
Activists Hold 'Die-in' Protest At Soviet Monument In Warsaw
Some two dozen protesters wrapped in white sheets, their clothes and faces splattered with a red substance imitating blood, lay at the foot of a monument at the cemetery for Soviet soldiers in Poland's capital.
They chanted "terrorists" as Russia's ambassador to Poland, Sergei Andreyev, made his way to the monument with a wreath to commemorate the Soviet defeat of Nazi Germany.
"The idea was that the path the ambassador would take to reach the monument would be lined with the graves of people who died innocently during the war" in Ukraine, Miroslaw Petryga, 70, who participated in the lie-in, told AFP.
Poland is a staunch ally of Kyiv, supporting Ukraine with military and political aid as it fends off a Russian invasion that is grinding through its fourth year.
"It was the gait of a man pretending not to see anything, with tunnel vision," Petryga, a Ukrainian engineer who has lived in Poland for decades, said of Andreyev.
The ambassador walked past the protesters amid a heavy police presence and with a handful of supporters and security guards around him.
The activists also scattered children's toys at the entrance to the cemetery. The teddy bears, balls and other items were also splattered with a blood-like liquid to symbolise child victims of Russia's war in Ukraine.
Some were wearing t-shirts with the slogan "Make Russia small again" and were collecting signatures under a petition to expel the Russian ambassador from Poland.
At the site, around a dozen people also gathered at a counter protest, wearing the St George ribbon, a historical symbol of Russian and Soviet military successes.
Minor scuffles and verbal altercations broke out between the groups.
A handful of people also showed up to lay flowers at the cemetery away from the protests.
"We should honour the memory of those soldiers who died in the World War," said Natalia, a 67-year-old who held a black-and-white photo that she said showed her father who had fought in the war.
The Russian citizen and longtime Polish resident declined to give her full name.
In 2022, the year Russia launched the full-scale war, protesters at the Soviet mausoleum threw a red substance at Moscow's envoy.
A year later Andreyev was blocked by activists from laying flowers at the monument.
The Kremlin is using its annual Victory Day parade in Moscow -- marking 80 years since the end of World War II -- to whip up patriotism at home and project strength abroad as its troops fight in Ukraine.
But for Natalia Panchenko from the pro-Ukrainian organisation Euromaidan, the day should serve as a reminder of Russia's ongoing war.
"It is important to us that today, when people remember that there is a country called Russia, they do not remember Russia through Russian propaganda, but remember the real Russia," Panchenko told AFP.
"And Russia is a terrorist state," she said. Protesters chanted "terrorists" as Russia's ambassador to Poland, Sergei Andreyev, brought a wreath to commemorate the Soviet defeat of Nazi Germany AFP At the site, around a dozen people also gathered at a counter protest AFP
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Int'l Business Times
15 minutes ago
- Int'l Business Times
Gaza Mediators 'Working Very Hard' To Revive Truce Plan: Egypt
Egypt said Tuesday it was working with fellow Gaza mediators Qatar and the United States to broker a 60-day truce, as part of a renewed push to end the Israel-Hamas war. Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty made the announcement at a press conference in Cairo, as two Palestinian sources told AFP that a senior Hamas delegation was due to meet Egyptian officials for talks on Wednesday. Diplomacy aimed at securing an elusive ceasefire and hostage release deal in the 22-month-old war has stalled for weeks, after the latest round of negotiations broke down in July. Abdelatty said that "we are working very hard now in full cooperation with the Qataris and Americans", aiming for "a ceasefire for 60 days, with the release of some hostages and some Palestinian detainees, and the flow of humanitarian and medical assistance to Gaza without restrictions, without conditions". One of the Palestinian sources earlier told AFP that the mediators were working "to formulate a new comprehensive ceasefire agreement proposal" that would include the release of all remaining hostages in Gaza "in one batch". Mediation efforts led by Qatar, Egypt and the United States have failed to secure a breakthrough since a short-lived truce earlier this year. The Hamas delegation expected in Cairo, led by the group's chief negotiator Khalil al-Hayya, is scheduled to meet Egyptian officials on Wednesday to "discuss the latest developments" in negotiations, said the second Palestinian source. News of the potential truce talks came as Gaza's civil defence agency said Israel has intensified its air strikes on Gaza City in recent days, following a government decision to expand the war there. