Police break up blockade of Poland’s parliament amid political crisis
Police early on Saturday Dec 17,2016 forcefully broke up an
hours-long blockade of exits from the Polish parliament by protesters
who said ruling party lawmakers violated the constitution by illegally
passing the budget for next year.
The passage sparked the biggest political
stand-off in years in European Union member Poland and the sharpest
escalation of the conflict between the opposition and the ruling Law and
Justice (PiS) party since it came to power in October 2015.
The head of the PiS party, Jaroslaw Kaczynski,
left parliament in the early hours of Saturday after police used force
to remove protesters blocking the exit from parliament, television footage showed.
“PiS has crossed a certain line and nothing will
be the same again,” Tomasz Siemoniak, deputy leader of the biggest
opposition party Civic Platform told local media outside parliament.
Opposition party lawmaker Jerzy Meysztowicz told
television network TVN24 that police used tear gas to disperse the
protesters who tried to prevent the convoy of cars carrying Kaczynski
and Prime Minister Beata Szydlo from leaving.
Warsaw police spokesman Mariusz Mrozek denied use of tear gas, but confirmed physical force was used to remove protesters.
Mrozek said the gathering before the parliament has been declared illegal starting from midnight.
By 0237 GMT, many protesters had left, but some
remained. Several opposition lawmakers said they would spend the night
in parliament.
Polish opposition parties accused PiS of
violating the constitution after Speaker Marek Kuchcinski moved a key
vote on next year’s budget outside of the main chamber of parliament and
blocked the media from recording the vote.
It was the first time since Poland’s transition
from communism in 1989 that a sitting of the lower chamber of parliament
and a budget vote were held outside of the main chamber.
“The ‘sitting’ was illegal. Period. This is a
constitutional crisis,” Civic Platform head Grzegorz Schetyna said on
social media.
Kuchcinski transferred the sitting after
opposition lawmakers occupied the parliamentary podium protesting
against a plan to curb media access and Kuchcinski’s decision to exclude
one opposition lawmaker.
The opposition said the budget vote was illegal
as it was impossible to confirm that the required number of lawmakers
was present.
“There is no proof that a quorum of lawmakers
was present. We suspect that people who were not allowed to vote took
part,” leader of the opposition Nowoczesna party Ryszard Petru said.
Before leaving parliament, Kaczynski said the
vote was legal and involved the required number of MPs. Other PiS
lawmakers echoed his comments.
“What the opposition did was a scandal. And we were working,” said PiS lawmaker Jaroslaw Zielinski.
Since coming to power, PiS has passed laws that
made it more difficult for the constitutional court to pass rulings, a
move that led the European Commission to say democracy and rule of law
were threatened in Poland.
The nationalist-minded, eurosceptic PiS party has also tightened control
over public news media and state prosecution. The party has approved
legislation that human rights groups said would curtail freedom of
assembly.
PiS is the first party since Poland’s transition to democracy to hold an outright majority in parliament.
Civic Platform lawmakers said they had difficulties accessing the hall where PiS lawmakers voted.
“I was able to enter the hall only after pushing
aside guards,” Civic Platform (PO) lawmaker Slawomir Nitras told
Reuters. “The access routes to microphones were blocked by chairs.”
Direct access for media to the hall was denied, with reporters only able to observe an official camera feed.
Opposition parties Civic Platform, Nowoczesna
together with the PSL party said the speaker violated the constitution
and demanded parliament continue its sitting next week.
No comments:
Post a Comment