after a stormy debate, with 168 deputies voting to rescind the measure
while 247 backed the government.
Although
the legal reasons for the decree only mention the migrants — who are being
encouraged to cross the border by Belarusian leader Alexander Lukashenko — the
government also says there’s a danger from the Zapad joint military exercises
being conducted by Russia and Belarus starting on Friday.
“We can
clearly see that scenarios threatening the sovereignty and security of the
Polish state have been written in Moscow and Minsk,” Prime Minister Mateusz
Morawiecki of the ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party said in parliament.
Although
the Zapad exercises have been held regularly in the past — in 2009 they even
simulated a nuclear attack on Warsaw — the government says this year’s
maneuvers are more worrying.
“The level
of threat at the moment may be the highest since the collapse of the Soviet
Union,” said Paweł Soloch, the head of the president’s national security
office. “We see a correlation between the migration crisis and the Zapad
exercises.”
Lukashenko
is being accused of encouraging migrants, flown to Minsk from the Middle East,
to cross into the EU in retaliation for sanctions imposed after last year’s
contested presidential election and the subsequent brutal crackdown on
protests. Belarus has denied these allegations. Migrants have been intercepted
in Latvia, Lithuania and Poland, and all three countries have imposed special
measures to bring the problem under control.
“Our
services have identified 46 planes from Baghdad to Minsk … that is around 10,000
residents of Iraq,” said Polish Interior Minister Mariusz Kamiński, calling for
preventive measures to avoid a “great migration crisis.” Some 3,500 people have
tried crossing Poland’s 418-kilometer border with Belarus last month.
Two
narratives
The opposition
accused the government of spinning the border problem into an existential
crisis for political gain.
“There is
no justification of the state of emergency on the basis of constitutional
conditions,” argued Tomasz Siemoniak, a former defense minister and an MP with
the Civic Platform opposition party.
Although
the government is sounding the alarm at home, it’s not doing the same abroad.
It has not called on help from Frontex, the EU’s border agency, which is
headquartered in Warsaw. Frontex is helping Lithuania deal with its border
problems since late July, where Poland has also chipped in a helicopter and
patrol units.
Kamiński
said the opposition’s suggestion to enlist EU help was “an expression of [its]
incompetence.”
Polish
Border Guard spokesperson Anna Michalska said: “If we will need assistance from
Frontex, we will certainly ask.”
“Poland has
no shortage of staff and is well equipped to defend its border on its own,”
said Marek Świerczyński, head of the security desk at Polityka Insight, a think
tank in Warsaw. “But there could, unfortunately, be a political reason too —
the Polish government may not want European institutions watching its hands.”
Media
crackdown
The border
crisis is the biggest story in Poland — one that’s attracted human rights
groups, opposition MPs and subjected the Polish government to intensive
scrutiny over how people are being treated and criticism from European
organizations and campaigners over its refusal to accept asylum applications
from many migrants. The European Court of Human Rights last month told Poland
to provide migrants at the border with aid.
Siemoniak
called restrictions on media activity in the 3-kilometer-wide border zone
“unprecedented and absurd.”
But barring
outsiders from entering the area means there will be less of a chance of any
“provocative” activity by foreign agents, and that could take some of the
pressure off the military and police operating in the area. “They need not look
around, and can focus on looking east,” said Świerczyński.
While human
rights groups are calling for help for the people stuck on the border, many
Poles have qualms about opening the country to large numbers of outsiders.
Donald
Tusk, the leader of Civic Platform, has been quite careful in how he treats the
issue — criticizing the government for not helping 32 migrants stuck on the
border between Belarus and Poland, but also saying, “We have to ensure the
safety of our borders.”
The border
crisis has shifted attention from PiS’s recent run of political troubles and
has helped boost support for the nationalist party in recent opinion polls.

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