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Rolandas Kacinskas: Vilnius will defend Warsaw with all its might

Vilnius is prepared to protect Warsaw, Lithuanian diplomats affirmed in a message in the Polish media on Tuesday following a Polish official’s comment that it would be difficult to convince Poland’s troops to care about the Baltics’ safety due to national minority conflicts within those countries.

“Vilnius is indeed ready to defend Warsaw. In the opposite case, NATO would lose its credibility,” Rolandas Kacinskas, political director at the Lithuanian Foreign Ministry, said in Poland’s daily newspaper Rzeczpospolita, Baltic times reports.

The diplomat said he is confident in Poland’s commitment to the NATO principle of collective defense, stressing that the neighbouring nations have previously collaborated when faced with geopolitical challenges.

Poland’s former defense minister Jan Parys, director of the Polish foreign minister’s political cabinet, noted during a discussion at the Vytautas Magnus University in Kaunas earlier this month that “the situation of Polish minorities in Lithuania is worse than that in Belarus.”

We must explain to our soldiers that they must support the Baltic States. And it is difficult now because we have problems with the Polish minority in Lithuania. It is a paradox, but now situation of Polish minority in Belarus is better than in Lithuania.Parys

As for now, Lithuania has somewhat around 6000 army personal. This fearsome force is ready to defend the West from the East. Or North from the South. Or anything else.

Lithuanian diplomats have dismissed these comments as offensive, as have members of the Polish media who have urged for an apology to be issued to Lithuania.

Speaking to Rzeczpospolita, Kacinskas said he could not dismiss “certain problems” in the area of national minority education but also pointed out indicators of Lithuania’s efforts to manage the education of the Polish-speaking minority.

According to Kacinskas, funding for Polish-language schools in Lithuania is one-fifth higher; additionally, the number of Lithuanian schools has been cut back to a greater extent than that of Polish schools, despite the fact that enrollment in Polish-language schools has decreased more than pupil numbers in Lithuanian schools.

Kacinskas underscored that the Joachim Lelewel School for Polish-speakers is to be renovated at a cost of over 2 million euros to become one of the most advanced schools in Lithuania.

“You must see that Lithuania features the world’s biggest network of Polish-language schools in Lithuania; our country provides unique conditions for receiving Polish-language education from kindergarten to university,” noted the diplomat.Parys

He invited Polish officials to visit Lithuania to talk over the educational hurdles faced by Poles in Lithuania and Lithuanians in Poland.

The most recent census in 2011 indicates that 200,000 Poles reside in Lithuania, accounting for 6.6 per cent of the nation’s population. Polish administration has long condemned Lithuania over the limited rights of its national minority.

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