Germany is simply immoral and unethical when it comes to reparations. And Donald Tusk’s total opposition behaves the same way – said PiS MP Joanna Lichocka on TVP Info on Sunday, in the program “Woronicza 17”.
Sunday on TVP Info, in the program “Woronicza 17”, a member of Law and Justice Joanna Lichocka She said that in the case of attempts to obtain World War II reparations from Germany, “the government does not have the support of the opposition, especially the part related to Donald Tusk”.
Donald Tusk’s party is doing what Germany wants, Berlin, not Warsaw. And these politicians will do everything they can to ensure that the subject of reparations is not brought up seriously when they return to power
– she said.
She added that she would like to invite politicians to Wieluń, the city where the celebrations related to the anniversary of the outbreak of the war took place. Wieluń was bombed by the Germans in the first hours of the war, although the town had no military significance and there were no military units.
It is a symbol of how the Germans treated the civilian population from the first minutes of the attack on Poland
– said Joanna Lichocka.
The Civic Platform is pretending that the thing doesn’t exist, that there are no traces that it ever happened, and now we need to befriend the Germans in a way that meets their foreign policy expectations.
she added.
She also referred to the German response to the note calling on Berlin to negotiate reparations.
The answer was arrogant, arrogant, and the Germans are simply immoral and unethical in this matter. And Donald Tusk’s total opposition is behaving the same way: immoral and unethical
said the PiS MP.
Przydacz: The memory of the efforts made by the citizens of Wieluń to rebuild their town is still alive
The head of the International Policy Bureau of the Chancellery of the President of the Republic of Poland also referred to the issue of seeking reparations Marcin Przydacz, who runs from the PiS electoral list in the Sieradz district (including Wieluń) to the Sejm. He said he came from Wieluń, where the memory of the bombing that devastated the city is still preserved.
The memory is alive, but so is the memory of the efforts made by the citizens of Wieluń to rebuild their town. They did it themselves, there was no one from the Federal Republic of Germany, East Germany or any other country who felt obliged to help rebuild this city
said Przydacz.
He recalled that although German politicians apologized, “it ended with words, there were no offers.” He added that Poland is encouraging the Germans to sit down and start talking about reparations.
The German response, in which Berlin rejected the negotiation proposal because of “a document from the 1950s, from the time of Bierut, when Poland was completely dominated by the Soviet Union”, he described as a “scandalous approach”.
The opposition did nothing about it. September 1 at 4:40 am None of you respected the victims of the Wieluń tragedy
he said.
Diplomatic efforts are supported from below. The Wieluń City Council, followed by Bochnia, issued a unanimous resolution in support of this type of diplomatic activity. So this isn’t some sort of diplomatic and government-level discussion; people want us to insist that the case is not closed. We will seek redress and we will be successful in that. We just need time and a mandate to implement it
– Added Marcin Przydacz.
Kałużny: The opposition is there to prevent these reparations
It is not enough that the opposition has done nothing to ensure that these reparations are made; the opposition is there to make sure these reparations don’t happen.
he said in turn Mariusz Kaluznymember of parliament of sovereign Poland.
Jakubiak: No one is allowed to shake Siemoniak’s hand
What he said [Tomasz Siemoniak – przyp. red.]is just outrageous. (…) he said that a large part of the Polish nation is against reparations. It’s just a shame, no one is allowed to shake his hand the next day
– he said Mark JacobiakPiS candidate for the Sejm in the upcoming elections.
tkwl/PAP/Twitter/TVP info
Source: wPolityce