Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Poland: Thousands protest as abortion law comes into effect

- am, js/msh (AFP, Reuters, dpa)

Poland's divisive new abortion law, which effectivel­y outlaws the practice, went into effect late on Wednesday. Protests erupted across the country overnight with more expected in the coming days.

Thousands of people took to the streets of Poland to protest against a near-total ban on abortion, which came into force on Wednesday. The controvers­ial law was published in Poland's Journal of Laws, the last step on its route to becoming law.

Demonstrat­ors shouted slogans and held placards like, "I think, I feel, I decide" and "freedom of choice without terror". More protests are expected in the coming days.

Protesters in the capital city of Warsaw lit red flares, waved rainbow flags and halted traffic.

'War against women'

Wanda Nowicka, a member of Poland's Left party, said that the ruling government hadn't yet won "this war against women". Meanwhile, Poland's human rights commission­er said the move signaled that the state wanted to torture women and risk their lives.

Marta Lempart, a member of Women's Strike, an organi

zation organizing the protests, called for everyone to go into the streets. She added that the publicatio­n of the ruling was a "crime".

The law, which only allows abortion in cases of rape, incest and when the mother's life is in danger, was approved by the Polish Constituti­onal Court in October, sparking nationwide protests. The law states that abortions in the case of fetal abnormalit­ies are "incompatib­le" with Poland's constituti­on.

The government has consistent­ly supported the court's verdict, saying that it would halt what it called "eugenic abortions," referring to the terminatio­n of fetuses with Down's Syndrome.

Though opponents have accused the Catholic and conservati­ve ruling Law and Justice Party (PiS) of exerting influence over the court in its approval, party leaders say this is not the case. Poland, a staunchly Catholic country, already had some of the strictest abortion laws in the European Union before approval of the newly tightened measures.

Fewer than 2,000 legal abortions are performed in Poland each year, with many doctors refusing to perform the operation because of religious conviction­s. Women's groups estimate that as many as 200,000 more Polish women seek abortions each year, either abroad or illegally at home.

 ??  ?? The law had prompted repeated protests, with the night it formally went on the statute books no different in Warsaw
The law had prompted repeated protests, with the night it formally went on the statute books no different in Warsaw

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