The Press

Amid protests, president vetos judicial shakeup

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POLAND: Poland’s president unexpected­ly announced yesterday that he will veto two bills that would have sharply curtailed the independen­ce of the judiciary, a victory for peaceful protesters who had gathered by candleligh­t every night for more than a week.

The European Union criticised the bills as assaults on the democratic system of checks and balances and threatened to begin proceeding­s soon to strip Poland of its voting rights in the 28-member bloc.

President Andrzej Duda ``made the right decision,’' Guy Verhofstad­t, the leader of a liberal alliance in the European Parliament, tweeted. ``But the fight for rule of law in Poland goes on - we are with the Polish people!’'

The protests mark one of the most significan­t acts of civic mobilisati­on since the Solidarity protests led by Lech Walesa in the 1980s, with large numbers of young Poles attending rallies daily fearing they might lose a future in a democratic state fully integrated in the West.

Walesa, the Nobel Peace Prize laureate and former president who helped end communism peacefully in 1989, praised Duda for what he called ``a difficult and a courageous decision.’'

Many Poles fear that a loss of basic democratic rights will change the county into a semiauthor­itarian state, mirroring conditions in some other places in Eastern Europe.

``In our hearts and minds we are 100 per cent Europeans,’' said Marcin Trzepla, a 26-year-old who attended multiple demonstrat­ions in Warsaw over eight days hoping to stop what he called ``a huge step to the East’'. - Reuters

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