The Commercial Appeal

Polish nationalis­ts march amid crisis

- Vanessa Gera and Monika Scislowska

WARSAW, Poland – Thousands marched in Warsaw on Thursday to mark Poland’s Independen­ce Day, led by far-right groups calling for strong borders, while its troops blocked hundreds of new attempts by migrants to enter the country illegally from neighborin­g Belarus in a tense political standoff.

Security forces patrolled the capital and other cities for the holiday rallies, which in recent years have seen some violent attacks by nationalis­t extremists.

This year’s march was overshadow­ed by events unfolding on Poland’s border with Belarus, where thousands of riot police and troops are turning back migrants, many from the Middle East, who are trying to enter the European Union.

Makeshift camps have sprung up in forests on the Belarusian side near a crossing at the Polish town of Kuznica, and with temperatur­es falling and access to the frontier restricted, there are fears of a humanitari­an crisis.

EU officials have accused Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko of using the migrants as pawns in a “hybrid attack” to retaliate for sanctions imposed on his authoritar­ian regime for a harsh internal crackdown on dissent.

“We Thank the Defenders of Poland’s Borders,” said one banner seen in Warsaw, which is 155 miles west of Kuznica. Traditiona­l patriotic music, some of which was banned while Poland was part of the Soviet bloc, also was played.

Warsaw’s liberal mayor and courts had banned the march, but right-wing authoritie­s in the national government overrode the order and gave the gathering the status of a state ceremony.

The government’s support for the far-right leaders of the march underlined how Poland’s right-wing ruling party wants their support.

It also is engaged in a political fight with the EU over Polish changes to the country’s judiciary, viewed in Brussels as an erosion of democratic norms, along with rhetoric seen as discrimina­tory to LGBT groups.

In 2017, the Independen­ce march drew tens of thousands and included white nationalis­t and anti-semitic slogans. Yet the following year, which was the centennial of Poland regaining its statehood, the president and prime minister and other leaders marched along the same route as the nationalis­ts.

In seeking to ban the march, Mayor Rafal Trzaskowsk­i, an opposition figure, argued that Warsaw, which was razed by Nazi Germany during World War II, is “no place to propagate slogans that have all the hallmarks of fascist slogans.”

As Thursday’s march began, groups carried Poland’s white-and-red national flags, but some also waved the green flags of the National Radical Camp displaying a stylized hand with a sword, a far-right symbol dating to the 1930s.

Deputy Interior Minister Maciej Wasik tweeted that many of the security forces “will go directly from Warsaw to defend our border with Belarus. When marching, remember this!”

Robert Bakiewicz, leader of the march, said in a speech that all Poles should stand behind the troops and officials who are protecting the eastern border.

 ?? CZAREK SOKOLOWSKI/AP ?? Members of far-right groups light flares as they try to dominate the annual Independen­ce Day march in Warsaw.
CZAREK SOKOLOWSKI/AP Members of far-right groups light flares as they try to dominate the annual Independen­ce Day march in Warsaw.

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