The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Poland’s ‘revolution that we cannot stop’

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WARSAW: For Klementyna Suchanow, one of the leaders of Poland’s protest movement, mass demonstrat­ions against a tightening of abortion laws have turned into “a real revolution” against the current government.

Suchanow, an author and editor and one of the organisers of the Women’s Strike collective, told AFP in an interview that what had started out as prochoice protests had grown into something far bigger.

It all started with a Constituti­onal Court ruling last month that abortions due to birth defects are unconstitu­tional — a decision that would impose a near-total ban on terminatio­ns.

“It provoked an eruption of anger,” said Suchanow, 46, a constant presence at the many demonstrat­ions in the capital alongside fellow co-ordinator Marta Lempart.

Suchanow said that the protests have also been fuelled by a perception of the government’s poor handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic, as a second wave of the virus with a record-high death rate sweeps the country.

“People see that those who govern do not think about our lives, our health, our security but they exploit everything for political gain,” she said.

Suchanow said the objectives of the protest movement have widened to issues such as employment, education, culture and the role of Poland’s powerful Catholic Church in society.

“People really want a separation between Church and State.

“They’ve had enough of the Church getting involved in every aspect of their lives,” she said.

A series of sexual abuse scandals and cover-ups involving senior Polish clergymen have added to the sense of frustratio­n and a notion that the Church “operates in a way outside of the legal system”.

Suchanow sees the protests as a “revolution of women and young people who are fighting for a country worthy of the 21st century in which they could live normally”.

“They want to stop being told how to live. They are rediscover­ing the meaning of the word freedom,” she said.

The demonstrat­ions have brought hundreds of thousands of Poles into the streets, including in towns and rural areas where these kinds of protests are unpreceden­ted.

Although attendance has dwindled, in part due to coronaviru­s concerns, Suchanow is in no doubt as to the historic impact of the protests.

“It’s a revolution that we cannot stop. It’s a revolution that has already won because it has already changed Poland and it will bear fruit through the engagement of young people for years to come.”

She said it was highly significan­t that the demonstrat­ions have extended even into traditiona­l bastions for the ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party.

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 ?? — AFP photo ?? Suchanow waves a flag during a pro-choice protest marking the 102nd anniversar­y of the women’s voting rights in Poland, in Warsaw.
— AFP photo Suchanow waves a flag during a pro-choice protest marking the 102nd anniversar­y of the women’s voting rights in Poland, in Warsaw.

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