"We have already experienced many such breakthroughs or, rather, declarations of such breakthroughs. One of them was announced by the head of Polish diplomacy, Radosław Sikorski. This did not happen. I do not know what the Prime Minister considers a breakthrough," said Nawrocki. "We are talking about 1,500 villages that have disappeared from the map, about 120,000 victims, so a breakthrough would be to start exhuming."
"We cannot speak of a breakthrough. I am pleased with this information from the Prime Minister. If this is indeed a breakthrough, because I do not know. We at @ipngovpl have experienced declarations of breakthroughs many times" - said @NawrockiKn, a presidential candidate supported by… pic.twitter.com/IBrut64BJ5 in @GoscZiemcaRMF
— RozmowaRMF (@Rozmowa_RMF) January 11, 2025On January 10, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk announced a long-awaited "breakthrough" and "the first decisions" regarding the exhumation of Polish victims of the Volhynia tragedy in Ukraine, but he did not provide details.
Tusk thanked the culture ministers of Poland and Ukraine for their good cooperation.
"We are waiting for further decisions," emphasized the Polish Prime Minister.
Commenting on Tusk's statement, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sibiga expressed hope for "further implementation of agreements based on mutual respect and reciprocity."