Give me back my child sobs mum
Transcription
Give me back my child sobs mum
Would you order food delivery, if it was possible in English? Delivero.pl – All in English, All online. Order food from your local restaurants in Warsaw Polish News and Entertainment Friday 10th December 2010 Issue 49 (100) Give me back my child sobs mum Nationwide hunt still on for missing girl NATIONAL © www.kujawsko-pomorska.policja.gov.pl A desperate mother has pleaded for her daughter to be returned after the 14-year-old girl went missing on her way to school. Wanda Skwara said that without her daughter Ewelina “she had nothing to live for”, beseeching any kidnapper “to please give me back my child”. The plea came as over 200 police officers, firemen, soldiers and volunteers carried out an intensive search for the Ewelina in and around the central town of Sluzewo. The girl, who stands 146 centimetres tall, has brown hair and blue eyes, went missing on the morning of December 8. “The latest information that we have is that the girl went to school on her bike at 7:10 in the morning; since then there has been no sign of her,” said Piotr Bieniak, a police spokesman. “The bike she was riding has signs of damage that indicate the girl was in an accident. But she could also have been abducted.” He added that police had enlisted the help of a helicopter from the Warsaw police equipped with thermal-imaging equipment, which could scour the frozen countryside for any signs of life as temperatures dropped well below freezing. Despite the damage to the bike 14-year-old Ewalina has been missing since Wednesday morning suggesting that it was hit by a car, no collisions were reported to the police, raising the possibility that the girl may have been hit by a vehicle and then removed from the scene by the driver. Investigators said snow that surrounded the damaged bike revealed no signs of the girl moving off by herself, and her Puma backpack, which she carried her schoolbooks in, has also disappeared. Police have checked local hospitals to see if the girl, who was wearing a blue and black checked jacket and a green p.3 REGIONAL woollen hat when she went missing, had been checked in unconscious. They have also quizzed friends and family members to see if they could cast any light on the girl’s whereabouts. Local authorities have alleged that a failure by the regional government to clear roads of snow may have forced the girl to cycle in the centre of the road, and thus may have contributed to any accident. Police have appealed to anybody who has information on the missing girl to come forward. p.7 BUSINESS p.9 Death while waiting Radioactive blunder Snow season - A costly business A 56-year-old woman has died in hospital after six days of waiting for surgery for her broken leg. The as-yet unnamed woman, a patient at Warsaw’s Dzieciatka Jezus hospital, was told she could not be operated on due to the facility not having the appropriate orthopaedic screws. Seven canisters containing a radioactive isotope of cobalt have been reported missing by the State Atomic Agency (PAA) from the defunct Ursus iron foundry in Lublin. The matter has been reported to the police who have passed it on to the Internal Security Agency (ABW). As long as the cobalt remains inside the canisters, there is no danger to the environment. With the snow showing no sign of letting up anytime soon, local governments will be forced to fork out an estimated PLN 1.3 bln clearing roads and public places over the winter period. Local authorities in the nation’s capital spent PLN 100 mln moving snow last year, although this year the figure is expected to be slightly less. 2 EDITORIAL The New Poland Express I Friday 10th December 2010 I www.nwe.pl Contents News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 Regional news . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6 Business . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9 What’s on . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10 Sport . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12 Classifieds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13 From the editor Quotes of the week This week in history “Filling out my visa, I had to answer the question ‘Are you a terrorist?’ During communist times I was a terrorist. I didn’t know whether to write the truth or lie. But I could not lie to the US.” Komorowski makes light of the recent Poland-US visa talks. 1948 - The Polish United Workers’ Party (PZPR) is founded. Based on the theories of Marxism-Leninism, the party’s main goal was to create a communist society and promote communism around the globe. 1981 - Martial Law is declared in Poland. During the period of strict political oppression, which was lifted in July 1983, thousands of activists were interned without charges and around 100 people killed. 1989 - Anti-revolutionary forces pull down Nowa Huta’s Lenin statue. The creation of Nowa Huta (‘The New Steel Mill’) began at the end of the 1940s, with an aim to build a ‘Communist Utopia’. The giant bronze statue of Lenin, who lived in Krakow between 1912-1914 was a prominent feature of Plac Centralny. L osing a child for even a few minutes can seem like an eternity. Every parent knows the heartstopping dread that comes when their toddler wanders off - and the overwhelming relief when they are safely back in their arms. So the sight of distraught mum Wanda Skwara breaking down on camera this week and pleading for the safe return of her missing 14-year-old daughter Ewelina would have sent chills down the spine of every parent. The red bike that Ewelina rode to school Wednesday morning, as she did every morning, and that was found lying crumpled on the side of a road is every parents’ nightmare. And with the harrowing reminder that children go missing every day, few parents will not be now thinking ‘thank God that wasn’t my daughter.’ According to statistics from missing people centre ITAKA, last month alone they had 97 children added on to their missing list. Of that 35 were aged 10 or younger, 62 were between 10 and 17 years old. They still haven’t been found. And that doesn’t take into account the hundreds more that have been reported to the police. Some do turn up, alive and well. They’ve either stayed over at friends and forgot to tell their parents, or they’ve got lost before finding their way safely home. We can only hope this is the case with Ewelina. But with massive media coverage failing to result in reports of a little girl being taken to hospital and with no friends popping up to say ‘It’s ok, she’s with us’, as the hunt for little Ewelina stretches into its third day that hope is beginning to dwindle. And the news Friday morning that another missing 14-year-old was found strangled to death and buried by an 18-year-old friend won’t help. At the moment it seems only one person knows what really happened Wednesday morning. And that is the person who left Ewelina’s red bike lying by the side of the road. “It’s a routine visit which only benefits the USA.” Jaroslaw kaczynski is unimpressed with President Komorowski’s meeting with Barack Obama. “Russia has opted for a softer approach with the West as it is afraid of China and the threat from so-called ‘Islamic’ countries. The question is, will we too use this approach?” PiS politician Jaroslaw Sellin on what he believes are Russia’s hidden motives. Have Your Say The NPE weekend QUIZ Re: The smoking ban Last weekend, when standing in an open car park, here in Poland, someone came speeding towards me in their car with its horn screaming at me. I had to jump aside, to avoid being hit! It wasn’t until the driver got out and threatened me with physical violence, that I realised what his problem was... I was smoking in a public place... Since then I realised that I was in fact a victim of a hatecrime because I am a smoker. And what’s worse, is that because there is a smoking ban now here in Poland, he (incorrectly) believed that he had the law on his side. The harm of the smoking bans is greater than the infringement of our rights. It