WhatFinger

Polish helicopters for Canadian Troops, Canadian Investment in Poland

Forging links between Canada and Poland


By Guest Column Bogdan Kipling——--April 13, 2008

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IS THERE a link between NATO and the travails of a Halifax investor in Poland?

No, there isn’t – except in a travel route way. Prime Minister Stephen Harper went to Bucharest, Romania, a week ago to attend this year’s NATO summit. After it ended, he moved on for a visit in Poland, a fellow NATO member, for bilateral talks with Prime Minister Donald Tusk. More on that later. Canada’s relations with Poland have not been as good as they could have been over the years. In the past, many Poles saw Canada as indifferent to, maybe even tolerant of, communist thuggery; and Grit and Tory governments alike treated Poland as marginally interesting, at best. Perhaps it took the tragedy of Robert Dziekanski, the Polish traveller Tasared to death at Vancouver’s airport last October, and Canada’s desperate need for helicopters to take Canadian soldiers off Afghanistan’s ambush-ripe roads to press Ottawa and Warsaw into a closer engagement. Fierce indignation in Canada and Poland over the Vancouver death may have speeded up Ottawa’s decision to lift the visa requirement on Polish visitors. And of all the NATO allies, Poland alone offered Canada some of its helicopter fleet. But Mr. Harper can do much more. He can open up a big, promising investment vista for Canadian capital in the European Union’s biggest and most dynamic of the new member countries. There has got to be room at the top. Canadian investment in Poland, the Globe and Mail reported the other day, has been increasing, “hitting" $237 million in 2005. Hitting is not the word I would have used when talking about modest sums. Poland is attracting some big bucks these days, but Mr. Tusk has it in his hand to attract far more. All he has to do is clean up corruption. He can start with making his own government’s Ministry of the Treasury curb the lawlessness of the people running state-owned enterprises. The case in point here is Dessaport International Corp., a Halifax-based private holding company. Dessaport is 40 per cent owner of Europort Inc., the stalled state-of-the-art grain terminal in the Port of Gdansk – property of the Polish Treasury. Europort Inc. holds the lease on arguably the choicest deep water pier anywhere on the Baltic and started work on its grain terminal soon after financing had been secured. It sank $34 million into concrete and equipment before the Port of Gdansk – the dear landlord – harassed and strong-armed it to a standstill – at gun point on one occasion. Donald LeBlanc, a Haligonian, is president of Dessaport and Europort’s technical expert. He joined the Europort enterprise as junior partner of Joseph D’Andrea, a Scranton, Penn., builder, industrial developer and venture capitalist. The partnership, formed a decade and a half ago, endures as the two visionaries fight for their property rights with Poland’s – let me put it politely – less than transparent government bureaucracy and expensive legal system. Joe D’Andrea and Don Le Blanc sank $40 million into the endeavour. I imagine they would want to complete it because the grain trade is sound business that will never fade. Joe D’Andrea and Don Le Blanc were hailed as the models of a better future when they got Europort off to a flying start in the late 1990s. By 2002, a particularly brutish and corrupt post-communist government took over in Warsaw and the American-Canadian duo soon faced nothing but obstruction, deceit, demands for bribes and, on one occasion, armed thugs with guns drawn trying to force them off their pier. Poles have elected two governments since. In 2005, the ferociously anti-communist Law and Justice party pledged to purge corruption. That government collapsed in chaos and corruption, and was swept out of office by the pro-business Civic Platform led by Mr. Tusk. The Canadian prime minister can do much to redress the wrongs inflicted on Europort. He can press their case directly on Mr. Tusk – and he wouldn’t have to strain. Donald Tusk knows all about Europort. He is a Gdansk native. Gdansk is his political base. He would know all the players in this nasty situation and where all the bodies are buried. Canadian diplomats in Poland see Europort as “the biggest irritant" in Ottawa’s relations with Warsaw and briefed Mr. Harper prior to his dinner meeting – in Gdansk – with Mr. Tusk. Mr. Harper, it seems to me, has made a good start on a link Canada never had in Central Europe. If he persists, he could end up creating a market Canadian businesses have hardly looked at in the past. Poland too stands to gain. Canada is both a good market and a good source of investment capital. But confidence is crucial for that segment to develop, and fair treatment of Europort’s Canadian and American backers might just be the ticket. Bogdan Kipling is a Canadian journalist in Washington. First published in the Chronicle Herald

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