Poland sees migrant surge at border, accuses Belarus of 鈥榮tate terrorism鈥�

Polish police and military police stop vehicles at the checkpoint on the road between Sokolka and Kuznica as they head to the reinforced border in Kuznica on Wednesday. (AFP)
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  • Concern was growing for more than 2,000 migrants who are trapped at the border, with the UN calling their plight "intolerable"
  • "What we are facing here, we must be clear, is a manifestation of state terrorism," Polish Prime Minister told reporters in Warsaw

SOKOLKA, Poland: Poland said Wednesday it had seen a surge in attempts to breach its border and pushed back hundreds of migrants to Belarus, accusing Minsk of 鈥渟tate terrorism鈥� by provoking a new migrant crisis in Europe.
Concern was growing for more than 2,000 migrants 鈥� mainly Kurds from the Middle East 鈥� who are trapped at the border, with the UN calling their plight 鈥渋ntolerable鈥� and demanding action.
Western governments accuse Belarusian strongman Alexander Lukashenko of luring them to his country and sending them to cross into Poland in retaliation for sanctions.
鈥淲hat we are facing here, we must be clear, is a manifestation of state terrorism,鈥� Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki told reporters in Warsaw at a news conference with visiting EU chief Charles Michel.
Michel said new sanctions against Belarus 鈥渁re on the table.鈥�
European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen said she expected 鈥渁 widening of the sanctions鈥� at the beginning of next week.
鈥淭his is the attempt of an authoritarian regime to try to destabilize its democratic neighbors. This will not succeed,鈥� she said, speaking after a meeting with US President Joe Biden in Washington.
Migrants have been trying to cross the border for months but the crisis reached a new level when hundreds made a concerted effort on Monday and were pushed back by Polish borders guards.
They set up a camp on the border, sheltering in tents and burning wood from local forests to keep warm, blocked by Polish guards behind razor-wire.
In the Polish town of Sokolka near the border, AFP reporters saw patrols stopping vehicles to check the boots for migrants, as well as lines of military trucks and police vans going to and from the border.
鈥淭he residents here are under constant stress,鈥� Sokolka鈥檚 deputy mayor Piotr Romanowicz told AFP.
Izabela Korecki, 38, who was walking in the town center with her daughters, said she felt 鈥渢ense.鈥�
鈥淲e hear the sirens and helicopters all the time,鈥� she said.
Journalists and charity workers have been banned from the immediate border area by Polish authorities under state of emergency rules.
Poland has sent 15,000 troops to the border along with police and border guards, accusing Belarus of using intimidation to force migrants to breach the border.
Belarus has in turn accused Poland of violating international norms by blocking the migrants and beating them back with violence.
In a back street of Sokolka, Anna Chmielewska, a volunteer with the Ocalenie (Salvation) Foundation, was sorting through a garage filled with donated food and clothes intended for migrants.
鈥淚 can鈥檛 believe we are living in times like these. We are here, we are ready to help but we cannot,鈥� she said, explaining that volunteers could only help migrants who make it beyond the border area.
Kyle McNally, a humanitarian affairs adviser at Doctors Without Borders who has met with migrants on the Belarusian side of the border, called for 鈥渦nfettered access鈥� to assist them.
鈥淭he people that we have spoken with and we have seen are really in a desperate state and it鈥檚 getting worse by the day,鈥� he said.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel on Wednesday called Lukashenko鈥檚 main backer, Russian President Vladimir Putin, asking him 鈥渢o use his influence鈥� with Minsk to stop what she called an 鈥渋nhumane鈥� instrumentalization of migrants.
But Belarus and Moscow have said the West should deal with migrant flows caused by its military interventions in the Middle East.
The Kremlin said it was 鈥渋rresponsible鈥� for Poland to blame Putin for the crisis, while Belarus鈥檚 foreign minister said the EU was causing the crisis because it wanted a reason to impose new sanctions.
鈥淭he migrant crisis was provoked by the EU itself and its states that border Belarus,鈥� Vladimir Makei said on a visit to Moscow to meet his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov on Wednesday.
Lavrov accused Western institutions of mounting an 鈥渁nti-Belarusian campaign,鈥� and said Russia and Belarus had 鈥渃losely coordinated our approaches鈥� to countering it.
Thousands of migrants have crossed or attempted to cross from Belarus into the eastern EU member states of Latvia, Lithuania and Poland in recent months.
At least 10 migrants have died on the Poland-Belarus border, seven of them on the Polish side of the border, according to the Polish daily Gazeta Wyborcza.