An Iraqi Kurdish family of seven with five children aged between 5 and 15 has already spent 20 days in the woods.
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Poland: MSF team leaves Belarus border region after the blockade of aid organisations for assisting migrants and refugees

On Monday, January 10, 2022

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Since October, MSF has repeatedly requested access to the restricted area and the border guard posts in Poland, but without success,” says Frauke Ossig, MSF emergency coordinator for Poland and Lithuania.

We know that there are still people crossing the border and hiding in the forest, in need of support, but while we are committed to assisting people on the move wherever they may be, we have not been able to reach them in Poland.” Frauke Ossig, MSF emergency coordinator for Poland and Lithuania

Since June 2021, thousands of people have attempted to reach the EU by crossing from Belarus into Poland, Lithuania and Latvia. In response, Poland has constructed border fences, brought in its military and declared a state of emergency along its border zone. This area has become tightly controlled with access restricted, including for aid organisations, volunteer groups and the media.

Over the past six months, there have been numerous instances of Polish border guards forcibly returning migrants and refugees to Belarus, in disregard of their intentions to request international protection and in breach of their rights. Fear of such ‘pushbacks’ and violence at the hands of border guards has led women, men and children to try and make their way through the area without being detected, hiding in the forests in extreme winter temperatures without food, water, shelter or warm clothes. At least 21 people have lost their lives in the attempt in 2021. 

Bella (21 years old) has been travelling for a few days with a family of Kurds. He is also Kurdish and comes from Iraq. He has not eaten for four days. Near Siemianowka, Poland.

The MSF team has heard numerous first-hand reports of violence, ranging from the theft and destruction of people's belongings to intimidation, intentional violence and physical assault on all sides of the borders. MSF staff have witnessed physical injuries which coincide with these accounts. People are being attacked and beaten at the hands of border guards, and yet state officials continue to allow the practice of pushing people between borders knowing that such maltreatment continues.

MSF teams have been working in Belarus, Lithuania and Poland in response to the crisis but have not succeeded in gaining authorisation to enter the border areas of any of the three countries, despite repeated requests to respective authorities. The MSF team has provided support to these groups, as well as providing basic medical care, mental healthcare and humanitarian aid to a limited number of people who managed to make their way beyond the restricted areas. MSF is concerned that the current policy of restricting access to aid organisations and volunteer groups could result in yet more migrants and refugees dying.  These policies are yet again another example of the EU deliberately creating unsafe conditions for people to seek asylum at its borders.

A group of Yemenis and Palestinians continue their journey after receiving food, warm clothes and batteries from a group of activists in a "silent intervention".

“The current situation is unacceptable and inhumane. People have the right to seek safety and asylum and should not be illegitimately pushed back to Belarus,” says Ossig. “This is putting lives at risk”. 

As long as impartial, non-governmental humanitarian groups cannot reach these people to provide them with water, food, warm clothing and medical care, the number of deaths will likely increase as temperatures continue to drop.

MSF is withdrawing its emergency response team from the Polish border area but will continue to work in Poland and – in line with the initial plans - is in the process of establishing a country office in the capital, Warsaw. Meanwhile MSF’s activities in response to this crisis will continue in Lithuania and Belarus. MSF remains committed to assisting people on the move.