creates division and hatred in our society. John, Lodz This week for our 100th edition, we’ve got a belter of a prize for you good folk out there - a double invitation to see Smokie perform live with their symphony orchestra. Re: The new Warsaw National Stadium. Sounds like the people who produced the business plan for this project were the same people who led the Millennium Dome project in London. Invariably the consultants employed - at usually massive sums - clearly don’t think too far outside of their comfort zones. The idea of using it for concerts though does sound the way to go. George, Bath, UK To get your name in the hat, just tell us the title of Smokie’s most recent album, released this year. Publisher: WIYP Sp. z o.o. WIYP Sp. z o.o. • Ul. Paderewskiego 1 • 81-831 Sopot tel. +48 58 555 9818 • tel/fax. +48 58 555 0831 • [email protected] Editor-in-Chief: Ed Wight ([email protected]) Chief Writer: Steve Sibbald Staff Writer: Matt Day Nationwide & Sports: Graham Crawford ([email protected]) Events: Klaudia Mampe ([email protected]), Vaughan Elliott, Łukasz Jankowski Players on the European rock circuit for over 40 years, the band will be treating the audience to such classics as ‘Have you Ever See the Rain’, ‘I’ll Meet you at Midnight’ and of course, ‘Living Next Door to Alice’. Well done to Maria Panek and Jitka Beye for picking up last week’s prizes. For a chance to win, just send your answers to: [email protected] Graphic Designer: Tomáš Haman ([email protected]) Sales Director: Malgorzata Drzaszcz ([email protected]) 3 NEWS The New Poland Express I Friday 10th December 2010 I www.nwe.pl Russian visit stirs Death while waiting mixed reactions A T he Russian president jetted into Poland this week on a state visit hoping to build on warming relations between the two historical foes. Mr Medvedev arrived in Warsaw to a reception much different to that which greeted the visit of Vladimir Putin, then Russian president, in 2002. Then the bloody history between the two nations and mutual distrust clouded the relationship, but this time Mr Medvedev was quick to praise an apparent new understanding between the two countries. “Today is a great day in Polish-Russian relations,” said the Russian president. “The spirit of our relations is changing. “For a very long time the ghosts of the past loomed over those relations. It doesn’t mean that the past has disappeared, it doesn’t mean that there are no issues linked to the past that would remain,” he continued. “It is important that we are starting again to listen to one another. That we are ready to discuss the most difficult, the darkest and most weighing pages in our mutual history.” Bronislaw Komorowski, the Polish president, struck a similar note. “The bad drought in Polish-Russian relations has come to an end,” he said at a news conference held after deals were signed on closer business and economic co-operation. Speaking at a press conference just before the visit, Radek Sikorski, the foreign minister, said that both countries have “strong cultural bonds”, and that Poland sought the same spirit of reconciliation that it had experienced with Germany”. Relations between the two countries have profited from what many perceive as the more pragmatic approach of the Donald Tusk government in dealing with the Russian bear, and Moscow’s rapid and sympathetic reaction to the Smolensk disaster. But for all the diplomatic hand shaking and back slapping differences remained. The Wikileaks documents revealed that Poland remains suspicious of Russian intentions, with one diplomat asking for “American boots on the ground” to deter Russian aggression. At the same time demonstrations in all of Poland’s major cities against the Medvedev visit made it clear that not all Poles approved of his presence. Law and Justice politicians also accused the government of betraying Polish interests in order to curry favour with Moscow. 56-year-old woman has died in hospital after six days of waiting for surgery for her broken leg. The as-yet unnamed woman, a patient at Warsaw’s Dzieciatka Jezus hospital, was told she could not be operated on due to the facility not having the appropriate orthopaedic screws. According to daily Fakt, the patient was not given anticoagulants - a drug to prevent the clotting of blood - for three days and only received one single dosage after she personally requested it. The death is now under full investigation. “We want an explanation as to how the accident occurred and whether the patient was the victim of neglect,” said Piotr Olechno, a spokesman for Poland’s Ministry of Health. Orthopaedic specialist Marek Duszkiewicz, stressed that standard surgery of this nature should be carried out as soon as possible, preferably within a few hours. “There are exceptions to this rule, but any patient waiting for surgery needs to be given anticoagulants, the amount of which should be judged on each separate case,” he said. “A patient should not have to wait for an operation due to a lack of orthopaedic equipment. If the problem cannot be resolved, then the patient must be transferred to another hospital.” But Deputy Director of the hospital Wlodzimierz Wisniewski argues that the woman received the correct treatment. “The patient was treated as she should have been while she was waiting. Unfortunately there were complications before her surgery and it had to be temporarily put back.” He continued, “And besides, even if her leg had have been in plaster, so what? We sometimes have cases like this where we wait six to eight weeks before treatment.” 4 NEWS The New Poland Express I Friday 10th December 2010 I www.nwe.pl PJN policies Tragic pile-ups shock nation ‘Unprecedented’ O T he leaders of a breakaway faction of Law and Justice have started to put policies together ahead of forming a party early next year. Pawel Poncyliusz, one of the founders of the Poland is the Most Important Association (PJN) and once a leading Law and Justice (PiS) figure, said that they are getting ready to launch the new organisation as a new party on the Polish political scene. “We will try to establish a party at the beginning of next year,” Mr Poncyliusz told NPE. “At the moment we are travelling, meeting supporters, and trying to create a new party structure.” He added the organisation’s members were consulting with supporters in order to provide flesh on the ideological bones of the nascent party. Marek Migalski, another of the rebels, said that by basing its polices on what people want means that they are doing what no Polish politicians have done before. “This is an unprecedented move in Polish politics,” Mr Migalski said, adding that the public would also be able to offer their suggestions via the internet. Another policy decision could also involve changing the name from Poland is the Most Important to Poland Comes First. Up until now the Poland is the Most Important people have had to talk in bold, if rather vague, statements. “We will draw upon the conservative, Christian tradition,” said Mr Migalski at a recent press conference, while Elzbieta Jakubiak spoke about “the expansion of democracy”. Mr Poncyliusz, keeping to the lofty terms, spoke about creating a Poland “secure and prosperous, fair and free”. But not all have been bowled over by the grand words. Jerzy Wenderlich from the Democratic Left Alliance (SLD) said that for all their fine talk the PiS breakaways once supported a government that “was a laughing stock in the world” and belonged to a party that had close ties with controversial priest and media mogul Father Tadeusz Rydzyk. Poland is the Most Important has also drawn criticism from the mainstream media for failing to define what it actually stands for and how, in specific terms, it differs from Law and Justice. According to Mr Poncyliusz, the new organisation has around 12,000 supporters at the moment. ne person was killed and approximately 40 left injured this week in two separate car pile-ups that occurred simultaneously on the S-1 Expressway in Silesia. In total, an estimated 70 vehicles were