Poland: ‘State of emergency’ worsens Afghan refugees’ plight
People look at the camera from afar, with heavily armed soldiers separating them and the photographer. Some of the people in the photos seem to be waving, but few are smiling. They do not look particularly serious, but they do seem desperate.
These are rare pictures of the 32 Afghans who have been waiting at the border between Poland and Belarus for over three weeks now. The black-and-white photos were taken by Anna Maria Biniecka from Testigo Documentary, a Polish collective of multimedia journalists that reports on political and social themes that receive little attention in the mainstream media.
Among other places, the pictures have been posted to the Facebook page of the Ocalenie (Rescue) Foundation, which supports migrants and refugees living in Poland. Its activists on the ground have criticized the Polish authorities’ failure to act. “They watch Mohammad, a tailor, who has promised to sew all the helpers in our camp a nice coat as soon as he comes out of this hell. Sayyed, a chef who wants to cook us his best dish, qabuli (rice with carrots and raisins). Abdul, an electrical engineer. Mohsen, a smith. Mohammad, a carpet weaver,” is what they have written on social media.
They explain that with the help of a megaphone and a translator they were able to conduct short conversations with the Afghans and find out what jobs they were doing before they were forced to leave their homes.
The information is precious because NGOs and doctors have been complaining for days that they are unable to access the people at the border. And the situation is likely to worsen now that the authorities have declared a state of emergency for 30 days in 183 places along the border. Mass gatherings are banned, as is the photographing and filming of “border objects” as well as soldiers, police officers and border guards. Journalists can also no longer access the frontier area.
‘Absurd’
The Polish Parliament could technically nullify the emergency order, but there does not currently seem to be a majority in favor of doing this, even though there are many critics.
Former Polish Interior Minister Marek Biernacki said on television that the state of emergency was “absurd.” “These are usually introduced when a situation is critical and the authorities can no longer act normally and on the basis of existing laws,” he said. The opposition has also wondered whether it is appropriate to declare a state of emergency because of 32 refugees.
The current interior minister, Mariusz Kaminski, insists that the state of emergency makes sense. He said that the situation on the border would stabilize as a result: “This problem does not only concern 30 people on the other side of the border. This is the tip of the iceberg that Lukashenko wants to give us. We will not allow Poland to become another route for illegal mass immigration into the European Union,” he said.
He also referred to upcoming Russian military drills behind Poland’s eastern border. “Part of these important maneuvers will take place in Belarus, directly on our border,” he stated. “We have to be prepared for every scenario, for every provocation on the border.”
‘It is against the law’
For activists and helpers in the border area, the state of emergency means that they have to dismantle their tents and leave. The doctor and activist Paulina Bownik, who has been helping refugees for years, told DW a few days ago that she had been able to get within a few meters (yards) of the Afghans at first, but then she was told to keep at a greater distance.
“The people who turn me away don’t even want to identify themselves,” she said. “A person fainted the day before yesterday; we could see him lying on the ground. Other refugees gathered around and asked for a doctor. You could see that the Polish and Belarusian soldiers didn’t know what to do. But the police, or more precisely their so-called crisis-prevention forces, would not let me through.”
The police officers told her that because they were there to support the border guards and not taking their “own” actions, they did not have to identify themselves. “The refugees are clearly signalizing that they are cold, that someone is unconscious, and we cannot help them because the police is barring access. It is against the law, and this is happening on Polish soil.”
The 32 Afghans, who are in fact officially still on Belarusian territory or in no-man’s land, have been camping there for over three weeks now. The Polish government accuses Belarusian ruler Alexander Lukashenko of purposely bringing them and other refugees to the EU’s external border. He had announced at the end of May that he would no longer prevent people from crossing the country to get to the EU in response to tougher sanctions imposed on Belarus by the West. Poland’s interior minister said that Lukashenko obviously wanted to provoke another refugee crisis like the one of 2015.
According to official Polish figures, some 3,500 people tried to enter illegally from Belarus in August but were prevented in 2,500 cases. Paulina Bownik estimates that the real numbers are probably three times higher. “It is important to help these people,” she said. “People will keep trying to cross the border despite the state of emergency.”
Poland and the Geneva Conventions
Rafal Kostrzynski from the UNHCR in Poland told DW that it was necessary to minimize humanitarian costs. “Every state has the right to protect its borders, but these should be open for people who want to apply for refugee status and who very likely need international protection,” he said.
But in this case, he pointed out, the border guards were refusing to accept any applications whatever reasons were presented. “There is no doubt in international and Polish law that a person who arrives at a border and requests refugee status is not committing a crime regardless of whether they have documents or are trying to cross a border not meant for this purpose,” he insisted, adding that he did not understand why certain regulations were being ignored. He pointed out that Poland had signed the Geneva convention on refugees exactly 30 years ago.
The head of the UNHCR in Poland, Christine Goyer, wrote in the Polish daily Rzeczpospolita: “I would like to believe that Poland will stay true to these values and will protect refugees at least another 30 years.”
This article has been translated from German
SOURCE: DW News