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Child’s Death Exploited to Fuel Anti Ukrainian Propaganda  

The tragic events in Jelenia Góra have been exploited to spread disinformation.  Following the murder of an 11-year-old girl, false claims began circulating online  alleging that the perpetrator was Ukrainian. These claims were denied by Poland’s  Ministry of the Interior and Administration (MSWiA), which warned that the lie was a  deliberate attempt to incite hatred and deepen social divisions.  

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The crime, which took place in December, deeply shocked the Polish public. The  11-year-old victim died after being attacked with a sharp object. A 12-year-old  student from the same school was detained in connection with the case. Due to the  suspect’s age, the proceedings are being handled by a family court; investigators  have not disclosed a motive, and preventive measures have been imposed. The  girl’s funeral was held on 20 December.

At the same time, false information began to circulate online, claiming that the 12- year-old was Ukrainian. “A terrible crime has occurred in Poland. A 12-year-old girl  slit the throat of 11-year-old Danusia. The murderer is probably Ukrainian,” a  journalist wrote on Facebook.

“In online discussions, people argue that nationality is irrelevant. That is not entirely  the case. Naturally, a child under 13 cannot be held criminally responsible,  regardless of nationality. My point, however, is different. For years, I have argued  that Poland has admitted millions of people who profess completely different values  and cultural norms, and that this poses a serious danger. On the internet, one can  find hundreds of videos in which proud Ukrainian parents show their children how  ‘bravely’ they cut the throat of a doll or teddy bear marked with the word ‘Russia’— to the delight of both parents.There are also videos showing Ukrainians celebrating  the Volhynian massacre with cakes shaped like small Polish children pierced with  forks.

In this culture, there is contempt for life—and even for death, as demonstrated by  their wild behaviour at Red Army cemeteries. Two years ago, I shared a video of a  Ukrainian boy aged around 10–12 abusing a cat on camera (I was banned from  ‘Nazibook’ for posting it). He shot the animal several times with an air rifle in a  closed room until it died, smiling the entire time.

These are children—but someone is raising them, and then great tragedies  happen.”

The author of this post is not an anonymous figure. He gained wider recognition a  decade ago as an activist of the openly pro-Russian political party Zmiana, led by  Mateusz Piskorski. Among other positions, Zmiana advocated Poland’s withdrawal  from NATO and the European Union.

“The establishment of the Zmiana party in January 2015 created a qualitatively new  situation on the Polish political scene. For the first time since Poland regained  independence and sovereignty from Russia in 1989, a pro-Russian party emerged  that openly rejected the country’s geopolitical orientation and alliances,” wrote  Grzegorz in the text entitled “The Communist Party of Poland and the ‘Zmiana’  Party as Centres of Soviet and Russian Sabotage and Influence in the Second and  Third Republic of Poland”:

In 2024, the author of the post received the “For Peace and Human Rights” award  from the Belarusian International Charitable Foundation named after Emil Czeczko —a Polish soldier who deserted to Belarus in December 2022 and died there  shortly afterward under unexplained circumstances.

Speaking to the Belarusian state news agency BELTA at the time, the award  recipient stated: “Belarus and Poland are neighbours, but our relations are in the  most tragic state. In my opinion, this is primarily the fault of the Polish authorities,  who—for reasons I do not understand—want to change the government in Belarus  and destroy the economic and social order here. They want to sell everything to the  West or steal it, just as they did in Poland.”

He is also a vocal defender of Soviet General Ivan Chernyakhovsky, whose  monument stood for decades in Pieniężno (Warmia–Masuria), where the general  died in February 1945. Although the monument has since been dismantled, the  Russian ambassador continues to visit the site annually on the anniversary of  Chernyakhovsky’s death, accompanied by Polish sympathisers. In 2024, the same  activist took part in such commemorations, as he himself noted in an interview with  Lukashenko’s International Radio Belarus.

Who was Ivan Chernyakhovsky? In July 1944, he commanded the 3rd Belorussian  Front, whose troops were fighting the German Wehrmacht in the Vilnius region. On  17 July, together with NKVD General Ivan Serov, he invited the leadership of the  Vilnius District of the Polish Home Army (AK), headed by Colonel Aleksander  Krzyżanowski (“Wilk”), to talks. All Polish officers were arrested. The same was  then done to the commanders of partisan units. Around 8,000 AK soldiers were also  disarmed. Some of them were killed, while many others were deported to labour  camps, where they were subjected to forced labour in logging.

This was the extent of his so-called ‘service’ to Poland. Today, in place of the Soviet  general’s monument stands a cross commemorating the victims of Nazism and  communism.

In response to lie surrounding the Jelenia Góra tragedy, the Ministry of the Interior  issued a firm statement. MSWiA spokeswoman Karolina Gałecka wrote on X:

“The 12-year-old suspect from Jelenia Góra is not Ukrainian. Spreading such  nonsense is deliberate disinformation that exploits tragedy and fuels hatred  between Poland and Ukraine.”

“I assure you that this post on X is not the only action taken by the MSWiA and  Minister Marcin Kierwiński in response to the shameless exploitation of the tragedy  in Jelenia Góra to escalate tensions between Poland and Ukraine,” she  emphasised.

“The MSWiA and the services subordinate to it respond to content that incites  hatred on ethnic or racial grounds. We act both offline and online. Not all police  actions can be made public, but the @Polish Police have the tools and use them to  counter those who radicalise public sentiment—just as was done in the 1930s,” she  added.

Finally, it is also worth pointing out that Zmiana’s former leader, Mateusz Piskorski,  appeared in 2025 on the support committee of Grzegorz Braun during the  presidential campaign and became affiliated with Braun’s Confederation of the  Polish Crown party.

“In two years, if the election circus takes place on schedule, Braun’s party will  overtake everyone. The rest—after the failure of their policy in Ukraine and the  squandering of our money—will disappear into oblivion. Although I hope Braun will  put these thugs on trial,” wrote the former Zmiana activist and author of the  defamatory post.

By ih

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