Army engineers from UK to assist Poland on Belarus border

Migrants stay in the transport and logistics centre near the Bruzgi border point on the Belarusian-Polish border in the Grodno region on November 18, 2021. (FIle/AFP)
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Updated 19 November 2021
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Army engineers from UK to assist Poland on Belarus border

  • Around 140 to be deployed to reinforce and maintain security and logistical infrastructure
  • British defense secretary: Deployment could come in ‘days or weeks’

LONDON: A force of British Army Royal Engineers is to be dispatched to Poland to assist the country’s military to maintain infrastructure on its border with Belarus.

The move comes after weeks of tension, with thousands of migrants trying to cross into the EU via Poland, causing damage to border fences and other security installations, and throwing missiles at personnel on the Polish side.

Poland has deployed around 15,000 troops to the border to maintain order. Earlier this week, tear gas and water cannons were used to disperse migrants, many of whom are from the Middle East. 

UK Defense Secretary Ben Wallace said a reconnaissance team of engineers had already visited the Polish border, and a larger force of around 140 will be deployed “within days or weeks.”

He is thought to have discussed the proposal with his Polish counterpart Mariusz Blaszczak on Thursday during a visit to the country, and added that he will put the proposal to Parliament before the deployment.

“What we’ll do is send some Royal Engineers — that’s part of the army designed for building or making fences or roads or putting in infrastructure,” Wallace told the BBC.

“We’re going to be using that part of our forces to help the Poles and potentially other Baltic states to secure their border,” he added. “This isn’t combat — this is support to the Poles.”

Blaszczak told local media: “The task of British soldiers will be to repair the temporary fence on the Polish-Belarusian border and to maintain and unblock road connections.”

Belarus has come under intense international scrutiny, with President Alexander Lukashanko accused of “weaponizing” migrants against the EU following the bloc’s decision to impose sanctions on Minsk in response to human rights violations. 

Thousands of people are now thought to be trapped in deteriorating conditions around the border with Poland, with harsh winter weather setting in.

“I’m particularly worried for the women and children and the vulnerable people who are being trafficked by the Belarusians into this game they seem to be playing,” Wallace said.

“It’s a horrendous thing to do, to force migrants to be a tool in a game to try to destabilize their neighbors.”


China acts against 40 Japanese entities over military ties

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China acts against 40 Japanese entities over military ties

BEIJING: China’s commerce ministry took action against 40 Japanese companies and entities on Tuesday, citing national security concerns over their military ties.
It imposed export controls on 20 entities, including Mitsubishi and the Japanese space agency, accusing them of helping to enhance Japan’s military capabilities.
The ministry added a further 20 Japanese entities, including Subaru, to a “watch list” requiring stricter reviews of exports of “dual-use items.”
“The above measures are aimed at curbing Japans’ ‘remilitarization’ and nuclear ambitions and are completely legitimate, reasonable and lawful,” a commerce ministry statement said.
“China’s lawful listing actions target only a small number of Japanese entities, relevant measures target dual-use items and do not impact normal economic  and trade between China and Japan,” it said, adding that “honest and law-abiding Japanese entities have nothing to worry about.”
Companies can apply to be removed from the “watch list” if they cooperate with Beijing’s verification terms.
China has ramped up pressure on its neighbor since Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi suggested in November that Tokyo may react militarily to an attack on Taiwan, which Beijing has vowed to seize control of by force if necessary.
Last month, Beijing announced a broad ban on the export of “dual-use” goods with potential military applications.
China has since begun restricting exports to Japanese companies of scarce and expensive “heavy” rare earths, as well as the powerful magnets containing them, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing two exporters in China.