involved in the two accidents, although authorities have yet to release any official information as to the causes of the crashes. “Initially we had information coming through about several vehicles, but then we started to get news that there may be at least a dozen,” Aneta Golebiowska of the Silesian Fire Department told TVN. Send comments and letters to [email protected] “At the moment we think that the fog is to blame.” The ser v ices had extreme dif f icu lt y getting to t he pile-ups as t he t wo routes were blocked in bot h directions, causing around seven hours of traf f ic jams and genera l chaos on t he road. Amazingly however, only six people were taken to hospital, two of whom were in a serious condition. “We believe that the person who died was probably a driver, whose car collided with a truck,” TVN reported from the scene of the accident. “Only a few people were taken to hospital, but in total the emergency ser vices have helped out about 40 people. The exact number of vehicles involved in the crash has still not been released, but it is estimated to be around 6070.” New Year's Eve 2010/2011 in Warsaw Dom Polski Restaurant invites you Dom Polski has the honour to invite you to our New Year's Eve supper 2010/2011. Supper will be served in our stylish villa, where the beautiful, intimate interiors will soothe the eyes, the gourmet cuisine will be a nectar to the palate and the atmosphere, artistic setting and band will put you in the right mood for the New Year. New Year's Eve supper arrangements 20:00 Aperitif Four-course supper + dessert served between 20.00 and 24.00 (with live background music) At 24:00 Full of hope for a successful and happy New Year we will welcome in 2011 with a glass of Nicolas Feuillatte Brut Grande Reserve champagne. After midnight we will prepare for you a buffet of cheeses, fruit, and our own sweets and pastries. The price of the above menu is 390 zł per person plus 10% for waiter service. Included in the price are supper, soft drinks, an aperitif, Flagstone (South Africa) white and red wine (half a bottle per person), band and a buffet of pastries and cheeses. On New Year's Day we invite you to our festive brunch from 14.00 Reservations 22 616 24 88 or 22 616 24 32 or in person at the restaurant 11 Francuska St., Warsaw www.restauracjadompolski.pl 5 NEWS IN BRIEF Unexpected gift for Santa An angry mother in Grudziak was forced to see off a drunken santa from her doorstep, by kicking him between his legs. The 37-year-old man, who was returning from a fancy-dress party, turned up banging on the door demanding booze. “He was stinking drunk and very loud. Then he tried to get into the house,” said the mum. “I asked him to leave but he refused and became abusive so I kicked him very hard right where it would hurt most. His bells won’t be jingling very much for a long time.” Police detained the man for the night on drunk and disorderly charges. Journos trusted over leaders A new report shows that the Polish public trust journalists more than they do politicians or priests. According to the study, conducted by SMG / KRC, 75 percent responded that they have more trust in those who write for their newspapers than those who run the country. Just over half stated that they believed news reports should contain the whole truth and not cover up facts, regardless of future consequences. However, when it came to other professions, such as doctors, teachers and lawyers, journalists were ranked lower on the trust scale. The study was conducted nationwide, with 1,002 people aged between the age of 15 - 75 taking part. Drunk on the slopes A woman was taken to hospital this week after colliding with a drunken skier in the Tatras, just weeks after a proposed government crackdown on alcohol abuse on the slopes. Suffering from a broken shoulder and concussion, the 35-year-old lady is now in a stable condition, but authorities are warning that the law must be changed if incidents like this are to be eradicated. “Due to the consumption of alcohol not being prohibited on the slopes, it’s a major cause of accidents,” said Kazimierz Pietruch, a spokesman for the Zakopane police. According to TVN24, the winter season will see around 200 Polish police officers stationed in the mountains handing out fines to those they believe pose a threat to the safety of others. Razor blade intruder in PiS office A 66-year-old man has been apprehended by police after he was found carrying razor blades into the Law and Justice offices in Legnica. According to director of the office, Krzysztof Slufcik, police had to be called after the as yet unidentified man marched in and threatened to attack MP Adam Lipinski. Upon arrival, officers found the man to be in possession of razor blades and a rock. The incident comes just two months after 62-yearold taxi driver Ryszard C. stormed into the Law and Justice (PiS) Lodz offices, stabbing one man and fatally shooting another while shouting “Kill Kaczynski”. The New Poland Express I Friday 10th December 2010 I www.nwe.pl Charming conman collared by cops P olice have tracked down a conman who, with the aid of different disguises, has defrauded dozens of women over a 13-year period. According to daily Fakt, 32-year-old Artur Buczek managed to con around PLN 210,000 out of unsuspecting women right across the country, using a host of different guises such as a paediatrician, a traffic cop and a US Army Officer. “He was extremely charming, and I fell in love with him almost right away,” said one victim, Malgorzata Pres who met Buczek through a newspaper advertisement. “He introduced himself to me as a construction supervisor and after that I was soon under his spell.” After a few months of being together, Buczek suggested that the couple move in together. “I agreed without any hesitation. We were soon renting a studio apartment and were talking about buying a place for the two of us.” But after getting the PLN 25,000 deposit for their new home, a sum which Pres had saved up for over a number of years, Buczek disappeared without trace, taking with him a car and a laptop. Initial reports by investigators suggest that around 30 women have fallen for his charm over the years and have been defrauded in the process. But the list of victims could be much larger and police are now urging any other people who believe that may have been conned by Buczek to come forward. “So far we know that he was able to extort approximately PLN 210,000 from his victims,” says police spokeswoman Monkia Brodowska. “But we believe there are more victims out there and we hope they will contact us.” 6 REGIONAL NEWS The New Poland Express I Friday 10th December 2010 I www.nwe.pl Nationwide with Graham Crawford: Bringing you the best from across the regions. If you have any news for Graham, send him an email at [email protected] WITHOUT RHYmE OR REGION I received a panicky sms last Friday from my dear old mum. It read, ‘Poz on telly, trams frozen in tracks. Are you alright? Luv Ma.’ A touching missive, it set me wondering how much news reporting is like the child’s game Chinese Whispers. I’m sure the emissaries of the BBC had no evil intentions, but a simple report led to a poor pensioner thinking her beloved son, her precious baby, was in a situation reminiscent of Scott in the Antarctic. The truth is Poznan wasn’t even in the grip of anything particularly excessive weather-wise, and my reply, ‘Fine. Weather’s great,’ left mum less than impressed. How did Poznan end up the centre of a report on extreme weather conditions? It was definitely far worse elsewhere. The only explanation I can proffer is that some poor hack was sent here to cover the Lech-Juventus match on Wednesday evening (when admittedly conditions were pretty iffy) and was required to file a further report while on the spot. The attendant need to big the story up tabloidstyle led to a few trams stuck in snow being transformed into a crisis heralding the dawn of a new ice-age, with the extinction of the human race imminent. Wretched journalistic tactics to which we here at NPE would never stoop. So, to set the record straight, mumsy, I’d just like to inform you that as I gaze from my window I can see woolly mammoths stalking across a desolate icy tundra, the drunks that congregate at my back door are frozen, like rather repulsive ice sculptures, and will likely be discovered by archaeologists in a couple of millennia from now, food supplies are scarce and even the vodka has frozen solid. Send money, lots of it, immediately. Ta. AROUND POLAND In Poznan, where the incumbent president, the independent Ryszard Grobelny, had failed to win in the first round by a few hundred votes, turnout was 25 percent. Grobelny secured a fourth consecutive term in office, securing 66 percent of the vote. “It was only to be expected that the turnout was going to be lower than in the first round. It’s probably a result of the fact that there wasn’t as much electoral tension in Poznan as in other places,” Grobelny told reporters after his win was confirmed. His opponent, Grzegorz Ganowicz (PO), had a more damning assessment of the figures. “This is a message to the entire political class that the majority of people that are directly affected by these elections aren’t interested in them, because they don’t feel they are able to participate in the running of their city,” he commented. Significantly more interest was shown in two cities where candidates were mired in controversy - with differing results. Turnout was highest in Sopot, at 66 percent, where independent Jacek Karnowski was returned to power, despite the ongoing corruption charges facing him. In Olsztyn, Czeslaw Malkowski (also independent), who is accused of rape and sexual molestation, was narrowly beaten, attracting 46 percent of the vote with turnout at a similar level - 44 percent. In Krakow, Jacek Majchrowski (independent, but with historic connections to SLD) saw off the challenge of PO. It was a similar story across the country, where independent politicians scored significant successes against the party giants. PO did win Lodz, though - the result also guaranteeing that Poland will now get its first black MP as Hanna Zdanowska moves from the Sejm to Lodz City Hall, to be replaced by party colleague the Nigerian born John Godson. Law and Justice (PiS) were the big losers in the elections, party chiefs blaming the problems in their ranks on the poor results. Second round stirs up apathy T he second round of local elections across Poland last Sunday were greeted with apathy by voters, not helped by the wintry conditions. A number of vital battles needed to be resolved, with city presidencies still hanging in the balance. Despite that, turnout struggled up to 33 percent, in many places lower - especially where the first round results clearly indicated the likely eventual winner. The low turnout meant that in many cases the eventual winner was decided by a handful of votes, for example in Opole, where Ryszard Zembaczynski of Civic Platform (PO) won by a mere 644 votes from Tomasz Garbowski of the Democratic Left Alliance (SLD). A dancing New Year’s Eve party at Petit Moulin Rouge Welcome in the New Year 2011 in the joyful atmosphere of a French boudoir, decadence and can-can. A delicious menu and open bar. Only 250zl per person. Information and reservations at (+48) 22 222 08 64 Petit Moulin Rouge - Złote Tarasy, level -1, ul. Złota 59 - www.petitmr.pl 7 REGIONAL NEWS LUBELSkIE Radioactive blunder S even canisters containing radioactive cobalt are missing from the defunct Ursus iron foundry in Lublin, the State Atomic Agency (PAA) reported. Police have passed the matter on to the Internal Security Agency (ABW). mAzOWIECkIE High speed mix up T he Pendolino trains to be bought by PKP Intercity with great fanfare, promising significant reductions in travelling times from Warsaw to the other major cities in Poland are not, it turns out, going to be the high speed version with the leaning cabins, but a slower, non-leaning version. The leaning action enables the train to corner at 200km/h. Without that function the locomotives will only be able to get up to full speed on short, straight sections of track, while every corner, will require the trains to slow. The manufacturer, Alstom, is adamant that the leaning trains were never on offer. “That’s a misunderstanding. PKP InterCity never stipulated leaning cabins in its The New Poland Express I Friday 10th December 2010 I www.nwe.pl As long as the cobalt remains inside the canisters, there is no danger to the environment. The missing canisters were discovered in mid-November, during a routine inspection by the PAA. Andrzej Kowalczyk, of the PAA’s Radiation Incidents Centre, told reporters, “Nobody was required to inform us about the liquidation of the foundry. Our inspectors went there and found that the radiological protection supervisor there had been fired and the documentation was missing.” Kowalczyk was keen to emphasize that the amount of radiation involved is quite small and he believes the canisters may have been treated as junk and ended up in a furnace. “If the source is small, after being melted and mixed with large quantities of molten scrap metal, the radiation may be virtually unmeasurable,” adjudged the scientist. The missing canisters, type PRJ-20, are egg-shaped, with handles on the sides. The canister is bright yellow and has the standard symbol for radiation on the sides. tender. We’re offering what the carrier asked for. According to their simulations, the cuts in journey times due to the leaning cabins wouldn’t have been that great,” commented Emilio Gallocchio, head of Alstom in Italy. Twenty of the leaning trains were guaranteed, though, by Nicolas Halamek of Alstom at the time the tender results were announced at the end of September, when it turned out Alstom’s offer was the only one submitted. Only after the tender process did PKP get cold feet about the new rolling stock, voicing concerns about the costs and difficulties of maintenance. The trains will cost a massive PLN 1.6 bln, but the revelations now call into doubt the value of that investment. “If the trains won’t have the leaning cabins, there are serious doubts as to whether it’s worth buying them. You could buy ordinary carriages and locomotives that would travel at the same speed,” commented Adrian Furgalski of the Transport Consultant’s [sic] Group TOR. Bus stop incident F ive people were injured this Thursday afternoon when a Ford Mondeo ploughed into a bus stop on ul. Odrowaza near the Zaba roundabout. According to Maciej Karczynski, press officer for Warsaw police, the accident was a result of excessive speed and tailgating, “The driver was following a bus and couldn’t brake in time when the bus approached the stop.” His colleague Mariusz Mrozek continued, “There was too much traffic in the lefthand lane, so in order to avoid a collision he decided to turn to the right.” The car lurched into a group of people waiting for the bus, hitting five. Three men and two women, all with injuries to their lower limbs, were taken to hospital. The car also smashed into a lamp-post before coming to a halt. The 22-year-old driver was unhurt in the incident and breathalyser tests showed he was sober. 