The Polish Prime Minister and the South Korean president have met in Warsaw this week to discuss their bilateral „strategic partnership”.
The two leaders discussed „bilateral relations, economic, military and energy cooperation, and international issues,” according to officials. Afterwards, the Polish prime minister wrote on Facebook: “The partnership between Poland and South Korea is of a strategic nature. Today I met with South Korea’s President Yoon Suk Yeo in order to further strengthen our ties and friendship.” The Polish prime minister said: “We’ve worked together on economic issues for a long time, and South Korean firms are investing huge resources in our country, especially in the IT sector and the high-tech industries.” Morawiecki added that “this has now been extended to include investment in the construction of Poland’s planned mega-airport CPK and in nuclear energy.”
Source – Polskie Radio
Polish senators have adopted a resolution honouring the victims of massacres carried out by Ukrainian and German armed forces during the II World War.
The resolution said: “80 years ago, on July 11th, 1943, in a series of coordinated assaults by the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA), around 100 Polish settlements in the Volhynia region were destroyed. It was the most tragic moment and the climax of the UPA’s genocidal actions, which claimed the lives of at least 100,000 Poles, according to historical studies.” It added that, around the same time, “massacres of Polish villages by German forces” in occupied Poland „reached their height.”
Source – Polskie Radio
In a thrilling quarterfinal match of the League of Nations, Poland women’s volleyball team achieved a momentous victory over the German team, securing their spot in the semi-finals.
The intense clash ended with a final score of 3:1 (25:12, 21:25, 25:21, 26:24) in favour of the Polish team. By reaching the top four in the League of Nations, the red-and-white-clad Polish athletes etched their names in history, marking their greatest achievement in the tournament to date. Previously, their best result was a fifth-place finish in 2019, which took place in Nanjing, China.
Source – Polskie Radio
And finally, City Guards in Gdańsk have been testing the possibility to use drones in the fight against illegal trading in the Old Town.
During test flights, the City Guards tested the image quality, range and drone mobility in urban areas. The city council are already using drone technology in the fight against other crimes and nuisances such as illegal dumps and determining the location of waste burning, for example in allotment gardens or in hard-to-reach places.
Source – Radio Gdańsk
Weather
Today will be a sunny day in light winds with chances of thunderstorms later, and temperatures of 24 degrees centigrade (73 degrees Fahrenheit) during the day and 11 degrees overnight. Tomorrow will remain sunny in a light breeze and temperatures of 29 degrees during the day and 18 degrees overnight.
That was the Radio Gdańsk English news and weather.
Martin Caren