Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Polish nationalis­ts join officials in march

- MONIKA SCISLOWSKA AND VANESSA GERA

WARSAW, Poland — Poland’s president, prime minister and other top political figures led an Independen­ce Day march Sunday as part of a day of centenary celebratio­ns, trailed by a huge crowd led by nationalis­t groups.

More than 250,000 people marched in Warsaw to mark the 100th anniversar­y of Poland’s rebirth as an independen­t state at the end of World War I, according to police.

President Andrzej Duda, Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki and the leader of the conservati­ve ruling party, Jaroslaw Kaczynski, walked in a crowd fronted by soldiers.

Walking a small distance behind them was another crowd of nationalis­ts and their supporters, many of them burning firecracke­rs and flares, creating flashes of red light and smoke.

Most in that contingent carried national white-andred flags, but some held flags of the National Radical Camp, a far-right group and one of the main march organizers. The camp’s flag has a falanga, a far-right symbol dating to the 1930s of a stylized hand with a sword.

There were also a few flags of Forza Nuova, an Italian group whose leader, Roberto Fiore, describes himself as fascist. One of the organizers of the march, Krzysztof Bosak, insisted that Forza Nuova are nationalis­ts who are in touch with the Polish group.

Among the slogans that participan­ts shouted were “USA, empire of evil” and “Poland, white and Catholic.” Members of one nationalis­t group, Euroskepti­c All-Polish Youth, burned a European Union flag. An EU flag was also burned at another nationalis­t rally in Wroclaw. The city’s mayor dissolved the march by nationalis­ts toward its end, during speeches by far-right leaders.

Over the past decade, nationalis­t organizati­ons have held Independen­ce Day marches in Warsaw on Nov. 11 that have included racist slogans, flares and, in some years, acts of aggression.

Sunday’s was by far the largest Independen­ce Day march to date, and it was mostly peaceful. Government spokesman Joanna Kopcinska called it “the biggest march of free Poles in a free Poland.”

This year, in honor of the centennial, state officials sought to hold one big government-led march for Sunday’s ceremonies. At first, negotiatio­ns broke down over requests for the radical groups to leave banners at home, but an agreement on a joint march was reached on Friday.

“Let this be our joint march, let it be a march for everyone, a march where everyone wants to be and feels good, marching for Poland,” Duda said at the start of the march.

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