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Gallery|In Pictures

Refugee crisis deepens at the Polish-Belarusian border

Bleak images show the reality thousands are facing on the EU’s eastern border as a humanitarian disaster looms.

Three jackets left behind in the woods. It is not clear what happened to their owners. All over the woods around the border area are traces of people who tried to cross them. [Vincent Haiges/Al Jazeera]
By Katy Fallon and Vincent Haiges
Published On 16 Nov 202116 Nov 2021
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Sokolka, Poland – On the Polish-Belarusian border, thousands of people have gathered at the barbed wire fences, having believed Minsk’s alleged false promise that they would be able to cross into the European Union territory.

For more than a week, an East-West clash has been escalating, between Brussels and the administration of Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, while a humanitarian crisis looms on Poland’s doorstep.

Poland and its allies say Belarus has encouraged people to travel to Minsk and head to the border, in a bid to destabilise Europe. Belarusian authorities have reportedly provided refugees and migrants with fence cutters for their attempted crossings.

Observers say Belarus masterminded the crisis with the support of its main ally Russia in revenge for Western sanctions following last year’s disputed election that handed Lukashenko a sixth term.

Reports of violence and intimidation on the part of Belarusian authorities are widespread and people, including children, have reportedly frozen to death on the Belarusian side of the fence.

Meanwhile, Poland has been re-enforcing its border having declared a state of emergency, which forbids journalists and aid workers from entering an exclusion zone.

Only local residents showing documentation are allowed to enter the area and police and army checkpoints are widespread across the length of the frontier.

Regardless, some still manage to make it across the fence, but with plummeting temperatures, they find themselves stranded in Polish forests with no access to aid.

Volunteers, locals and activists can help only once they have made it through the exclusion zone.

Locals are reportedly putting green lights outside their homes to show their willingness to help those lost in the forest and some venture out, searching for people to help.

A community spirit is palpable on the ground, with a local fire station collecting food and warm clothes for people in need.

Many of those who are found by volunteers and medics after making it through suffer from hypothermia and some require hospitalisation.

The crisis on the ground shows no sign of an imminent resolution as those stuck on the Belarusian side of the fence are increasingly desperate, with reports of food shortages and alleged abuse at the hands of Belarusian forces.

There are also reports of frequent pushbacks, as Poland returns people across the border if they did not cross at a formal crossing point.

Medics and activists give first aid treatment to a young Syrian man who was found unconscious in the woods, 25km (15.5 miles)from the Belarusian border. [Vincent Haiges/Al Jazeera]
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Abandoned clothes are found in the Polish forests close to the Belarusian border. These clothes belonged to refugees and migrants who crossed the forest a few days earlier. [Vincent Haiges/Al Jazeera]
Medics and border police carry the unconscious Syrian man to the ambulance.[Vincent Haiges/Al Jazeera]
At the beginning of the crisis, Polish activists placed first aid packages in the forest close to the Belarusian border. [Vincent Haiges/Al Jazeera]
A baby's outfit is left behind in the Polish forest. Children and babies are among the many people making the perilous journey. [Vincent Haiges/Al Jazeera]
Medics carry the unconscious Syrian man in the ambulance car. He would be taken to the closest hospital to receive further treatment. [Vincent Haiges/Al Jazeera]
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A baby's bottle left behind in the Polish forest close to the Belarusian border. [Vincent Haiges/Al Jazeera]
Two Polish volunteers sort clothes donations at a fire station in Michalowo. [Vincent Haiges/Al Jazeera]
Activists hold pictures of refugees who managed to cross the border.[Vincent Haiges/Al Jazeera]
A military vehicle parked in a small village close to the contested zone. Poland has sent thousands of soldiers to reinforce the border. [Vincent Haiges/Al Jazeera]
The Tatar community buries 19-year-old Ahmad Al Hasan, a Syrian refugee who drowned near the Belarus border, in the local cemetery of Bohoniki. [Vincent Haiges/Al Jazeera]
Ahmad Al Hasan drowned last month in the river Bug, which separates Poland from Belarus. [Vincent Haiges/Al Jazeera]


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