Anti-LGBTQ clashes at Poland’s Independence Day far-right march

ABOVE: Clashes in Poland, photo via Twitter.

WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Polish police used tear gas and rubber bullets in clashes with far-right supporters Nov. 11 during an annual Independence Day march attended by thousands in Warsaw that went ahead despite a ban on public gatherings due to the pandemic.

Many participants turned up in cars and on motorbikes to observe social distancing. But a few thousand others marched on foot, holding up downtown traffic for hours.

Some threw firecrackers, stones and bottles at police in riot gear and into windows with LGBTQ rainbow flags or signs of anti-government sentiment. An apartment went on fire, but firefighters put it out. No one was hurt there.

During the clashes a 74-year-old photographer was injured in the face with a police rubber bullet.

Poland’s right-wing government has been promoting and sometimes even joining the march and has shown acceptance of the far-right groups ever since it took power in 2015.

Warsaw Mayor Rafal Trzaskowski shared via social media that “clashes with the police, damage, trains held up, probably a (case of) arson, this is how the far-right, overindulged by the ruling team, is observing Independence Day.”

A lawmaker for the opposition Civic Coalition, Michal Szczerba, said on Twitter he will request a prosecutors’ investigation into the fire at the apartment.

“Bandits caused a fire at an apartment,” Szczerba said. “The full penal responsibility and all damages rest on the organizers of the illegal gathering.”

Another opposition lawmaker, Paulina Hennig-Kloska tweeted to say: “Give us back our holiday and the joy that should accompany it. This is crime, not patriotism.”

Warsaw police reported a number of arrests and also said some injured police were hospitalized. Authorities had banned the march, which a court also declared illegal, citing the ban on gatherings of over five people intended to stop the accelerating spread of the coronavirus.

The march came at a time when thousands of Poles have been holding daily nationwide protests against the government that backed the tightening of an already strict abortion law last month. The protesters are also demanding more rights for LGBTQ people and want the government to resign.

Organized by far-right groups, massive Independence Day marches have often led to clashes with leftwing groups and the police.

The Nov. 11 national holiday marks Poland’s regaining of sovereignty after World War I.

Other Independence Day observances included President Andrzej Duda and other leaders attending a Catholic Mass in Warsaw and a ceremonial changing of the guard at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.

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