Prime minister: Estonia condemns Polish railway sabotage

Prime Minister Kristen Michal (Reform) said Estonia stands in solidarity with Poland after an "unprecedented act of sabotage" on its railway line on Sunday.
A train line linking the Polish capital, Warsaw, to the eastern city of Lublin and Ukraine was blown up on Sunday, Poland's Prime Minister Donald Tusk said on Monday. Authorities say they are certain the damage, near the village of Mika, is the result of a planned attack, Politico Europe reported.
Tusk called the incident "an unprecedented act of sabotage" that targets the "security of the Polish state and its civilians."
"We will catch the perpetrators, whoever they are," he added.
Blowing up the rail track on the Warsaw-Lublin route is an unprecedented act of sabotage targeting directly the security of the Polish state and its civilians. This route is also crucially important for delivering aid to Ukraine. We will catch the perpetrators, whoever they are.
— Donald Tusk (@donaldtusk) November 17, 2025
Michal wrote on social media that Estonia stands with Poland, "strongly condemning the sabotage".
He said the Warsaw–Lublin line, one of the country's busiest routes, is vital for supporting Ukraine.
"Those behind hostile acts against EU and NATO members must be exposed. Our response must be united," he wrote.
Estonia stands with Poland and @donaldtusk, strongly condemning the sabotage on the Warsaw–Lublin railway, vital for supporting Ukraine.
— Kristen Michal (@KristenMichalPM) November 17, 2025
Those behind hostile acts against EU and NATO members must be exposed. Our response must be united.
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Editor: Helen Wright










