Farmers are angry over EU climate policies and food imports from Ukraine that they say threaten their livelihoods.

Throwing smoke bombs and lighting fires, thousands of angry farmers demonstrated in Warsaw against European Union regulations and cheap Ukraine imports, with police reporting that two officers had been injured and a dozen protesters arrested.

Some demonstrators on Wednesday tried to force their way past security railings onto parliament grounds, according to police. Farmers also organised tractor blockades on roads across the country.

Polish farmers have been blocking border crossings with Ukraine since last month to protest against what they say is unfair competition from goods entering from Ukraine.

Ukraine has seen its agriculture sector crippled by Russia’s invasion in 2022. Many of its major export routes through the Black Sea have been blocked and its farmland rendered unusable by warfare.

In a bid to help Kyiv economically, the EU in 2022 scrapped tariffs on Ukrainian goods transiting the 27-nation bloc by road.

But logistical problems mean a lot of the Ukrainian cereal exports destined for non-EU countries have accumulated in Poland, undercutting local producers.

The border blockades and grain dispute have strained ties between the neighbours, even as Poland has shown staunch support since the Russian invasion.

Farmers in several other European countries have also been protesting for weeks over these conditions.

Poland’s Prime Minister Donald Tusk said last week the government was mulling a temporary closure of the border with Ukraine for goods.

On Monday, he called on the EU to impose full sanctions on food and agricultural imports from Russia and Belarus – a proposal backed by Ukraine.

Tusk said EU-wide sanctions would make it possible to “more effectively protect the EU’s agricultural and food markets” and “fully open up the possibilities of exporting Ukrainian produce … to third countries”.

Tusk is to hold talks with Polish farmers on Saturday.

Polish farmers
Polish farmers hold a poster reading ‘Down with the Euro terror – otherwise Polexit’. [Wojtek Radwanski / AFP]
Polish farmers
Polish farmers say that low-priced Ukrainian grain entering the Polish market creates unfair competition. [Wojtek Radwanski / AFP]
Polish farmers
Farmers also marched against the European Union’s Green Deal, a set of laws to help the bloc meet its climate goals. [Wojtek Radwanski / AFP]
Polish farmers
The protest increased pressure on the government of Poland’s Prime Minister Donald Tusk. [Wojtek Radwanski / AFP]
Polish farmers
Prime Minister Tusk has sought to meet the farmers’ demands, calling their frustrations justified. He has said he plans to propose amendments to the Green Deal. [Wojtek Radwanski / AFP]
Polish farmers
Some protesters threw stones at police and tried to push through barriers around parliament, injuring several officers, police said. [Wojtek Radwanski / AFP]
Polish farmers
Police used tear gas and said they detained more than a dozen people and prevented the protesters from getting through to the Sejm, the Polish parliament. [Wojtek Radwanski / AFP]