Two Ukrainian citizens who collaborated with Russian intelligence services are the main suspects in the case of the two acts of sabotage on the Polish railway network, stated on Tuesday Prime Minister Donald Tusk, according to BBC.
Tusk told parliament that one of the suspects had already been convicted in absentia for acts of sabotage in Ukraine.
On Monday, the Prime Minister visited the site of an explosion near the town of Mika, southeast of Warsaw, which damaged the railway line leading to the border with Ukraine over the weekend, calling the incident “an unprecedented act of sabotage”.
Another incident, which occurred further down the same line near Puławy, forced the abrupt stop of a crowded train on Monday, and authorities discovered damage to the overhead cables.
Initially, Polish authorities stated that there was a very high chance that the two acts of sabotage on the Warsaw-Lublin route were ordered by “a foreign service”. Later on Tuesday, a spokesperson for the Minister for Special Services clarified that “everything points to the fact that it would be the Russian special services”.
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