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government has not provided an exact timetable on when forces may enter the area, but civil defence spokesman Mahmud Bassal said on Tuesday that air raids had already begun increasing over the past three days. Bassal said the neighbourhoods of Zeitun and Sabra have been hit "with very heavy air strikes targeting civilian homes". "For the third consecutive day, the Israeli occupation is intensifying its bombardment" using "bombs, drones, and also highly explosive munitions that cause massive destruction", he said. Bassal said that Israeli strikes across the territory, including on Gaza City, killed at least 33 people on Tuesday. "The bombardment has been extremely intense for the past two days. With every strike, the ground shakes," said Majed al-Hosary, a resident of Gaza City's Zeitun. "There are martyrs under the rubble that no one can reach because the shelling hasn't stopped." An Israeli air strike on Sunday killed five Al Jazeera employees and a freelance reporter outside a Gaza City hospital, with Israel accusing one of the slain Al Jazeera correspondents of being a Hamas militant. Israel has faced mounting criticism over the war, which was triggered by Palestinian militant group Hamas's October 2023 attack. UN-backed experts have warned of widespread famine unfolding in the territory, where Israel has drastically curtailed the amount of humanitarian aid it allowed in. Netanyahu is under mounting pressure to secure the release of the remaining hostages -- 49 people including 27 the Israeli military says are dead -- as well as over his plans to expand the war. The Israeli premier has vowed to keep on with or without the backing of Israel's allies. Hamas's 2023 attack resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, according to an AFP tally based on official figures. Israel's offensive has killed at least 61,599 Palestinians, according to the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza, whose toll the United Nations considers reliable. Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has faced mounting domestic pressure to secure the release of the remaining hostages AFP Mourners at the funeral of Al Jazeera journalists killed in an Israeli strike in Gaza City AFP Palestinians in southern Gaza queue at a water distribution point amid severe shortages more than 22 months into the war AFP


Int'l Business Times
an hour ago
- Int'l Business Times
Ukraine Says Fighting 'Difficult' After Reports Of Russia's Rapid Gains
Ukraine said Tuesday it was engaged in "difficult" battles with Russian forces after Moscow had made rapid advances in a narrow but important section of the front line in the country's east. The gains came just days before US President Donald Trump was to meet Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin in Alaska for talks on the war, the first meeting between a sitting US and Russian leader since 2021. The Ukrainian army said it was engaged in "heavy" battles with Russian forces attempting to penetrate its defences. "The situation is difficult and dynamic," it said in a statement. A map published by Ukrainian battlefield monitor DeepState, which has close ties with Ukraine's military, showed Russia had advanced around 10 kilometres (six miles) over around two days, deep into a narrow section of the eastern front line. The corridor -- now apparently under Russian control -- threatens the town of Dobropillia, a mining hub that civilians are fleeing and that has come under Russian drone attacks. It also further isolates the destroyed town of Kostiantynivka, one of the last large urban areas in the Donetsk region still held by Ukraine. The Institute for the Study of War, a US-based observatory, said Russia was sending small sabotage groups forwards. It said it was "premature" to call the Russian advances in around Dobropillia "an operational-level breakthrough". The military's Operational-Tactical Group Donetsk, which oversees parts of the front in the industrial region, also said Russia was probing Ukrainian lines with small sabotage groups, describing battles as "complex, unpleasant and dynamic". Trump has described his summit with Putin on Friday as a chance to check the Russian leader's ideas for ending the war. Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelensky warned ahead of the talks that Moscow was laying the groundwork for further attacks, after Trump said on Monday that both sides would have to swap territory for peace. European leaders have meanwhile sought to ensure respect for Kyiv's interests. "We see that the Russian army is not preparing to end the war. On the contrary, they are making movements that indicate preparations for new offensive operations," Zelensky said in a statement on social media. Russia, which invaded Ukraine in 2022, has made costly but incremental gains across the sprawling front in recent months and claims to have annexed four Ukrainian regions while still fighting to control them. Ukrainian police meanwhile said that Russian attacks in the past hours had killed three people and wounded 12 others, including a child.


