
Polish President Vetoes Bill Extending Social Benefits for Ukrainians
Nawrocki said the bill “places us in a situation where citizens of Poland are treated worse in their own country than our guests.”

Nawrocki said the bill “places us in a situation where citizens of Poland are treated worse in their own country than our guests.”

The Polish president’s plans reflect a stricter approach to foreigners, emphasizing the principle of ‘Polish citizens first.’

Donald Tusk said on Tuesday Poland will expel 57 Ukrainians and six Belarusians who were behind “certain provocations.”

Citing improved security reasons within Ukraine, authorities argue people could return to a few regions without being in immediate danger.
With over 4 million Ukrainians enjoying benefits in the EU, it is hard to know how many would return to their destroyed home country.

The defense ministry admitted that Kyiv ‘misled’ Warsaw by suggesting that thousands of Ukrainian refugees in Poland were ready to sign up and fight.

PM Tusk will have a hard time defending his earlier claim that the migrant relocation scheme will not apply to Poland after the French prime minister contradicted him in a TV debate.

Dublin plans to slash welfare payments to many of the 100,000 Ukrainians as asylum crisis becomes increasingly charged issue in Irish politics.

Despite the Polish government’s great support for Ukraine in its war with Russia, Poles seem to be becoming fatigued, fueling support for the populist Confederation party who are critical of the government’s spending on refugees.

The study revealed 80% of Ukrainian refugees are women, 72% have university degrees, and nearly one-fifth of those who are working age already have jobs.