Polish President Slams EU’s Lack Of ‘Solidarity’ With Eastern Europe

Poland

Polish President Andrzej Duda defied European Union criticism of his country’s government on Sunday, accusing the bloc of showing “too little solidarity” with its eastern members.

Poland has come under fire for refusing to take in its share of asylum-seekers under an EU plan to tackle Europe’s migration crisis, citing security fears following last month’s jihadist attacks in Brussels.

The conservative government has also faced criticism over controversial reforms that prompted the EU to launch a probe in January to determine if proposed changes to Poland’s constitutional court violate the bloc’s democracy rules.

“The Union must be more decisive. The EU is strong, but weak on the level of decision-making and that’s its problem today,” Duda, a member of the ruling right-wing Law and Justice (PiS) party, told PAP news agency.

“It is possible that it comes from the fact that the EU shows too little solidarity,” he added.

“There is not enough solidarity in understanding the situation of the countries of Central and Eastern Europe

“Put differently, the countries that recently joined the EU are seeking to catch up with the rich countries of the West.

“We are seeking to raise the standard of living for young people so that they don’t have to seek work abroad to have a proper salary and to live normally.”

In an apparent reference to the Nordstream 2 pipeline which will bring Russian gas to Western Europe, Duda also called on the EU to understand “the issues important to the sovereignty of states, such as energy policy and that of raw materials”.

Poland has been critical of the project, which it claims undermines the EU in the face of Russian aggression and is also seen as a challenge to the country’s coal industry.

But Duda said that he, like “the great majority of Poles”, valued the EU greatly.

“I support the EU as a union of nation-states that cooperates especially in the economic field, without interfering in matters that should remain in the area of national sovereignty,” he said.

Since the PiS swept to power in October’s elections, relations have chilled between Poland and EU institutions, which have expressed alarm over Polish reforms to the constitutional court and public media.

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