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Threat to one of Europe’s last primeval forests

Organisations ask EU to stop Poland building wall on border with Belarus

More than 150 non-governmental organisations are asking the European Commission to intervene to halt the construction of a wall on the Polish-Belarusian border running through protected areas, including one of Europe’s last primeval forests.

Poland started building a 186 km (115.6 mile) metal barrier in January to deter migrants after nearly 40,000 people from the Middle East, Afghanistan and Africa tried to cross from Belarus last year.

FILE PHOTO: A herd of bison is seen on the field during migrant crisis on Belarusian Polish border, near Hajnowka, Poland, January 26, 2022. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel

The barrier will run through several protected Natura 2000 areas, including the Bialowieza Forest, a UNESCO World Natural Heritage site and home to the European bison, lynx and other endangered species.

The organisations from 25 countries argue the project will divide animal habitats and interrupt ecological connectivity.

“We oppose the construction of this horrible wall, which will be ineffective in stopping the migration crisis while risking the collapse of protected species such as lynx,” said Augustyn Mikos from the Association Workshop for All Beings.

FILE PHOTO: Workers from Unibed company work at the construction site of a barrier at the border between Poland and Belarus, in Tolcze near Kuznica, Poland January 27, 2022. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel

“We call on the European Commission, which is the guardian of the EU’s Treaties and Laws, to urgently take action to stop this barrier that goes against all European human rights principles and is in infringement of EU law on nature.”

The appeal will be handed on Tuesday to a representative of the EU executive in Warsaw together with a letter signed by over 1,500 academics and a petition of the local community opposing the wall.

The organisations say the decision to build the barrier was taken without public consultations or an environmental impact assessment.

Poland’s government has said the law on the border wall did not require such an assessment and that over 20 animal crossings would be built to limit its impact on wildlife.

FILE PHOTO: A soldier protects himself with a shield as he keeps watch at the construction site of a barrier at the border between Poland and Belarus, in Tolcze near Kuznica, Poland January 27, 2022. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel

UNESCO, the European Commission and environmentalists called in January for a proper assessment of the environmental impact of the construction.

Poland should delay construction of a new barrier through the primeval Bialowieza forest that straddles its border with Belarus until it can prove that it will not harm local wildlife, UNESCO and environmentalists had said. (Reuters)

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