Poland says it may cut aid for Ukrainian refugees next year.

Poland will likely not extend the support for the roughly 1 million Ukrainian refugees it is hosting to the same extent for the following year, Polish government spokesperson Piotr Muller told Polsat News on Sept.

18. Poland has hosted the largest number of Ukrainian refugees of all countries. The U.N. records around 6 million refugees residing abroad as a result of Russian aggression.

In a show of solidarity with besieged Ukraine, Warsaw decided to assist Ukrainian refugees by waiving residency requirements and providing free access to education, healthcare, and family benefits. Now, the Polish government signals this aid may not be prolonged for 2024, at the very least not at the same scale. "These regulations will simply expire next year," Muller said on television.

"I think the regulations will not be extended to a large extent," he noted, adding that the international community should become more involved in the support.

Mothers of killed soldiers find meaning in helping war effort, refugees Stuck between a worksite frozen in time and a highway facing the Dnipro River, the volunteer's center was not easy to find. The anonymous building hardly betrayed any sign of human activity from the outside.

Everything was wrapped in an eerie silence until a door opened, spilling a

According to data collected by Statista, Poland allocated around £16.5 billion to support refugees in the period from March 2022 to June 2023, outspending all other European countries hosting Ukrainians fleeing from the war. Poland has been one of Ukraine's most fervent supporters since the start of the full-scale war, providing not only humanitarian aid but also military and diplomatic support. The relationship has grown strained recently, marred by diplomatic spats and disagreements over Ukrainian grain imports as the governing Law and Justice party likely seeks to win over farmers' votes ahead of the October parliamentary elections.

Poland extended the ban on domestic sales of Ukrainian agricultural products despite the EU's decision not to prolong the measure past Sept.

15. The ban was imposed by the European Commission in May at the request of Poland, Hungary, Slovakia, Bulgaria, and Romania, who feared that Ukrainian imports may threaten their domestic agricultural production. In turn, Kyiv said it will sue Poland, as well as Hungary and Slovakia who also decided to prolong the ban, over their refusal to lift the restrictions.

Ukraine's Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal said that the Ukrainian government may impose its own import bans on select goods from the three countries.

Ukraine ready to take neighbors to court as continued grain bans threaten exports Kyiv may be gearing up for a legal battle with three of its neighbors as it now fights to free its grain on its western borders. In defiance of the European Commission's Sept.

15 decision to lift an embargo on the domestic sale of Ukrainian agricultural products in five

Martin Fornusek

News Editor

Martin Fornusek is a news editor at the Kyiv Independent. He has previously worked as a news content editor at the media company Newsmatics and is a contributor to Euromaidan Press. He also volunteers as an editor and translator at the Czech-language version of Ukrainer.

Martin studied at Masaryk University in Brno, Czechia, holding a bachelor's degree in security studies and history and a master's degree in conflict and democracy studies.