DW
4 hours ago
- DW
How will Iran respond to 'Trump route' in South Caucasus? – DW – 08/12/2025
A peace plan between Armenia and Azerbaijan brokered by Donald Trump calls for a US-backed transit corridor in the South Caucasus. Tehran's response has been surprisingly mixed. A US-brokered peace declaration between Armenia and Azerbaijan has been met with mixed reactions in Iran. Tehran has welcomed peace between the two ex-Soviet nations, but also expressed opposition to growing US influence in its backyard. Armenia and Azerbaijan are both located on Iran's northwestern frontier in the South Caucasus. After decades of territorial disputes, the two nations signed a peace declaration at the White House on August 9. The agreement provides for the construction of a transit corridor between Azerbaijan and its exclave of Nakhchivan, which goes through a 32-kilometer (20-mile) strip of Armenian territory. The corridor, which allows the US development and usage rights, is to be named the "Trump Route for International Peace and Prosperity" after the current US president, Donald Trump. Azerbaijan has established itself as a major oil and gas producer, and the new route would offers a more direct trade connection to Turkey and onward to Europe. For Iran, also a major energy power, this would be a severe blow. Also, Tehran maintains rather close ties to Armenia and is sensitive to moves that might limit its diminishing influence in the region. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video On August 9, Ali Akbar Velayati, advisor to Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, said Iran, "will not allow the creation of this corridor," as the US presence in the South Caucasus poses a threat to Iranian interests. However, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian quickly contradicted this assessment a day later. The peace plan "also takes Iran's views into account," he said during a phone call on Monday with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, which was reported in Armenian media. The planned route would not cut off Iran's access to Armenia, Pezeshkian emphasized. The corridor is much more than a transit project, said Afshar Soleimani, a former Iranian ambassador in Azerbaijan. "The main problem is the strategic competition between Russia and the West," he told DW. Solemani added that the West, and the US especially, are trying to diminish Russian influence in the South Caucasus, and take advantage of a power vacuum brought on by Russia being bogged down in Ukraine. Shireen Hunter, an Iran expert at Georgetown University in the US, told Iranian news website Tabnak that she doesn't think Russia can "win back" its former dominance in the region, even if it is set to remain an important actor. "It is conceivable that Russia and the US are now seeking a comprehensive agreement on Ukraine and the Caucasus," she said. According to Hunter, the construction of pipelines and trade routes that bypass Iran has been part of US strategy since the 1990s. "Trump has merely accelerated this process and now achieved the signing of the agreement,' said Shireen, who was an Iranian diplomat prior to the 1979 Islamist revolution. The new "Trump route" would serve as a significant reinforcement of Iran's geopolitical isolation, she said. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video The military exchange with Israel earlier this year, the loss of proxy militias in the Middle East, along with growing dissatisfaction among the population with political repression and the economic situation, have all significantly weakened the position of Iran's leadership. While Iran still maintains good relations with Christian-influenced Armenia, its relations with Muslim-majority Azerbaijan are tense. "Tehran attempted to curb Israel's influence in Azerbaijan by establishing closer ties with Armenia," Reza Talebi, an Iran expert at Germany's University of Leipzig, told DW. "The result, however, is that Azerbaijan is now even more closely linked to Israel," Talebi added. Azerbaijan was separated from Iran in 1828 after a Russian-Persian war and annexed to the Russian Empire. Two Iranian provinces along the northwestern border still bear the names West and East Azerbaijan. The number of Iranian citizens with Azerbaijani roots is estimated at around 18 million, which is more than the total population of Azerbaijan, at 10.2 million. There is also concern in Tehran about separatist groups wanting to secede from Iran and form a "South Azerbaijan." In Baku, there are also nationalist movements that speak of a "greater Azerbaijan" that would include Iranian Azerbaijanis. To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video According to Leipzig-based expert Talebi, Iranian President Pezeshikan is trying to adjust Iran's regoinal policy, including towards Azerbaijan, the Iraqi region of Kurdistan, Pakistan, and Turkey. The government's goal is to avoid a new conflict in the context of Iran's growing isolation. The president himself is half Kurdish and half Azerbaijani. He met with Azerbaijan's president, Ilham Aliyev, in Baku in April, and spoke Azerbaijani in front of the cameras. With both global and regional alliances shifting, Iran must fundamentally rethink its entire foreign policy and adapt its goals to the changed realities, which would include accepting US regional presence, and resolving issues with Washington, said expert Shirin article has been translated from German