8 REGIONAL NEWS The New Poland Express I Friday 10th December 2010 I www.nwe.pl OPOLSkIE POmORSkIE Leader of the pack Femme fatale finally finished A woman was rescued this Tuesday night in Opole near the Sybirak Bridge as she drifted on pack ice, shouting for help. Cameras from 24opole.pl captured the dramatic rescue as fire officers and a diver combined to remove the kneeling woman from her icy predicament. “It was after midnight when a passerby heard cries for help coming from the river. He noticed a woman kneeling on a sheet of ice in the Odra river. Fire officers then rescued the woman using a ladder and a diver attached to a securing line. The woman was kneeling on a piece of pack ice under which there was a large branch. It was probably the branch that stopped the floe from drifting further,” fire officer Grzegorz Czerniecki told reporters. The exhausted, frozen 34-year-old woman was taken to hospital where she is still under observation. “The day before the woman was reported missing to police by her sister. For the time being we have no idea how she came to be in the river,” Aleksandra Mekal-Wnuk, press officer for Opole police told a reporter from 24opole.pl. T he long running case of Jolanta W-K., a fifty-year-old woman accused of murdering her lover, finally came to an end this week when the Gdansk Regional Court upheld the guilty verdict and sentence against her, set at the end of the first trial in June this year (see NPE 25/76). The decision means she now faces 25 years in prison, and will be able to apply for parole after serving twenty years, by which time she will be 70 years of age. “There is no evidence of her guilt,” argued her defence lawyer, Grzegorz Ksepko. “In a case based on circumstantial evidence such as this, the decision of the court must be beyond question. If there is any doubt at all, it must operate in favour of the defendant. The original court, though, did precisely the opposite,” he said. However, Elzbieta Ryminska-Piatek of the Gdansk Appellate Prosecutors argued for the original decision to be upheld. “Every killer likes to think that if they effectively dispose of the body and the murder weapon, then there’s nothing to fear. But that isn’t necessarily the case, as can be seen by numerous guilty verdicts in trials based on circumstantial evidence.” The court agreed and upheld the original sentence. Extra means less for heart clinics T he Pomorskie Health Fund (NFZ) has offered PLN 2.7 mln to be divided among the region’s clinics in a new contract offer following protests at the original plans. “It definitely won’t be enough for all of them,” commented the acting director of Gdansk NFZ, Barbara Kawinska. This additional contract for hospitals in the Pomorskie NFZ area follows protests, after an earlier announcement left the region’s three cardiological departments without contracts. This would have removed 91 beds available for patients with general cardiological problems in the Tricity area. Irena Erecinska-Siwy, director of the Morski Hospital told Gazeta Trojmiasto, “We’ll be making a bid. But the sum is very small, and if it’s divided between the three departments it will only be enough for them to operate for three months. Even if our hospital won the bid and received the entire sum, it would still mean a significant reduction in services. We had a budget of PLN 3.8 mln for cardiology this year.” Send comments and letters to [email protected] 9 BUSINESS The New Poland Express I Friday 10th December 2010 I www.nwe.pl Snow season - A costly business W ith the snow showing no sign of letting up anytime soon, local governments will be forced to fork out an estimated PLN 1.3 bln clearing roads and public places over the winter period. Local authorities in the nation’s capital spent PLN 100 mln moving snow last year, although this year the figure is expected to be slightly less, with around PLN 95 mln put aside so far according to new figures reported in daily Rzeczpospolita. PLN 25 is the expected figure needed in the western city of Poznan, while Krakow authorities have decided on PLN 29 mln - PLN 2 mln more than last year. In total, town and city centres can expect to use approximately 10 percent of their budget dealing with the elements. According to the paper, authorities aim to clear major roads around the country within four hours of snow, while motorways are often cleared within half that time. Smaller local roads in and around towns and cities can expect to wait up to 12 hours before being dealt with, due to local budgets being unable to stretch that far. Logging out of Logistics T imes look tough for Poles looking to get into the logistics industry according to a new report. The study, conducted by research firm Manpower entitled ‘Employment Outlook for the Polish’, found that during the first quarter of 2011 a mere 17 percent of firms will be looking to hire more staff, while 68 percent stated that they have no intention of taking on more workers. Perhaps more worryingly though, is that 12 percent of bosses asked said that they would be looking to let staff go right after the New Year period. According to authors of the report, employment prospects are expected to be higher in the public sector, in areas such as Transport and Manufacturing. “Employers in the Manufacturing sector will provide new jobs during the first quarter of 2011. It looks much more optimistic than in 2009 and 2010,” said Iwona Janas, Director of Manpower Poland. “Transport is another area which looks positive coming into the New Year. It hasn’t looked so optimistic since the third quarter of 2008 and certainly looks the best place for jobs in the public sector.” BUSINESS IN BRIEF Rail operator tries to combat debt Przewozy Regionalne, which operates both local and interregional passenger trains, has submitted a payment plan to PLK after failing to pay the operator for track use since last year. According to reports, the figure owed to PLK is approximately PLN 400 mln. However, PLK’s financal director Katarzyna Janio says that the deal would not work in the company’s favour. “By signing this, it would be impossible to extract the debt by way of a court order, and the debt itself would then increase.” NBP OFFICIAL CURRENCY RATES 10/12/2010 Currency Czech Koruna Danish Krone Estonian Kroon Euro Hong Kong Dollar Hungarian Forint Japanese Yen Norwegian Krone Pound Sterling Russian Ruble Swiss Franc US Dollar Symbol 1 CZK 1 DKK 1 EEK 1 EUR 1 HKD 100 HUF 100 JPY 1 NOK 1 GBP 1 RUB 1 CHF 1 USD Mid-rate 0,1608 0,5416 0,2580 4,0376 0,3918 1,4550 3,6465 0,5073 4,8282 0,0986 3,1074 3,0458 Przewozy Regionalne’s debt negotiations are not thought to be affecting its current services. Xmas money spinner Those looking for a little extra Christmas spending money could do worse than apply for a job as a Santa Claus in Warsaw. According to figures by Sedlak&Sedlak, Santas in the capital can charge between PLN 50 - 400 for half an hour’s work, with the average fee working out at approximately PLN 120. While the average rate is noticeably less in other large cites (around PLN 90), those who have their own beard can expect their salary to increase by as much as 150 percent. IN NUmBERS 11 .8% Poland’s unemployment rate after rising 0.3 percent last month. EUR 16 .5 bln The total amount of EU funding Poland will receive between 2007 - 2013 (63.4 percent of which has already been spent). Common Cents with Ross Naylor Scattered Thoughts H ere are some of the things that have caught my attention in the past week or so. In a recent survey of major US companies, 198 of them raised their profit estimates and 130 cut them. This is the biggest gap in favor of the “positives” since Bloomberg started tracking the data in 1999. Canadian Finance Minister Jim Flaherty has said he is determined to make Canada the first G-8 country to balance their budget by 2015. Balancing the budget eh? What a novel idea. That’s sure to get him thrown out of the finance ministers guild. It should be good for the Canadian currency though. At the end of November, survey results from the Munich-based IFO institute, showed that business confidence in Germany had jumped to its highest point since the survey started after German reunification in. You would expect that a weaker Euro would boost confidence further, at least amongst exporters. Polish industry has seen its best numbers since 2004. Analysts were originally expecting the main industrial index (HSBC Polish Manufacturing PMI) to drop in November, but they were pleasantly surprised however when it jumped to 55.9. The newest numbers suggest the index is enjoying increased strength. Of Wal-Mart’s 6,000 suppliers, 5,000 are from China A forecast suggested that UK property prices would fall by 10% next year, exceeding government forecasts of a 3.1% drop. They expect one of the big drivers to be public sector job losses. China is similar, if their GDP growth falls bellow a certain level, things