Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Poland: Protesters march to PiS leader's home after abortion ruling

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Polish protesters marched under the slogan ''we are going for freedom,'' accusing the ruling PiS party of authoritar­ianism. It was the latest in a string of protests since a top court tightened abortion laws.

Hundreds gathered in Warsaw at an anti-government protest on Sunday, led by the Nationwide Women's Strike group.

It was the latest of a series of demonstrat­ions that have sprung up in Poland after a high court ruled to tighten the country's already restrictiv­e abortion law in late October.

Sunday's protest was set to coincide with the 39th anniversar­y of the 1981 martial law crackdown by Poland's then Communist regime, as many accuse the government of looking and more like the authoritar­ian regime of that era.

"Governing party PiS is conducting a war with the entire world: with the youth, with teachers, doctors, entreprene­urs, public sector employees, with Europe. Without introducin­g a state of emergency, they have in fact introduced martial law," organizers wrote on social media prior to the march.

Masked protesters marched through central Warsaw holding anti-government placards and displaying Polish, EU and rainbow flags.

The march was being held under the slogan: ''We are going for freedom. We are going for everything!''

Entreprene­urs and business owners joined the anti-government demonstrat­ors, turning out in frustratio­n at the government's handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic and the restrictio­ns it has imposed.

Protesters march to PiS leader's home

The march began at a central intersecti­on and protesters soon headed to the home of Jaroslaw Kaczynski, the head of the rulingLaw and Justice (PiS) party, who is seen as the country's de factoleade­r, even though he is only a deputy prime minister.

Police repeatedly called on the crowd to disperse, as antiriot units blocked the protesters, forcing them to take anotherrou­te along the Vistula River to reach Kaczynski's home in thenorther­n Zoliborz district.

However, Kaczynski's apartment building was surrounded by hundreds ofpolice officers in riot gear, preventing the protesters from getting near the property.

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