WARSAW, Feb. 6 (Xinhua) -- Poland will uphold its veto of Russia-EU
negotiations toward broader economic cooperation if Russia imposes sanctions
against Poland in a meat export row, Polish Prime Minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski
warned on Tuesday.
Poland, which joined the EU in 2004, vetoed the launch of talks on a broader economic
cooperation agreement between the EU and Russia in November last year in
protest against a year-old Russian ban on imports of meat from Poland.
"Under the currently operative Russia-EU agreement, Russia cannot use such
methods towards Poland. Poland will in no circumstance withdraw from its veto
should Russia use them," Kaczynski told a press conference.
Kaczynski said any economic sanctions against Poland would mean sanctions
against the EU.
Poland will never agree to be treated like a country that is not a EU
member, he added.
The prime minister's words followed a report on Tuesday by Russia's Kommersant
daily saying that Moscow will impose restrictions on imports of various
goods from Poland in retaliation for Poland's blocking of EU-Russia negotiations
on the new agreement.
The planned restrictions will reduce the value of Poland's exports to
Russia by between 1.5 billion and 2 billion U.S. dollars from the present 4
billion, the daily said.
Russia, which has been vigilant of its food safety after findings of
Poland's falsified veterinary and sanitary certificates, responded with
rhetoric.
"We believe the ball is in Poland's court. No one other than Poland can
solve this problem," Sergei Yastrzhembsky, President Vladimir Putin's special
representative on EU relations, said on Tuesday in Moscow.
The national elites of some recent EU entrants had "major hang-ups" about their
"special relations" in the past with Russia, he said.
"(They) try in part to exorcise these hang-ups through their relations with
contemporary Russia. These new entrants have to a certain extent influenced the
atmosphere of relations between Russia and the EU," said Yastrzhembsky.
Russia urged Poland to put aside historical grievances and resolve a
dispute over meat imports which is hindering the start of negotiations on the
EU-Russia deal.
The EU said earlier that the restrictions should be lifted immediately, but
agreed that Russia does have a right to send a team of experts into Poland to
see for themselves.
According to the PAP news agency, Russian veterinary inspectors on
Monday visited Poland to inspect selected meat plants accompanied by EU vets.