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Ukraine may join missile investigation only on legal grounds — Poland’s Duda

On Tuesday, a missile fell in the village of Przewodow (Lublin Voivodeship), in eastern Poland on the border with Ukraine, killing two

WARSAW, November 17. /TASS/. Ukraine can be allowed to see the materials of the investigation into Tuesday’s fall of a missile in eastern Poland only on the basis of international law, Polish President Andrzej Duda told a news briefing on Thursday.

"In order to participate in the investigation, the relevant rules of international law and international treaties must be implemented. This is always done within the framework of legal assistance," he added.

Earlier, the Polish presidential office’s spokesman Jakub Kumoch said on Twitter that Ukrainian experts had been allowed to visit the site of the missile’s fall. As Duda explained, "if the guests from Ukraine wish to see investigative actions, this can be shown to them, but participation in the investigation and access to documents and to information will require clear grounds in accordance with international law and international treaties."

Polish and US experts are conducting onsite investigation. According to Duda, investigative actions in the field will last for several dozen hours.

On Tuesday, a missile fell in the village of Przewodow (Lublin Voivodeship), in eastern Poland on the border with Ukraine, killing two. Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky blamed Russia and demanded that the West "take action."

However, on Wednesday, Polish President Andrzej Duda said that, according to the authorities of the republic, the missile belonged to the Ukrainian air defense forces. The Department of State said that the US administration was fully certain the Polish authorities’ conclusions were accurate. The Russian Foreign Ministry described Kiev's statements regarding the incident a "crude provocation". According to the Russian Defense Ministry, the missile was fired with a Ukrainian S-300 air defense system.