Polish women put black clothes back on and returned to the streets
Sunday, launching another round of protests against efforts by the
nation’s conservative leaders to tighten Poland’s already restrictive
abortion law.
A large group gathered Sunday outside the parliament
building in Warsaw, decrying the Catholic Church’s influence on
political life and chanting “We have had enough!” Similar protests took
place in other cities across the country.
The street protests are expected to have their culmination on Monday,
when some women also planning a strike, boycotting jobs and
classes.
Similar protests took place earlier this month against a
proposal for a total ban on abortion. But lawmakers rejected that
proposal after massive crowds of women dressed in black staged streets
protests under their umbrellas in the rain.
The latest round of demonstrations, held under the slogan “We are not
folding up our umbrellas,” was organized in response to a new proposal
that would fall short of a total ban, but outlaw abortions in cases
where fetuses are unviable or badly damaged.
Jaroslaw Kaczynski, the head of the ruling Law and Justice party,
said recently he wants a new law that would ensure that women carry
their fetuses to term even in cases of Down Syndrome or when there is no
chance of survival. The move would allow for baptisms and burials,
Kaczynski said.
His socially conservative party won parliamentary and presidential
elections last year with the support of Poland’s powerful Roman Catholic
church, Catholic media outlets and religious voters.
Many observers see
the attempts to further restrict abortion as a way for the party to
re-pay its debt to its religious base.
However, the proposals have
proven too restrictive for many Poles, including some who voted for the
party.
Abortion was legal and easily available under communism in Poland,
but after communism’s fall the country re-embraced many of its Catholic
traditions. The current law, passed in 1993, bans most abortions, with
exceptions only made in cases of rape, if the mother’s life or health is
at risk, or if the fetus is irreparably damaged.
In many cases, however, doctors have declared themselves
conscientious objectors to abortions and refuse to perform them even in
those cases.
Official statistics show there were 1,040 legal abortions
in Poland last year, although many more abortions are known to take
place, with women or traveling to neighboring countries for the
procedure or ordering abortion-inducing pills online.