Normal view

Poland reverses 17-month bus halt at Shehyni-Medyka after Ukrainian ministerial push

12 June 2026 at 11:38

Polish demonstrators under a black canopy with red-and-white Polish flags lining a roadside fence at the Medyka border crossing, with a cyclist passing on the bicycle lane.

Poland will keep processing buses leaving Ukraine through the Shehyni-Medyka checkpoint this summer despite a planned 17-month closure for repairs. Vice Prime Minister Oleksiy Kuleba announced the reversal on Telegram on 11 June.

Lviv Customs had said the day before that traffic from Ukraine to Poland through the crossing would be suspended from 15 June until November 2027. Shehyni-Medyka is the busiest road link between the two countries.

The about-face followed urgent talks between Ukraine's Ministry for Development of Communities and Territories and the Polish Ministry of the Interior and Administration. Warsaw's Polish Embassy in Kyiv has not issued a public comment.

"Bus traffic through the 'Shehyni–Medyka' checkpoint will not be halted during the summer season, even while the repair work is being carried out." — Oleksiy Kuleba, Vice Prime Minister of Ukraine, 11 June 2026

A border managed under cooling political weather

The bus reversal was, narrowly, a technical fix. However, it landed in a year when Polish-Ukrainian relations had visibly cooled.

President Karol Nawrocki, elected in June 2025 on a "Poland First" platform, vetoed extensions of Ukrainian refugee benefits in August. He signed legislation in February ending the special-status regime that had governed Ukrainian residency since 2022.

Most recently, Nawrocki called for Volodymyr Zelenskyy to be stripped of Poland's Order of the White Eagle. The trigger was a Ukrainian Special Operations unit named for the Ukrainian Insurgent Army.

Public sentiment has shifted alongside Nawrocki. Just 48 percent of Poles still back accepting Ukrainian refugees, against 46 percent opposed, according to a January 2026 CBOS survey. That is the lowest figure recorded since Russia's full-scale invasion.

Furthermore, hate crimes against Ukrainians in Poland rose 49 percent between 2023 and 2025, The New Republic reported in April. Critically, Russia's Avanhard military camp near Volgograd remains active. More than 900 Ukrainian children passed through there for two-week shifts in 2026 alone.

Bus diplomacy meets bus politics

Polish haulers and farmers blockaded crossings repeatedly from late 2023 through 2024. They cited competition from Ukrainian carriers and grain imports. Two Ukrainian drivers died waiting in queues during the November 2023 blockade. In July 2025, Kyiv tightened Shehyni-Medyka registrations to scheduled bus routes only, citing summer overload.

A parallel dispute shows how bus traffic itself can become politicized. Earlier this week, Polish sister city Kielce refused to transfer 20-year-old municipal buses to Vinnytsia. Kielce cited a Vinnytsia street named after Stepan Bandera. Vinnytsia faces regular Russian strikes.

By contrast, the Shehyni-Medyka rollback suggests institutional cooperation can still hold even when sentiment frays. Polish construction firm Unibep signed a turnkey contract in October 2025 to modernize the same crossing. EU Entry/Exit System–compatible gates and 40 percent higher passenger throughput are targeted by Q2 2027.

For now, summer passenger traffic continues. Whether the Shehyni-Medyka corridor stays open through the autumn repair phase remains the next test of bilateral patience.

Luchar contra el ébola y la desinformación en el corazón de la epidemia: “Creía lo que decían mis vecinos, que quienes iban a los centros de tratamiento no salían con vida”

12 June 2026 at 04:30
Familias de pacientes de ébola aguardan noticias de sus seres queridos a las puertas de un centro de salud en la provincia de Ituri, en la República Democrática del Congo, el 8 de junio de 2026.

Del centro de salud de Mungwalu de Ituri, provincia del noreste de la República Democrática del Congo (RDC) donde se concentra el epicentro del actual brote de ébola, solo quedan paredes ennegrecidas y equipos carbonizados. Hace tan solo unos días, el lugar recibía pacientes y era un centro de información sobre el virus. Pero de repente, los habitantes, furibundos y convencidos de que la enfermedad era inventada o se exageraba, quemaron el lugar. A 80 kilómetros, en la periferia de Bunia, la capital de la región, otro centro de salud corrió la misma suerte. Estos ataques no son solo actos de vandalismo. Mientras las autoridades sanitarias intentan contener esta nueva embestida del virus, libran una batalla paralela y menos visible, pero igualmente peligrosa, contra la propagación de rumores y falsas informaciones y la desconfianza de la población.

Seguir leyendo

Dos responsables sanitarios se lavan los pies antes de entrar en un centro de tratamiento en Bunia, el 8 de junio de 2026.Un líder comunitario se lava las manos durante una sesión de información sobre el ébola en los alrededores del hospital de Rwampara, en República Democrática del Congo (RDC), el 8 de junio de 2026.
❌