are likely to go horribly wrong. Ross Naylor is a financial planner with AES International, an independent financial advisory group. www.aesinternational.com/ rossnaylor 10 ENTERTAINmENT The New Poland Express I Friday 10th December 2010 I www.nwe.pl : Producer 2. on mporary Animati Festival of Conte Tricity 8-12.12.2010 Freshly animate d! ners: Main Part Media: SOmETHING FOR THE WEEkEND from In Your Pocket S omething a bit different for this weekend: two books recently devoured by yours truly in double quick time: Hitler’s Empire, by Mark Mazower, and The Forsaken, by Tim Tzouliadis. Both authors are part of the new breed of younger, investigative historians ready to re-examine much of what was for so long thought to be unquestionable. Simon Sebag-Montefiore author of the brilliant At the Court of the Red Czar is the perhaps the Virgil of this bunch, though Mazower and Tzouliadis make excellent Dantes. Mazower’s book deals with a vast topic: life under Nazi Germany in occupied Europe. From benign Nazi rule in Denmark to the brutal occupation of Poland and the western USSR, Mazower delves into the nitty gritty of occupation, in an attempt to find out just exactly what was Hitler’s Grand Plan for Europe in the event of German victory in the war. That he doesn’t is not his fault: as he explains incredibly well in terrific prose, there simply was no Grand Plan, beyond Hitler’s mad, vague ideas of lebensraum in the east and assimilation in the west. When it came to the occupation of France and Poland especially, the sheer speed of the Wehrmacht victory meant that there were no plans in place for the occupation. By and large the Nazis made things up as they went along, with local commanders and governors having almost total autonomy. In western Poland for example, local Poles were thrown off their farms after one governor decided to Germanise the area with ethnic German ‘volunteers’ from the Baltics. Not only did these Baltic Germans speak less German than the Poles they had replaced, they also - being mainly industrial workers - knew nothing about farming. Harvest yields, predictably, collapsed. The Forsaken is arguably an even better read than Hitler’s Empire, and is one of the great untold stories of the 20th century: the fate of the thousands of Americans who emigrated to the Soviet Union during the Great Depression. Few were ideological emigrants: the vast majority were unemployed engineers and factory workers hired by Amtorg (the USSR’s American trading company) on long terms contracts. Many Americans sailed for the USSR without even the promise of jobs, lured only by the deceptive propaganda which so many useful idiots (as they have become known: the first was George Bernard Shaw) did so much to confirm as fact. The fate of these Americans is of course as predictable as it is tragic: all but a few ended up in the Gulag, and only a handful survived. Except in a very few cases, the American Embassy in Moscow did nothing to help them. Gdansk 15 .12 Wednesday - Ray Wilson & Berlin Symphony Ensemble - Genesis Klassik Gdańsk, Baltic Philharmonic Hall, ul. Ołowianka 1, tel. (+48) 58 320 62 62QConcert starts at 20:00. Tickets 170/130zł. Available at Baltic Philharmonic Hall’s box office (Open 10:00 - 18:00, Tue 09:30 16:00. Sat, Sun four hours before performance). 17 (Zabrze), tel. (+48) 32 271 66 22QEvent starts at 19:00. Tickets 90-140zł. Available at DMiT box office (Open 10:00 - 18:00, Sat 10:00 - 14:00). Warsaw 15 .12 Wednesday - Magical Disney Music Congress Hall, Pl. Defilad 1, tel. (+48) 22 696 99 00QConcerts start at 14:00 and 19:00. Tickets 4080zł. Available at Congress Hall box office (Open 11:00-18:00, Sat, Sun 11:00-15:00). Katowice 14 .12 Tuesday - Moscow City Ballet Dom Muzyki i Tańca, ul. Gen. de Gaulle’a Krakow 12 .12 Sunday - Monika Brodka Rotunda, ul. Oleandry 1, tel. (+48) 12 633 35 38, www.jazzjuniors.plQConcert starts at 20:00. Tickets 35-45zł. Available at Rotunda’s box office (Open 10:00 - 13:00, 16:00 - 19:00 and an hour before the event). 10 .12 Friday - Swans Stodoła, ul. Batorego 10, tel. (+48 22) 586 42 00, www.stodola.plQConcert starts at 20:00. Tickets 85zł. Available at Stodoła’s box office (Open 09:00 - 21:00, Sat 09:00 - 14:00. Closed Sun, Mon). In cooperation with In Your Pocket city guides 11 ENTERTAINmENT The New Poland Express I Friday 10th December 2010 I www.nwe.pl Poznan Warsaw Krakow 11 .12 Saturday - 19 .12 Sunday Poznań Bethlehem Stary Rynek, tel. (+48) 12 633 35 38 A tradition in Poznań, every year there are artistic events, a Christmas fair as well as an ice sculpture festival. Expect competitions for the best Christmas decorations, for Poznań’s Santa Claus and cooking. As always there will be live nativity-scenes with real people and animals playing the parts. Proceedings will be inaugurated on Saturday at 17:00 when President Ryszard Grobelny will officially open the 5th International Ice Sculpture Festival. After that there will be concerts, this time by Audiofeels and Evy Nawrot. There will also be a light and sound show. The bazaar part will be open everyday 10:00 - 21:00, but we recommend being there at 18:00/19:00 every day by the open air stage to hear guest performances of folk songs, Christmas carols, gospel music featuring other popular artists like Żuki Rock&Roll Band (The Beatles tribute band) and Piotr Kuźniak. From 20th to 23rd, 14.00 - 18.00, the stage will be given over to various bands and choirs playing Christmas Carols. Yo ho ho!QAdmission free. 14 .12 Tuesday - 30 Seconds To Mars Torwar, ul. Łazienkowska 6a, tel. (+48) 12 633 35 38 At the Coke Live Festival this year in Kraków Jared Leto announced that they would be back soon and they weren’t lying. Leto is also an actor and along with other mainstays, the Shannon brothers, the band have 3 studio albums. They are one of those groups who have a ‘special relationship’ with fans and the latest album This Is War had a special edition - 2000 cd covers had faces of their fans on them, aah. Lucky groupies may be invited on stage for a sing song as well, so squeeze to the front!QConcert starts at 20:00. Gates open from 18:00.Tickets 130/110zł. Tickets available at www. eventim.pl and EMPiK, ul. Nowy Świat 15/17 (Open 07:00-22:00, Sat 09:00-22:00, Sun 11:00-19:00). 11 .12 Saturday - Cracow Rap Fest Rotunda, ul. Oleandry 1, tel. (+48) 12 633 35 38 This will be the first time out for a festival that the organisers hope will become an annual affair. As we go to press the programme has concerts by: Pezet/Małolat playing material from their long-awaited, much anticipated new album. Meanwhile Pokahontaz, the left overs from Polish hip-hop legends Paktofonika will strut their stuff. Finally 2009’s sensation Toruń rapper Małpa will close proceedings. The list may grow, check the website for details.QConcert starts at 20:00. Tickets 3539zł. Available at Rotunda’s box office (Open 10:00 - 13:00, 16:00 - 19:00 and an hour before the event). Warsaw 10 .12 Friday - Młynarski Plays Młynarski Cafe Kulturalna, Pl. Defilad 1, tel. (+48 22) 586 42 00 Młynarski Plays Młynarski is albumconcert project which came out of a radio show hosted by Jan Młynarski in which he was interviewing his father and musician Wojciech. The idea is to perform Wojciech’s pieces in the same way author did in the 60 and 70s, all very jazzy, dancy and romantic. The performers include Gaba Kulka (vocals) Piotr Zabrodzki (piano), Kuba Galiński (organs), Marian Wróblewski (guitars), Wojciech Traczyk (double-bass), Manolo Alban Juarez (drums) and of course Jan Młynarski on singing and drumming duty.QConcert starts at 22:00. Tickets 35zł. Available at Cafe Kulturalna (Open 12:00-03:00). Kazimierz Dolny 11 .12 Saturday - 12 .12 Sunday Kaziemierz Dolny Christmas Fair Rynek, tel. (+48) 12 633 35 38 If you’ve never been and are looking for a day trip from Warsaw, then this beautiful little artists town, about 140km from the capital, could be for you. It’s always been popular with tourists, local and otherwise, but it’s star has risen further in recently because of a TV show with Artur Żmijewski. The