Crowds pour into central Warsaw for protest over abortion restrictions

30 October 2020, 17:54

Poland Abortion
Poland Abortion. Picture: PA

The demonstration in the capital violates pandemic restrictions which limit public gatherings to five people.

Throngs of people are pouring into central Warsaw to join what women’s rights activists vowed will be the largest street demonstration in more than a week of mass nationwide protests against a court ruling that further restricts abortion rights in Poland.

The demonstration in the capital violates pandemic restrictions which limit public gatherings to five people, with participants disregarding government appeals for people to stay home due to rocketing coronavirus infections.

Poland has hit new records for confirmed cases almost daily this week, including 21,600 confirmed cases reported on Friday.

Rallies are also being held in other Polish cities.

Poland Abortion
The Old Town in Warsaw (Czarek Sokolowski/AP)

The national public prosecutor promised to file criminal charges against protest organisers for “causing an epidemiological threat”, a charge that carries a prison sentence of up to eight years.

Klementyna Suchanow, one of the key organisers with the Poland’s Women’s Strike initiative, said she and many others refused to be deterred by the virus or the authorities because they believe they are fighting for a fundamental right.

“This is about the freedom and dignity of people,” Ms Suchanow said. “The will of people to protest should be a lesson for anyone who wants to impose authoritarian ways.”

Security forces are out in large numbers, including military officers deployed by the government amid the recent street protests.

The past week of social upheaval followed an October 22 ruling by Poland’s constitutional court, which held that abortion in cases of severe foetal deformities was unconstitutional.

Poland already had one of Europe’s most restrictive laws. Forged by political and Catholic Church leaders in 1993, it allowed abortion only in the cases of foetal defects, risk to the woman’s health and pregnancies resulting from crimes — incest or rape.

The law has been often described as a compromise between those seeking liberal abortion regulations and the church, which favours a total ban. However, neither side has ever been satisfied with the 1993 law, and women’s groups demanding greater reproductive rights say it struck no balance at all.

Last week’s constitutional court ruling leaves only the woman’s health or pregnancy resulting from crimes as legal reasons for abortion.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

India Election Narendra Modi

India starts voting as Narendra Modi seeks third term as prime minister

Police officers patrol

No weapons found after police detain man at Iranian consulate in Paris

Congress Ukraine Israel

Ukraine and Israel aid back on track as US House pushes towards weekend votes

Leonid Volkov

Two suspects held in Poland after attack on Navalny ally in Lithuania

Denmark Fire

Firefighters tackle scaffolding dangling outside fire-ravaged Danish landmark

Ruben Vardanyan

Ex-Russian tycoon who led separatist region launches hunger strike in Azerbaijan

Rain in Dubai

Three dead amid heavy flooding after record rain in UAE

Scenes in Iran

Iran fires at apparent Israeli attack drones near air base and nuclear site

French police

Man detained after police operation at Iranian consulate in Paris

A man was arrested after entering the Iranian consulate - near the Eiffel Tower.

Man arrested after ‘threatening to blow himself up’ outside Iranian consulate in Paris

The Canary Islands tourism minister has urged British holidaymakers not to cancel their trips.

Canary Islands plead with British holidaymakers not to cancel trips despite surge in anti-tourism protests

Italy G7 Foreign Ministers

Israel ‘gave US last-minute warning about drone attack on Iran’

Pictures of the Week Global Photo Gallery

Iran fires air defence batteries at two sites after drones spotted

Building on fire

Ukraine claims it shot down Russian bomber as Moscow’s missiles kill eight

Signs twinning Bournemouth with Israeli city mysteriously vanish as police probe apparent hate crime

Signs twinning Bournemouth with Israeli city mysteriously vanish as police probe apparent hate crime

Antonio Tajani

G7 foreign ministers warns of new sanctions on Iran and urge de-escalation