Poland’s Foreign Ministry has said that some elements in the ongoing protests by Polish farmers could “possibly be influenced by Russian agents” after banners appeared expressing anti-Ukrainian and pro-Putin sentiment.
One of the protest leaders expressed regret over the incidents, which he suggested could be a deliberate “provocation”.
This week, one farmer was photographed with a banner displayed on his tractor that said: “Putin, sort out Ukraine and Brussels, and our government.” The image caused public outrage.
The man, who also had a Soviet flag hanging on his vehicle, was detained by police the same day. He has been charged with public propagation of hatred based on nationality, a crime punishable in Poland by up to two years’ imprisonment.
Another anti-Ukrainian banner that has sparked public outrage read “It’s the end of our hospitality, you ungrateful sons of bitches” and displayed an image of a stick man kicking another stick man in Ukrainian colours off a map of Poland.
In a statement on February 21, the Foreign Ministry emphasised that these types of messages put Poland, a country that had been since the beginning of the Russian aggression heavily involved in helping Ukraine, “in a bad light” and also “compromise the organisers of the protests themselves”.
“In our assessment, this is an attempt to take over the agricultural protest movement by extreme and irresponsible groups, possibly influenced by Russian agents,” it added.
The ministry called on the organisers of the demonstrations to identify and remove the “few initiators” of such controversial actions from their movement “in the name of the Polish national interest and the chance to realise their demands”.
One of the leaders of the protests and president of a farmers’ unions, Slawomir Izdebski, expressed regret over anti-Ukrainian and pro-Putin banners at protests.
“I don’t know if this was a provocation or a conscious decision by one of the farmers. Nothing like that should happen,” he said, referring to a farmer with the banner calling for Putin’s involvement.
“Certainly, it was not the decision of any of the trade unions,” he said. “People are so determined that they resort to various methods but that should not happen.”
The farmers launched a 30-day strike on February 9, since when they had been blocking roads around Poland as well as border crossings with Ukraine. They say that cheap Ukrainian agricultural imports and EU climate policies threaten their livelihoods. (Notes from Poland/Business World Magazine)