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Poland protests leader: abortion court ruling must be waived

Warsaw, November 2 A leader of Poland’s massive protests triggered by the tightening of the country’s strict abortion law said Monday the court ruling must be withdrawn. Klementyna Suchanow, leader of the “Women’s Strike” rights organisation, said that a 12th...
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Warsaw, November 2

A leader of Poland’s massive protests triggered by the tightening of the country’s strict abortion law said Monday the court ruling must be withdrawn.

Klementyna Suchanow, leader of the “Women’s Strike” rights organisation, said that a 12th daily round of street blockades and marches was planned Monday and more will come during the week, despite an anti-COVID-19 ban on public gatherings of more than five people.

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Nationwide protests by hundreds of thousands of people have been held daily since October 22 when a constitutional court barred abortions of fetuses with congenital defects, further narrowing one of Europe’s most restrictive abortion laws in the predominantly Catholic nation.

The court ruling means that an abortion is only permitted in Poland when a pregnancy threatens the mother’s health or is the result of crime like rape or incest.

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“The ruling by the so-called Constitutional Tribunal must be withdrawn,” Suchanow said, stressing that the legal status of the court itself is being contested.

Critics question the independence of the tribunal after the ruling right-wing Law and Justice party put its loyalists in the court shortly after it took power in 2015. Some say the move was a breech of the law.

Suchanow said that Poland’s abortion law needs liberalisation, but admitted it may not be possible under the current conservative government, which has a narrow majority in the lower house of parliament.

Support for the ruling party started shrinking even before the abortion ruling. The government’s moves to control the judicial system, a new animal rights law and remarks against LGBT rights by top officials created political divisions and provoked some protests.

Some surveys show most people want the party leader and deputy prime minister, Jaroslaw Kaczynski, to step down, especially after he called last week on his supporters to counter the protesters and defend churches against attacks.

Protests were also planned by health care employees who say their sector is poorly organised and has reached its limits in the fight against the coronavirus. — AP

 

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