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Telegram reporter Ella Gonzales spent two weeks in Poland speaking with Ukrainian refugees as a part of a Pulitzer Center fellowship. Here’s what she found.
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Poland: The workers’ paradise overthrown by workers - MSNIn recent years, I have visited Poland more frequently than any other European country, and I am always amazed by the country’s remarkable economic development and rising standards of living.
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Agence France-Presse on MSNThe Ukrainian refugees boosting Poland's economyWith a wrench in hand, Ukrainian refugee Oleksandr Belyba is busy repairing a van in a garage in the Polish capital. The ...
For several months, Halyna Muliar watched Poland's presidential campaign from home in Poznan, worried as candidates swerved further to the right and increasingly aimed nationalist slogans at ...
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inews.co.uk on MSNI left the UK for Poland - I'm mortgage-free and my quality of life is far betterThe country now has living standards as high as Japan's, and has seen such a drastic economic transformation that many Poles ...
WARSAW – Poland’s population fell by 123,000 in 2024, the biggest drop among all EU member states for the second year running ...
Politicians have used their presence as a convenient excuse to explain the inefficiencies of public services. According to an NBP report from November 2024, 78% of Ukrainians living in Poland were ...
Poland's economy and ageing population are heavily reliant on a Ukrainian workforce. But Ukrainians who have been living in Poland for years have also been unnerved by the election campaign.
Ukrainians in Warsaw who AFP spoke to -- refugees and migrants who have been living in Poland for years -- were alarmed by the unprecedented hard-right tone of the campaign.
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