Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Polish police attempt to block protest against abortion ruling

- Olic church. ab/rs (AP, dpa)

Warsaw police tried to break up a women's rights march taking place in the country's capital, with protesters opposing curbs on abortion rights. Poland's abortion law is already one of the most conservati­ve in Europe.

Hundreds of protesters gathered in Warsaw and other Polish cities on Saturday to voice their opposition to further proposed restrictio­ns to the country's abortion law.

Police attempted to break up the protests after declaring that the march organizers had not fulfilled legal requiremen­ts to inform authoritie­s ahead of time. Authoritie­s also said the demonstrat­ion broke rules baring large gatherings during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Protesters in Warsaw began the march by symbolical­ly changing the name of Roman Dmowski Roundabout to "Women's Rights Roundabout." The activists hope for formal recognitio­n of name — which they say would honor equality rather than Dmowski, a statesman and independen­ce activist who was also an anti-Semite.

Read more: Poland's churches become sites of protest amid abortion row

The red lightningb­olt movement

As police blocked the march, protesters were forced onto a busy road. In response to the honks of annoyed drivers, the protesters shouted: "We're sorry for the inconvenie­nce, we have a government to overthrow."

A police officer used tear gas against opposition lawmaker Barbara Nowacka during the demonstrat­ion. Borys Budka, the leader of the centrist Civic Platform party explained that Nowacka had been there "in defense of peacefully protesting women."

A mother of two teenage girls told the Associated Press that she was taking part in the march "for my daughters."

Read more: Opinion: Abortion ruling is a nightmare for Polish women

Protesters called for a relaxation of the strongly Catholic country's strict abortion law and for the resignatio­n of the conservati­ve government. Many protesters carried signs saying "Strajk Kobiet" (Women's Strike).

Many signs, and protesters' faces, also depicted a red lightning bolt which has become the logo of the movement.

102 years of women's suffrage

Similar marches also took place in Krakow, Gdansk and other cities in part also to celebrate the 102nd anniversar­y of women's suffrage in the country.

On October 22, the Polish Constituti­onal Court issued a ruling banning abortions of fe

tuses with congenital defects, even if the fetus would not survive birth. The move sparked widespread protests, with hundreds of thousands of people taking to the street in Poland's largest protest movement since the fall of Communism in the country.

The government has not yet implemente­d the court ruling, which is seen as a win for the women's rights movement.

Poland's abortion laws were already some of the strictest in the European Union, allow

ing for abortion only in a limited number of cases. The rules were negotiated in the 1990s among politician­s and the Cath

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 ??  ?? Protesters symbolical­ly renamed Roman Dmowski Roundabout to "Women's Rights Roundabout"
Protesters symbolical­ly renamed Roman Dmowski Roundabout to "Women's Rights Roundabout"

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