Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski has rejected the allegations by British Prime Minister David Cameron that existing benefit rules for EU workers from eastern Europe were a "monumental mistake".
"If Britain gets our taxpayers, shouldn't it also pay their benefits?" Sikorski asked in an English-language comment on Twitter. "Why should Polish taxpayers subsidise British taxpayers' children?"
Cameron announced last month that a British crackdown on "benefit tourism" would begin on January 1 when migrants from the European Union will be banned from claiming unemployment handouts until three months after arrival.
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Sikorski's reaction came after Lech Walesa, Poland's anti-communist icon, accused Cameron of being "unreasonable and shortsighted" in tightening benefit rules for migrants from eastern EU states.
"Britain earned a lot (of money) on Poles finishing off communism, he (Cameron) shouldn't forget it and he should tally it all up," Walesa told AFP at the end of last month, pointing to the economic boom sparked by the reunification of Europe after the demise of communism in 1989.
"Then he would understand that countries like Great Britain are once again behaving unreasonably and shortsightedly," he said.
Under tightened migrant benefit rules adopted by Cameron's government, migrants will not receive out-of-work benefits for the first three months in Britain and payments will be stopped after six months unless there is a "genuine" chance of them getting a job.
Hundreds of thousands of migrants from eastern EU states have made Britain their home since 2004.
The biggest group came from Poland. Around 640,000 Poles live in Britain, according to official statistics released in 2012, but the Polish community estimates the real figure might be as high as one million.