Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Polish leader calls for protest halt

- MONIKA SCISLOWSKA

WARSAW, Poland — Amid a huge spike in the country’s coronaviru­s infections, Poland’s prime minister appealed Thursday for a stop to a week of angry protests against a high court ruling that tightens already strict abortion laws.

Earlier on Thursday Poland’s President Andrzej Duda partially broke ranks with his country’s conservati­ve leadership that has pushed for the new abortion restrictio­ns, and said he thinks women should have the right to abortion of fetuses with deadly defects.

“It cannot be that the law requires this kind of heroism from a woman,” Duda said in an interview with radio RMF FM. The president said he still favors outlawing abortion in cases of fetuses with nonlethal congenital defects, such as Down syndrome.

Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said the dispute should be resolved through dialogue, instead of through repeated mass street gatherings that are banned under pandemic restrictio­ns. On Thursday, Poland hit a new record of daily infections that exceeded 20,100 in the nation of 38 million.

“I am asking for these protests to be canceled because of the epidemic,” Morawiecki said, stressing that the health care system is close to its limits.

But women’s rights activists confirmed plans for a huge march in Warsaw tonight and more actions and city blockades next week.

Large crowds have protested daily over the past week across the predominan­tly Catholic country, after a top court ruled that abortion of fetuses with congenital defects is unconstitu­tional. Police estimate that some 430,000 took part in demonstrat­ions Wednesday.

Deep divisions that had been brewing for a long time in Poland are now erupting on the streets, with young people heeding a call by women’s rights activists to defend their freedoms. The young, even teenage protesters, intentiona­lly choose vulgar chants against the right-wing Law and Justice party to emphasize their anger with the ruling team and that there can be no negotiatin­g with them, language analysts say.

Poland’s most powerful politician, Law and Justice leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski, had called for his supporters to come out to defend churches after demonstrat­ors disrupted Masses and vandals spray-painted churches Sunday.

Many interprete­d Kaczynski’s call as permission for violence against the protesters.

Opposition Civic Coalition lawmakers will seek a no-confidence vote against Kaczynski, who is deputy prime minister, in parliament, saying he triggered huge social tensions at a difficult time of the pandemic.

“He started a fire and is pouring gasoline on it,” said opposition lawmaker Monika Wielichows­ka.

It was not clear when the vote would be. The ruling party and its two small coalition partners have 10 votes more than the opposition in the lower house.

Once the court ruling is published and takes effect, abortion will be legal only when a woman’s health or life is in danger or when a pregnancy results from crime like rape or incest.

Duda’s comments Thursday were in contrast to his initial reaction last week, when he welcomed the court ruling. He now spoke against abortions of fetuses with Down syndrome, which form the majority of more than 1,000 legal terminatio­ns performed in Poland each year. Duda called for a new law to distinguis­h between fatal and nonfatal defects.

“I believe that there should be a regulation which, in case of lethal defects, will unequivoca­lly guarantee the rights on the side of the woman,” the president said.

 ?? (AP/Czarek Sokolowski) ?? Protesters angry over a new abortion ban face off against police Wednesday near parliament in Warsaw, Poland.
(AP/Czarek Sokolowski) Protesters angry over a new abortion ban face off against police Wednesday near parliament in Warsaw, Poland.

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