Poles frustrated by wealthy Ukrainians – defense minister

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It is disappointing for locals to see refugees driving posh cars and staying in five-star hotels, Wladyslaw Kosiniak-Kamysz has said

The Polish public is frustrated at seeing wealthy Ukrainian refugees living luxurious lifestyles in the EU, the country’s defense minister, Wladyslaw Kosiniak-Kamysz, has said.

Poland, which has been one of Ukraine’s main backers during the conflict with Russia, initially willingly accepted more than a million refugees from the neighboring state. However, the attitude towards Ukrainians in the country has since shifted.

In comments cited by the Polish Defense Ministry's account on X on Monday, Kosiniak-Kamysz acknowledged that “frustration exists” in Poland with Ukrainian refugees. “I am not afraid to say it,” he added.

“I understand that there is fatigue and disappointment, especially when you see tens, hundreds of thousands, or maybe even over a million young Ukrainians driving the best cars around Europe and spending weekends in five-star hotels,” the defense minister stressed.

However, he insisted that everyone in Poland “should accept and understand” the reasons why the country must keep providing aid to Ukraine.

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“We help because we are human beings and we want to remain human beings. This is in our vital interest – the security of the Polish state,” Kosiniak-Kamysz argued, claiming that the continued fighting makes Russia “weaker.”

On Sunday, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk insisted that the EU must arm itself in order to be able to “guarantee peace” between Moscow and Kiev “not through the capitulation of Ukraine, but thanks to its own joint strength.”

Ukrainian information portal InPoland reported last month that Ukrainians have been increasingly leaving Poland for Germany, motivated by higher wages and better access to social benefits. Their number in the country has reduced from more than 1.3 million to around 983,000, it said.

Earlier this year, Tusk backed legislation stopping benefit payouts to refugees unless they live, work and pay taxes in Poland. Warsaw has also previously announced that it would not shelter Ukrainian men seeking to evade Kiev’s increasingly harsh mobilization campaign.

In February, Interior Minister Tomasz Siemoniak stated that Warsaw will stop letting in new migrants altogether, despite being bound to do so by an EU pact adopted last year.

According to data from Polish police, Ukrainian citizens committed almost two-thirds (9,753 out of 16,437) of offenses among foreigners in the country in 2024.

READ MORE: US halts all military aid to Ukraine – media

UN data suggests that there are some 6.3 million Ukrainian refugees currently staying in the EU and UK. Russia has accepted around 5.3 million people from Ukraine since the escalation of the conflict in 2022, TASS reported in 2023, citing a source in the security services.

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