WARSAW: Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk on Friday denounced what he said was Russian “state terrorism” after the sabotage of a railway line used to deliver aid to neighboring Ukraine.
In a brief address to parliament, Tusk called on Poles to unite against Moscow’s attempts to “sow discord with Europe, with Ukraine, and, above all, among ourselves.”
“Diversionary acts inspired and organized for months by Kremlin services have recently crossed a critical line, and we can now even speak of state terrorism,” he added.
Tusk claimed their goal was to “destroy human life and destabilize the foundations of the Polish state.”
The two acts, which Warsaw describes as “sabotage,” occurred between Saturday and Monday, and damaged a railway line helping to supply close ally Ukraine.











