Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Polish President Karol Nawrocki revoked his top state honor due to internal political infighting, adding that his behavior is similar to former Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán.
Nawrocki’s decision on Friday to strip Zelensky of Poland’s highest state decoration, the Order of the White Eagle, was the latest episode of a diplomatic row that has snowballed between Kyiv and Warsaw over historical memory and wartime solidarity.
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On Sunday, the Ukrainian president said the move was connected to Poland’s domestic politics.
“I see this purely as an electoral process. President Karol Nawrocki is fighting for his party’s premiership against Prime Minister Tusk. It has nothing to do with us – it’s an internal matter for them,” Zelensky told the TSN television station, as reported by the Ukrainska Pravda website.
He added that Nawrocki is creating hostility towards Ukrainians for his own political gain, drawing a comparison with the former Hungarian prime minister.
“That’s what Orbán did. This is a bad business. I believe it will end badly,” Zelensky told the outlet.
He stressed that “you can’t earn political dividends from hatred, because in the long run it will lead to bad relations between nations.”
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