 Poland stops weapons supplies to Ukraine. Poland will no longer provide arms to the Ukrainian military. Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki has said adding that Warsaw would instead shift focus to its own security. The decision follows a diplomatic row over Ukrainian grain imports, which were banned in Poland after flooding local markets. Morawiecki told that the government would halt the weapons shipments, highlighting a growing rift between the two neighbors after more than a year of heavy support from Warsaw. We are no longer transferring weapons to Ukraine because we are now arming Poland with more modern weapons. Morawiecki said he later warned that additional trade bands could be imposed on Kiev, given that the Ukrainian authorities do not understand the degree to which Poland's farming industry has been destabilized by foreign imports. The comments came after Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky appeared to make a thinly veiled jab at Poland during a speech before the UN General Assembly earlier this week, saying that some countries in Europe play out solidarity in a political theater and are making a thriller for the grain. The trade spat has steadily escalated in recent months. As major Black Sea shipping lanes were closed off due to the conflict with Russia, Ukrainian grain poured into central and European markets, tanking prices and reeking havoc for local producers. The grain blut prompted a formal import ban among five EU members to protect domestic farmers, Bulgaria, Hungary, Poland, Romania and Slovakia. Though the block-wide ban expired last week, Warsaw, Budapest and Bratislava have opted to keep the policy in place on an individual basis, each arguing it is needed to stabilize prices. Kiev has insisted that the bans are illegal. With Economy Minister Julia Sviridenko stating that it is crucially important for us to prove that individual member states cannot ban import of Ukrainian goods. The government has since filed lawsuits with the World Trade Organization seeking to halt the trade restrictions, though Warsaw dismissed the move saying that a complaint before the WTO doesn't impress us.