Current:Home > InvestPoland’s leader defends his decision to suspend the right to asylum -ChatGPT
Poland’s leader defends his decision to suspend the right to asylum
View
Date:2025-04-13 03:31:15
WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Poland’s Prime Minister Donald Tusk on Monday defended a plan to suspend the right to asylum as human rights and civil society organizations argued that fundamental rights must be respected.
Poland has struggled since 2021 with migration pressures on its border with Belarus, which is also part of the European Union’s external border.
“It is our right and our duty to protect the Polish and European border,” Tusk said on X. “Its security will not be negotiated.”
Successive Polish governments have accused Belarus and Russia of organizing the mass transfer of migrants from the Middle East and Africa to the EU’s eastern borders to destabilize the West. They view it as part of a hybrid war that they accuse Moscow of waging against the West as it continues its nearly three-year full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
Some migrants have applied for asylum in Poland, but before the requests are processed, many travel across the EU’s border-free travel zone to reach Germany or other countries in Western Europe. Germany, where security fears are rising after a spate of extremist attacks, recently responded by expanding border controls at all of its borders to fight irregular migration. Tusk called Germany’s move “unacceptable.”
Tusk announced his plan to suspend the right for migrants to seek asylum at a convention of his Civic Coalition on Saturday. It’s part of a strategy that will be presented to a Cabinet meeting on Tuesday.
The decision does not affect Ukrainians, who have been given international protection in Poland. The United Nations estimates that about 1 million people from neighboring Ukraine have taken refuge from the war in Poland.
Dozens of nongovernmental organizations urged Tusk in an open letter to respect the right to asylum guaranteed by international conventions that Poland signed, including the Geneva Convention on the Status of Refugees and the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union, and Poland’s own constitution.
“It is thanks to them that thousands of Polish women and men found shelter abroad in the difficult times of communist totalitarianism, and we have become one of the greatest beneficiaries of these rights,” the letter said.
It was signed by Amnesty International and 45 other organizations that represent a range of humanitarian, legal and civic causes.
Those who support Tusk’s decision argue that the international conventions date to an earlier time before state actors engineered migration crises to harm other states.
“The Geneva Convention is from 1951 and really no one fully predicted that we would have a situation like on the Polish-Belarusian border,” Maciej Duszczyk, a migration expert who serves as deputy interior minister, said in an interview on private radio RMF FM.
Tusk has argued that Finland also suspended accepting asylum applications after facing migration pressure on its border with Russia.
“The right to asylum is used instrumentally in this war and has nothing to do with human rights,” Tusk said on X on Sunday.
A spokesperson for the European Commission, the EU’s executive branch, acknowledged the challenge posed by Belarus and Russia, and didn’t explicitly criticize Tusk’s approach.
“It is important and imperative that the union is protecting the external borders, and in particular from Russia and Belarus, both countries that have put in the past three years a lot of pressure on the external borders,” Anitta Hipper said during a briefing Monday. “This is something that is undermining the security of the EU member states and of the union as a whole.”
But she also underlined that EU member countries are legally obliged to allow people to apply for international protection.
Hipper noted that the commission intends to “work on ensuring that the member states have the necessary tools to respond to these types of hybrid attacks.”
___
Associated Press writer Lorne Cook in Brussels contributed to this report.
___
Follow AP’s coverage of migration issues at https://apnews.com/hub/migration
veryGood! (6)
Related
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Clemson coach Dabo Swinney apologizes for mental-health joke after loss at Miami
- How Taylor Swift Made Drew Barrymore Feel Ready to Fill the Blank Space in Her Love Life
- Quick genetic test offers hope for sick, undiagnosed kids. But few insurers offer to pay.
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- 'You want it to hurt': Dolphins hope explosive attack fizzling out vs. Eagles will spark growth
- CVS pulls certain cold medicines from shelves. Here's why
- 'Make this place quiet': Rangers earn redemption to beat Astros, force ALCS Game 7
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Video shows Coast Guard rescuing mariners after luxury yacht capsizes near North Carolina
Ranking
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Israeli boy marks 9th birthday in Hamas captivity as family faces agonizing wait
- Georgia man shoots and kills his 77-year-old grandfather in Lithonia, police say
- Zach Edey named unanimous AP preseason All-American, joined by Kolek, Dickinson, Filipowski, Bacot
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- Leading in early results, Machado claims win in Venezuelan opposition’s presidential primary
- Prosecutor: Ex-police chief who quit in excessive force case gets prison term for attacking ex-wife
- Rebecca Loos Slams David Beckham For Portraying Himself as the Victim After Alleged Affair
Recommendation
Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
Washington Commanders' Jonathan Allen sounds off after defeat to New York Giants
40 years after Beirut’s deadly Marines bombing, US troops again deploying east of the Mediterranean
Authorities search for two boaters who went missing in Long Island Sound off Connecticut
US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
Texas coach Steve Sarkisian provides update on quarterback Quinn Ewers' status
Court orders Russian-US journalist to stay in jail another 6 weeks
Woman rescued after spending 16 hours in California cave, treated for minor injuries