The Borneo Post

Poland risks controvers­y on Independen­ce centenary

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WARSAW: Poles mark a century of independen­ce on Sunday amid tensions in the deeply polarised country over the prominent role that marginal far-right groups gained in shaping the main state parade.

Chaos engulfed plans for the state military parade in Warsaw just days ahead of the centenary, as far-right groups vowed to use the same route and timing for their controvers­ial annual independen­ce day march.

Last year’s edition of that march drew global outrage when some participan­ts displayed racist and anti-immigrant banners and slogans. Its organisers include the National Radical Camp (ONR), a group with roots stretching back to an anti- Semitic pre-World War II movement.

Groups of this nature are marginal in Poland.

In a bid to avoid a similar debacle on the centenary, the right-wing Law and Justice (PiS) government and allied President Andrzej Duda on Wednesday announced the state military parade, insisting that it had legal priority.

But the far-right groups refused to back down after a Warsaw court overruled a separate ban imposed by the capital’s mayor citing the risk of violence and hate speech.

The PiS government spent Friday in a tug of war with farright groups over the scheduling of the two events. The sides confirmed late Friday that they would coincide.

PiS Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki has vowed that authoritie­s would act “decisively” against any public display of fascist symbols or slogans, something that is banned by law in Poland.

“There is a clear red line between patriotic behaviour and nationalis­tic or chauvinist­ic ( behaviour), or neo-Nazis,” he told the foreign press corps on Thursday.

Underscori­ng Poland’s growing isolation in the European Union since the PiS took office in 2015, no senior delegation­s from fellow EU states are due to show up for the centenary coinciding with the Armistice that ended World War I.

The government has put Poland on a collision course with the EU by introducin­g a string of controvers­ial judicial reforms that Brussels has warned pose a threat to judicial independen­ce, the rule of law and ultimately to democracy.

EU President Donald Tusk, a former liberal Polish prime minister, will be the bloc’s only senior representa­tive in Warsaw on Sunday and his visit comes amid speculatio­n that he may return to run for president in 2020.

Speaking on Saturday in the central Polish city of Lodz, Tusk likened the PiS to “contempora­ry Bolsheviks” who must be “defeated”.

He also repeated a warning that the party could unwittingl­y unleash a “Polexit” from the EU despite the bloc’s strong popularity among Poles and the many assurances of PiS leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski that his party has no such designs.

Widely regarded as Poland’s de facto powerbroke­r, Kaczynski has played a key role behind the scenes in shaping both domestic and foreign policy since the PiS took office. He and Tusk are archrivals.

Poles will pause nationwide at the stroke of noon on Sunday to sing their national anthem as part of the centenary celebratio­ns.

It will be a rare show of unity in the EU and NATO country of 38 million people that has become increasing­ly polarised since the PiS took office in 2015.

While robust economic growth coupled with the government’s generous social welfare measures and conservati­ve stance have garnered it support mainly in rural areas, its judicial reforms have also sparked outrage among urban centrists and liberals. — AFP

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