schema:articleBody
| - Women in Poland vowed to walk off the job and hit the streets on Wednesday, the seventh straight day of protests over a court ruling to impose a near-total abortion ban in Poland. Despite coronavirus restrictions on public gatherings, Poland has seen mass rallies nationwide against the ruling in both more liberal urban areas and traditionally conservative smaller towns. In an unprecedented move in deeply Catholic Poland, protesters have also rallied inside churches and sprayed their exterior walls with graffiti including in the popular "#Women'sHell" slogan. The Women's Strike, one of the main organisers of the protests, called for demonstrators to rally in front of parliament in Warsaw later on Wednesday. On Tuesday, centrist and left-wing mostly female lawmakers held up placards and shouted pro-choice slogans at Jaroslaw Kaczynski, leader of the governing nationalist Law and Justice (PiS) party that backs the ruling. Parliament speaker Ryszard Terlecki-- who is a PiS member -- compared the protest symbol of a red lightning bolt to Nazi imagery. Kaczynski, who is also a deputy prime minister, accused protesters of attempting to "destroy" the nation and rallied party members to defend Catholic churches. Allied with the church, the PiS government has vowed to clamp down on protesters. When published in the journal of laws, the decision by the constitutional court announced last Thursday will strike down abortions for birth defects. Terminations will only be allowed for pregnancies resulting from rape, incest and or when a woman's life is at risk. Opponents of the ruling argue it puts women's lives at risk by forcing them to carry unviable pregnancies but supporters insist it will prevent the abortion of foetuses diagnosed with Down Syndrome. Some 66 percent of respondents oppose the verdict while 69 percent want a referendum on whether the changes ought to come into force, according to an opinion poll by the independent IBRiS pollsters published on Wednesday. There are already fewer than 2,000 legal abortions per year in Poland -- which even before the ruling enforced some of the strictest termination restrictions in Europe -- and the vast majority of those are carried out due to damaged foetuses. But women's groups estimate that up to 200,000 procedures are performed illegally or abroad. The ruling cannot be appealed but only comes into force if it is published in the journal of laws. It is unclear when this will happen and more protests are planned in the coming days. mas/txw
|