A massive demonstration has taken place in the Polish capital to show
support for the EU. Poland's conservative government has alienated many
on the right and the left, as well as Brussels.
Around 240,000 people marched through Warsaw on Saturday, the same day a smaller, pro-government rally took place.
The rally of nearly a quarter of a million people gathered in the Polish
capital to express support for both democracy and the EU, as the
country's right-wing government, headed by the Law and Justice Party
(PiS), continues to draw criticism for suppressing opposition and
alienating Brussels.
"We are here because we believe in Polish law, Polish freedom and
common action in the EU," ex-President Bronislaw Komorowski told
demonstrators.
At the same time, anywhere from 1,000 to 2,500 nationalists gathered in
the city to protest what they saw as the EU's interference in Polish
life.
Hand-picked news
PiS drew strong condemnation earlier this year when its representatives
signed into law a bill that allows the government to hand-pick officials
in charge of state-run news organizations. Critics - including
Reporters Without Borders, the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and the
Association of European Journalists (AEJ) - have said the measures
curtail free speech.
Foreign Minister Witold Waszczykowski raised eyebrows across the 28-member bloc when
he said that EU criticism of the bill was hypocritical.
"In the past eight years there was no pluralism in the public media [in
Poland] and no EU Commissioner deplored it," he told German newspaper
"Bild."
He went on to say that PiS wanted to cure Poland of "some diseases,"
insisting the country was on its way to becoming a world of "bikers and
vegetarians," things that "had nothing more to do with traditional
Polish values."
Former presidents speak out
In April, Komorowski and fellow former presidents Lech Walesa and Aleksander Kwasniewski
had a letter published in Polish daily "Gazeta Wyborcza,"
arguing that PiS has "no intention of abandoning this path of
demolishing the constitutional order" and "paralyzing the work of the
Constitutional Tribunal and all of the judicial authorities."
The three leaders also reiterated their support for both the EU and
NATO, saying that under PiS, "we're on our way to becoming a nation of
sorrow."
blc/jm (dpa, AFP)
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