Friday, July 10, 2026

The European Court of Human Rights tells Poland and Latvia to help immigrants stranded at the Belarusian border – EURACTIV.com


The European Court of Human Rights on Wednesday (August 25) asked Poland and Latvia to provide assistance and care for dozens of Afghan and Iraqi immigrants stranded at the Belarusian border.

The organization has been trapped on the eastern border of the European Union for two weeks, and the Polish army prevented them from entering and applied for asylum.

In recent months, thousands of migrants-mainly from the Middle East-have crossed the border from Belarus into the eastern European countries Latvia, Lithuania and Poland.

Brussels believes that the Minsk regime deliberately planned a large influx to retaliate against EU sanctions — allegations that Belarus has denied.

Poland called this a “mixed attack” on the EU and ruled out the possibility of allowing them to enter, saying that they are still in Belarus and should intervene.

The Strasbourg-based court’s decision is binding, requiring the Polish and Latvian authorities to “provide food, water, clothing, adequate medical services to all those who make the request, and provide temporary shelter where possible”, Until September 15th.

The judge made it clear that neither of these countries had been told to let this group of immigrants in.

A court statement stated that 41 Iraqi Kurds and 32 Afghans sought court help to enter Latvia or Poland and demanded international protection.

Afghan women “at risk of death”

A charity helping immigrants told AFP on Wednesday that a 52-year-old Afghan woman was trapped in a temporary immigration camp on the border between Belarus and Poland. Without emergency help, she could die.

About 30 migrants were trapped at the eastern border of the European Union for more than two weeks. Polish border guards and soldiers prevented them from entering and applied for asylum.

“We are worried about the life of a 52-year-old woman,” said Kalina Czarnog from the Ocalenie (Salvation) Foundation.

The foundation stated that the woman had respiratory and kidney problems, and a total of 12 immigrants are currently seriously ill.

“They have no drinking water. Since Polish soldiers prevented them from entering, representatives of the foundation have been communicating with migrants through loudspeakers, and they have not had food since yesterday,” the foundation said on Twitter.

The day after the UNHCR made a similar request, the European Commission Human Rights Commissioner Dunja Mijatovic also called on Poland to accept these migrants on Wednesday.

The Polish government has announced plans to build a tall barbed wire fence along one-third of its border to prevent further arrival.





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