Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Judges from across Europe march in Poland

Show solidarity with jurists under siege

- By Vanessa Gera

WARSAW, Poland — Judges from across Europe, many of them dressed in their judicial robes, marched silently in Warsaw on Saturday in a show of solidarity with Polish peers who are protesting a bill that would allow the government to fire judges who issue rulings officials don’t like.

The judges visiting the Polish capital descended the steps of the Supreme Court to applause and chants of “Thank you!” from a large crowd. Their show of support came amid a four-year struggle to protect judicial independen­ce under Poland’s populist government.

The European judges, joined by many Polish judges, lawyers and other citizens, marched from the high court to the parliament, some carrying Polish and European Union flags. City hall estimated that 15,000 people took part.

An organizer of the event read out a list of the countries represente­d, including Germany, Denmark, Italy and Croatia. Applause was strongest at the mention of Hungary and Turkey, where judicial independen­ce has been curtailed in recent years.

“We have been in a difficult situation for more than four years,” Supreme Court judge Michał Laskowski told The Associated Press at the start of the march. “We are not alone. We can see that today. This is very, very important for us. I am really moved by this.”

Legislatio­n giving the right-wing government new powers to fire or fine judges was passed by the lower house of parliament before Christmas and will be debated in the Senate next week. The EU and the United Nations have raised objections to the measure.

Opponents have characteri­zed the legislatio­n as the most dangerous blow to Poland’s democratic foundation­s since the ruling Law and Justice party came to power in 2015. They said if the law were enacted, it would end the separation of powers in the country.

They also fear it would add to Poland’s marginaliz­ation in the EU and possibly even lead to its eventual departure from the bloc because the bill would give the authoritie­s the power to punish judges for rulings that are faithful to EU law.

Among those marching Saturday was a Turkish judge who said he lost his job in a purge of thousands of judges following a 2016 coup attempt. Yavuz Aydin, who has received asylum in the EU, said that “the rule of law is worth fighting for — in a peaceful way, in a silent way, in a democratic way.”

The Law and Justice government has taken control of Poland’s Constituti­onal Tribunal, the public prosecutio­n system and a body that appoints judges, in the last four years. An EU court blocked measures that would have given it control of the Supreme Court.

The government argues that it seeks to bring order to a dysfunctio­nal judicial system dominated by what it describes as a “caste” of privileged and sometimes corrupt judges. It says it also is trying to purge former communist judges from the judiciary.

 ?? Czarek Sokolowski The Associated Press ?? Judges and lawyers from across Europe, many wearing judicial robes, march Saturday in Warsaw, Poland, in a show of solidarity with Polish judges.
Czarek Sokolowski The Associated Press Judges and lawyers from across Europe, many wearing judicial robes, march Saturday in Warsaw, Poland, in a show of solidarity with Polish judges.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States