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Minister: Poland will respond to rail sabotage

Poland will soon respond over a

Railway explosion

It blames two Ukrainians who collaborated with Russia to create chaos in a country that strongly supports Kyiv against

Moscow's invasion

The Polish Foreign Minister said on Monday.

"It wasn't just an act sabotage, but also an attack of state terrorism." Radoslaw Skorski, who spoke to lawmakers, said that the response would not be diplomatic.

The explosion on the Warsaw-Lublin Line, which connects Poland's capital with the Ukrainian border at the weekend, was the latest in a series of cyberattacks, arson attacks, and sabotage in Poland and elsewhere in Europe since the full-scale invasion started in 2022.

Poland, a major hub for Western aid in Ukraine, has said that two Ukrainians who were behind the sabotage fled to Belarus. Belarus is an ally to Russia.

Moscow has denied responsibility for the sabotage and blamed "Russophobia", both in Poland as well as elsewhere. (Reporting by Marek Strzelecki, Pawel Florkiewicz, Anna Wlodarczak-Semczuk; Editing by Andrew Cawthorne)

(source: Reuters)