fair is over two days and you’ll be able to find ideas for Christmas presents as well as lots of decorations to hang on Christmas tree. However, apart from Chinese tat, the most important feature is the regional products section. Mostly consisting of food and alcohol from all over the country, many of which you won’t find in the shops. On Saturday, 17:00, in Sarzyńscy’s Restaurant, ul. Nadrzeczna 6 there is a recital by Wiktoria Trynkiewicz. Accompanied by piano she will perform Christmas standards of jazz, soul, pop and sung poetry in a concert called ‘It’s never too late to love at Christmas’. Admission free. Another gratis event is on Saturday at 20:00, Knajpa u Fryzjera, Witkiewicza 2. The Rzeszów Klezmer Band will play Jewish music on clarinet, doublebass, drums and accordion. Before the war the city had a large thriving Jewish population as attested to be the moving cemetery just out of town. Of course the Rynek will be decorated with two huge Christmas trees and you’ll be able to meet Santa and get a small gifts from his big bag. Warsaw 10 .12 Friday - 13 .12 Monday Mazovia Goes Baroque VI ul. Modzelewskiego 59, tel. (+48 22) 586 42 00 This will be the last of the five parts that make up Mazovia Goes Baroque. The idea of the festival is to put Chopin in context by exploring other music. This time round the focus is on two era’s before Chopin’s romanticism. It all started and will finish with Bach, whose death signalled the end of the Baroque period. On the first day Amandine Beyer and Allan Rasmussen will play Bach on violin and harpsichord starting at 19:00. The following day will see three concerts from 18:00. On Saturday Eric Bellocq plays Bach’s compositions on harp and on Sunday there will be a double bill: first Eric Bellocq performs on lute, later Amandine Beyer on violin. The final show will be by Allan Rasmussen on harpsichord playing Goldberg Variations of Bach. However, for this one you have to travel to Płock as it’s all taking place in the State Music School, ul. Kolegialna 23.QFull schedule available at www.muzykanapowaznie. pl. Tickets 20-25zł. Available at Empik (ul. Złota 59. Open 10:00 - 22:00, Sun 10:00 - 20:00) and Płock Symphony Orchestra box office, Płock, ul. Bielska 9/11 (Open 10:00 - 15:00, Thu 10:00 17:00. Closed Sat, Sun). In cooperation with In Your Pocket city guides 12 SPORT The New Poland Express I Friday 10th December 2010 I www.nwe.pl Who’s our favourite Pole in goal? J erzy Dudek made a painful return to the Champions League on Wednesday, breaking his jaw in the 45th minute of a dead rubber against Auxerre which Real Madrid went on to win 4-0. Dudek, making only his eleventh start in four seasons at the Bernabeu, was having a good first half, making two important saves, when he clashed with Auxerre’s Roy Contoute. The innocuous looking challenge, as Dudek sought to kick the ball into touch, led to contact with the French striker’s elbow, Dudek falling to the turf. He was taken straight from the pitch to a clinic where a broken jaw was confirmed. Dudek now faces six weeks on the sidelines on a diet of porridge. Meanwhile, in London, Dudek’s compatriot Fabianski was enjoying a slightly better night in the Emirates Stadium, as Arsenal secured their passage to the second round of the Champions League with an eventually comfortable 3-1 win over Partisan Belgrade. The scoreline didn’t reflect the nervousness of the encounter, in which the London side teetered for long periods on the brink of elimination. Following a series of indifferent results, the Gunners needed a win to be sure of progressing. Despite dominating most of the match, a slender 1-0 lead over lively opponents meant Arsenal fans couldn’t relax. Fabianski was a spectator for the most part, until Partizan went on the counter attack and a mix-up in defence led to a gut-wrenching equaliser. A shot from the edge of the box by Cleo deflected off the leg of Sebastien Squillaci, hopelessly wrong-footing Fabianski. Fortunately, his colleagues on the pitch went on to regain the lead, sealing the win with a goal from the in-form Samir Nasri in the 77th minute. By comparison Tomasz Kuszczak’s adventure with Manchester United appears to have come to a disappointing end. Widely tipped to start in Tuesday’s final group match against Valencia, Kuszczak was instead left on the bench as the raw 20-year-old Ben Amos made only his third start for the Red Devils. Kuszczak has already made it clear that if he isn’t playing, he doesn’t want to stay with the club he joined back in 2007. A January exit looks likely with Premiership clubs Wigan and Aston Villa already expressing an interest, as well as Olympiakos and Stuttgart. Kuszczak will be happy to go anywhere that can guarantee him regular football - at the age of 28, he has only 99 starts for clubs in three different countries. Franek trains Polish strikers T omasz Frankowski, currently jointtop scorer in the Ekstraklasa, began his new job as coaching assistant to Franciszek Smuda with the national side at their training camp in Turkey this week. “It’s already sunk in that I’m having to combine my duties as a player with those of a coach. Everyone finishes their playing career sometime,” admitted 36-year-old Frankowski. He spent the first session, this Wednesday, kicking his heels as the squad went through tactics, but in the afternoon was more involved, barking comments to players he still competes alongside, like Kamil Grosicki, his partner in attack at Jagiellonia Bialystok. Asked if he could step back into the squad if a series of injuries hit the team, he replied, “No, that’s absolutely out of the question. If - touch wood - three strikers were all to get injured, then one of the attacking midfielders would lead the line. Not me...” Poland play Bosnia-Herzegovina in Antalya tonight, kick-off 20.15. The place to spend the weekend Friday Night Lillis - Live & Acoustic - 21:00 Saturday 11.12.10 Inverness V Rangers KO 13:45 West Ham V Man City KO 16:00 Newcastle V Liverpool KO 18:30 Sunday 12.12.10 Bolton V Blackburn KO 14:30 Spurs V Chelsea KO 17:00 Warsaw Tortilla Factory ul. Wilcza 46 tel. 022 621-8622 www.warsawtortillafactory.pl [email protected] SPORTS BRIEFS Lech prepare for Red Bull Following last week’s heroics in the blizzard against Juventus, Lech Poznan’s players are currently preparing for their final match of the year against Salzburg, next Thursday. Initially given a five day break following the 1-1 draw that guaranteed the Polish team’s qualification to the next round of the Europa League, the players assembled at the side’s plush training grounds in Wronki. The main pitch there is in fantastic condition, despite the wintry conditions, the undersoil heating having been on full whack for over a week. Also in better condition is the team itself, especially midfield maestro Tomasz Bandrowski, back after missing most of the season with a hip problem that he feared would need surgery. “I managed all the training with the lads, today. If the manager’s decision is positive, I can’t see any reason why I shouldn’t be in the squad to face Salzburg,” Bandrowski told reporters. Adamek madder than Maddalone Tomasz Adamek continued his unbeaten run in the heavyweight category in Newark last night, with a systematic demolition of Vinny Maddalone. Adamek took only five rounds to halt the American, a 37-yearold journeyman fighter with a reputation as a stayer. That reputation no longer exists, Adamek having effectively put an end to Maddalone’s fighting career. The one-sided victory has left some American commentators less than convinced, though, Rob Smith from eastsideboxing.com commenting simply, “Adamek looked good in this fight, but I don’t give him a chance when he comes up against the best.” 13 CLASSIFIEDS The New Poland Express I Friday 10th December 2010 I www.nwe.pl Classifieds: Place your free ads and community news here. Email [email protected] Native English speaker needed Free Polish conversation classes Mercedes for sale I am looking for English Native Speaker. My English is ok ;) but I need to improve my Business English. I can teach you Polish. We offer FREE POLISH CONVERSATION CLASSES every Saturday at 11AM and 12PM in NOVEMBER KLUB DIALOGU - Polish school for foreigners Krakowskie Przedmieście 13/155 (Hotel Europejski) Please sign up for this classes by email: [email protected] or phone: 22 396 68 92 / 22 489 10 10 www.klubdialogu.pl Mercedes 280CDI 2006 4matic for sale in Warsaw 119,000km ELEGANCE version, extras: GPS, Xenon, Bluetooth, 5 CD, DVD player, 76,000pln Contact: Tony, 604 555 855 Stunning apartment in heart of Old Town Apartment to let Downtown Warsaw Apartment for rent – Warsaw 100m + floorspace located on three floors next to Cathedral with views over convent. Refurbished to a very high standard with new kitchen and bathrooms, 2/3 bedrooms, wifi; home cinema etc.. Can be let unfurnished or furnished with high quality furniture and art. Euro 1800 per month. Contact: [email protected] +48 609 100 257 200 metre’s to the Zlote Tarasy shopping mall opposite the Holiday Inn Hotel. Located at 54 Sienna street. 