Israeli foreign minister calls Poland's government 'anti-democratic'
The tone is getting sharper in a diplomatic dispute between Israel and Poland, with Israeli Foreign Minister Yair Lapid calling the Warsaw government "anti-democratic" in a statement on Sunday evening.
At
issue is a change in Polish administrative law.
"Gone
are the days when Poles harmed Jews without consequence," the statement
said. "We do not fear antisemitic threats, and have no intention of
turning a blind eye to the shameful conduct of the anti-democratic Polish
government."
Lapid
had recalled the envoy of the Israeli embassy in Warsaw on Saturday evening for
open-ended consultations and announced that Israel's new ambassador to Poland,
who was due to arrive in Warsaw in the coming days, would not travel to Poland.
The
Polish ambassador to Israel was advised not to return to Israel after his
current home leave.
The
background to the dispute is an amendment to Polish administrative law passed
last week, under which administrative decisions can no longer be challenged in
court after 30 years. Israel fears that this will put an end to compensation
for the expropriation of Jews during the Holocaust.
The
national conservative Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki had reacted
sharply to the Israeli criticism on his Facebook page. He also announced that
measures had been taken for the safe return of the Polish ambassador's children
to Poland. The reason for this was the "rise of hatred against Poles"
in Israel, he said on the Polish state television channel TVP.