August 12, 2005
Russia/Poland: Assaults Add New Sour Note To Rivalry
by Robert Parsons
Two attacks have taken place just outside the Polish Embassy in Moscow
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Three Russian teenagers mugged in a Polish park, two Polish diplomatic personnel and a journalist beaten up and hospitalized in Moscow -- politically motivated assaults or random criminal acts? Whatever the case, they are at the center of a sharp deterioration in Russian-Polish relations. Russian President Vladimir Putin has expressed outrage at the assault on the Russian children, and Poland has hinted that it sees the attack on its nationals as something other than the work of hooligans.
Prague, 12 August 2005 (RFE/RL) -- Invasion and counter-invasion, occupation and counter-occupation -- there is ample historical precedent over the centuries for poor Russian-Polish relations. But in post-Soviet history, this has been among the lowest moments.
The catalyst seems to have been an incident in a Warsaw park on 31 July, when a gang of Polish youths attacked, beat, and robbed three sons of Russian diplomats and their Kazakh friend. Robbery is not uncommon in Warsaw, and the Russian consul dismissed suggestions that there might have been underlying nationalist or political motives.
President Putin, however, was not so sure. He called the incident a "crime" and held the Polish authorities to account. The Russian media joined in, blaming the attack on what they called anti-Russian propaganda in the Polish media.
Then the tables were turned. First, a technical worker at the Polish Embassy in Moscow was attacked and beaten up. Then, three days later, the embassy's second secretary was assaulted. Both were hospitalized. The incidents, in both cases, took place just outside the embassy gates.
"Considering the incident that occurred three days ago, in which a technical worker of the Polish diplomatic mission was severely beaten near the embassy, we are beginning to think that [the incidents involved] hooligans with a poorly directed but clearly shaped political agenda," said diplomat Witold Jurosz, who works at the Polish Embassy in Moscow.
It is a view that has since been strengthened by another vicious assault on the Moscow correspondent of a major Polish newspaper. According to Jurosz, embassy staff are now taking special measures to ensure their safety.