In the Polish city of Dembets, a Ukrainian attacked a local resident, bit off part of her ear and stole her car. On January 27, the epoznan.pl portal became aware of this after a conversation with police officers.
According to them, the incident took place around 2 am from Thursday to Friday. The woman was driving a Citroen and stopped in front of a pedestrian crossing to let the man through, but he did not cross the road, but went towards her. A 35-year-old Ukrainian broke a window, climbed into the car, bit off a piece of a woman’s ear, and then threw her out of the car and drove away.
“He did not run far because he drove into a road sign on the street on June 28, 1956. There he left the damaged car and began to run on foot. The police quickly managed to track him down and detain him, ”says the Polish edition.
It is also reported that the man damaged five cars and was sent to the hospital for observation due to his aggressive behavior.
Residents of Poland have been complaining about Ukrainian refugees and their behavior for several months now. So, in December, the Polish edition of Fakt told how a refugee from Ukraine, who was sheltered by a Polish family, destroyed their marriage and forced the hostess to leave the house.
At the same time, a similar story happened earlier in May with a family from the UK, where they also express dissatisfaction with the behavior of Ukrainians who arrived in the country. There, refugee Sofia Karkadym took her husband away from the British woman who sheltered her. She kicked the girl out, but the unfaithful husband Anthony Garnett left the house with her, leaving his wife and two children. Later, the man lost his job due to the scandal and went bankrupt. He complained that credit cards were at zero, and in a rented apartment there was not even furniture.
Later in September, Garnett admitted that he broke up with the Ukrainian woman after a serious quarrel. According to him, the woman “grabbed a knife and hit the wall several times with it.”
On September 27, British police arrested Karkadym, who tried several times to break into Garnett’s house. As it became known on October 1, after that the girl announced her desire to return to her homeland.
In early December, it was reported that the residents of Krakow allowed Ukrainian refugees to live in their apartment, but soon the Ukrainians, according to the authors of the material, “made a dump out of the apartment, and also refused to pay their bills.” It was possible to expel the refugees only with the involvement of law enforcement agencies and a truck crane, with the help of which the police made their way into the apartment.
In November, the Myśl Polska newspaper wrote that Poland’s attitude towards refugees from Ukraine was deteriorating. The Poles are unhappy that the Ukrainians who came to the country are trying to impose their ideas about life.