‘Hold The Caravan! Crocodile Cars Are Coming Out Of Forest’
- 24.12.2023, 10:29
What happens in a multi-kilometer traffic jam on the Polish-Belarusian border.
A giant traffic jam of cars has formed on the border of Poland and Belarus in the Terespol area.
You have to wait for days to pass through the border checkpoint, and all this time you have to be on duty, not sleep and try not to miss the “freeloaders” who want to squeeze in an empty place. There are even fights, writes Telegraph.
“Hold the caravan!” people call on each other in chats, constantly warning about cars that are trying to wedge themselves into a multi-kilometer queue.
“Bridge, watch the situation, when you go down from the bridge on the left there is an exit from the forest, crocodile cars are driving out of there,” writes another.
People no longer can stand it and fall asleep. The neighbors begin to panic. “Guys, after parking at the hotel, a man in a blue car fell asleep, there are three cars in front of him, wake him up,” exhausted Belarusians ask each other in the chat.
“Excuse me, maybe someone is selling a place in the line, there’s a pregnant woman with two children, I know that everyone is tired, please answer if possible,” the woman asked in the chat.
“Where are so many Poles going? Where do they end up disappearing if there’s a general queue?!” others are indignant.
The video published on VK in the group “Border in Brest” shows what a gigantic queue has formed at the entrance to the Polish-Belarusian border.
Myfin reported, citing readers, that people have to wait in line for at least 30 hours.
The Belarus-EU Border project warned that the biggest traffic jams on the Polish border await Belarusians on December 18-25. And already on December 24-26, stores in Poland will be closed, and the flow of shopping enthusiasts will fade away.
However, the next peak of queues at exit should be expected on December 29 and 30. If the “Christmas” story repeats itself, then some Belarusians risk celebrating the New Year by being on duty on winter roads in Poland.