95 square metre’s. English owner. 2500 Pln per month. Photo’s on request. Contact: [email protected] Fully furnished apartment to rent in Ursynow. 120 sq meters, includes 4 bedrooms, a living room with an attached kitchen, 2 bathrooms & 2 balconies. It is on the 4th floor & the building has an elevator. Parking space for 2 cars plus a private storage room in the basement. Rent 6000 pln / month. Contact: Ajit Bhojwani at 508 16 88 99 Warsaw Apartment for Sale Warsaw Apartment for Rent 5 BR house for Rent Wilanów 80m2 2 room apartment in a wonderful 1932 building, 2ft thick walls, huge windows, high ceilings, and fireplace. 24 hour security. 10 minutes walk from Nowy Zwiat. Fantastic project or investment potential. Contact: Daniel on 0044 7971 923737 or [email protected] 1 Bedroom apartment, huge rooms and high ceilings on 3 Maja street, 5-10 mins walk from Nowy Swiat. 2 mins by tram. Fully furnished and ready to move in. Contact: Daniel on 0044 7971 923737 [email protected] Beautiful 5 bedroom house for rent from At Home Warsaw; 25000 PLN. Please see http://www.athome-network. com/Property_in_Warsaw/Search_details. html#!/?id=5207 for details Contact: [email protected], +48 222 546 224 Pictures and webpage in return Amateur Theatre in English Editor for Academic Papers As a webmaster of a Dutch forum about Poland and an information portal I’m looking for good pictures of Poland. In return I’ll offer you a page on www.bigos.nl where you can promote your business for free Contact: [email protected] / www.bigos.nl / www.polen-forum.nl / www.lviv.nl New Warsaw amateur theatre group forming. Actors, producers, directors and others wanted. No experience needed. For more details Contact: Michael at [email protected] Native English speaker, with an M.A. in English and ABD in Polish, offers his assistance in editing papers for grammar and style. Between 7PLN and 10PLN per page – prices negotiated before work commences. Contact: [email protected] Apartment for sale Classical choir for amateurs Private Spanish Lessons Beautiful high quality apartment for sale.46,20m2 with balcony, lift. Fully fitted ready for holidays or letting. Minutes walk to Spa, park etc. About 1hr 30min.Wroclaw and skiing nearby. Contact: [email protected] Doubtful you are good enough? Give it a try! Rehearsals in English every Tuesday at 6.30 in Nowy Swiat. Spanish teacher (NATIVE SPEAKER) with experience in private tuition. I would be happy to teach you spanish and improve your level with intensive and funny lessons. Contact Elena, 722 15 58 10, [email protected] Warsaw downtown area. Price 50 zl/60 min. Please email me: [email protected] 2 Contact Richard Berkeley at [email protected] 14 COmmUNITY NEWS The New Poland Express I Friday 10th December 2010 I www.nwe.pl Community Groups: Place free listings for your community groups here. Email [email protected] Role Playing Game in Warsaw Poland Tartan Army HASH HOUSE HARRIERS International English-speaking group in Warsaw, mostly foreign professionals, play tabletop Dungeons & Dragons fortnightly. No experience necessary but fluent English proficiency is required. Have a good time. Play some games. Meet new friends. Open your imagination. More info: Facebook group: http://tiny.cc/zaffa or CreativeCowboy[at]yahoo[dot]com A new Poland Tartan Army Facebook group has been created. If you are a fan of Scottish football and our national team please join the group by visiting Facebook and conducting a search for Poland Tartan Army. If anyone, who is not a part of Facebook, is interested in this idea then please email [email protected] to register your interest. We are a Polish and Expat social group who organise a walk/run in a forest, park or around the city, followed by a few beers (or whatever takes your fancy!). We meet at the Marriott hotel on alternate Saturdays at 2pm. “Hash House Harriers” is an international group, which was originally established in Malaysia 70 years ago. All are welcome. For details, call Martin at 502-052-958. Email [email protected] or www.warsawhash.pl International Women’s Group International Rotary Club Gospel Baptist Church Meetings are held twice a month on the first Monday (at rotating locations between 10:30 and 12:30) and the third Monday of the month at Restauracja Tapa y Toro located in the Zlote Trasy Shopping Mall (ul. Zlota 59) from 10:00 - 11:00. For more information see www.iwgwarsaw.com or contact us at [email protected] International Rotary Club - Warszawa Wilanow is the only English speaking Rotary Club in Warsaw. Visiting Rotarians are warmly welcomed to join the weekly meetings held at the Polonia Palace Hotel, Al. Jerozolimskie 45. Tuesday’s at 12:00, except the last Tuesday of each month when the meeting is at 19:00. For more information: +48 601 897 731 Services are held in Polish and English languages: Sun. 11:00, Thurs. 19:00. For more information contact: Pastor Paul Sock, mob. 0500-270-990, e-mail: [email protected] www.gbc-ekb.com. GAA in Warsaw Expat meetings Toastmasters club Cumann Warszawa.Poland’s first and only GAA club is up and running and is looking for players of all levels, all nationalities and both sexes. We offer weekly training, competitive games and regular social events as well as fresh oranges at half time. Contact Eoin at 0518-425-587 or [email protected] Meeting English speakers in Warsaw just got a whole load easier. We don’t teach you Salsa, we make you pay for your own drinks, but we do promise to give you the premier multicultural event of the week at Warsaw’s very own Professional Wednesday Meetup. Toastmasters club (Polska) invites all to its weekly meetings. Toastmasters is the international organization for learning the art of public speaking and enhancing leadership skills. Meetings every Wednesday at 19.00 at the Palace of Culture 12th floor (premises of Collegium Civitas) - entrance from ul. Marszałkowska side. For more details visit www.toastmasters.org.pl or call Etan at 696-292-451 Poznan International Church CFM (Christian Fellowship Ministries) Every Sunday at 10:00 Contact details: www.international.pl. It’s simple at P.I.C.. Come and experience God through current music and relevant teaching. Grow in your relationship with God and others by making friends and joining a small group. Serve God and people by being generous with the gifts God has given you. Go and make a difference in the world by sharing the love of Christ. Kościół Chrześcijański (evangelical/Pentecostal) Location: Ul. Mała 15a (Praga Pólnoc, Warszawa) Services in Polish and English: Wednesday 19.30 hrs and Sunday 11.00 & 18.30 hrs Regularly on Saturday evening: Film, Concert & Drama Website: www.thedoor.pl Phone: 784 653 666 (Pastor Jan-Willem van Dam) Email: [email protected] Personal ads are for free Send us 360 characters (including spaces) with a heading of no more than 30 characters Place your classified ad here To advertise your business 100zł per week Contact - [email protected] or 691535566
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