The Star Malaysia

Thousands protest Poland’s judicial reforms

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WARSAW: Thousands of anti-government protesters hit streets across Poland to rally against a string of judicial reforms that the EU has dubbed a threat to judicial independen­ce and the rule of law.

The demonstrat­ions on Thursday night are the latest salvo in a bitter battle over sweeping judicial changes introduced by the rightwing Law and Justice (PiS) government.

They have led the EU to trigger unpreceden­ted proceeding­s against Poland over “systemic threats” to the rule of law that could see its EU voting rights suspended.

Chanting “Shame!”, “Free courts!” and “We’ll defend democracy!”, several thousand protesters rallied in front of the presidenti­al palace in Warsaw just hours after PiS-allied President Andrzej Duda signed into law a controvers­ial measure effectivel­y allowing the government to pick the next Supreme Court chief justice.

Warsaw lawyer Bozena Rojek, 68, said she had returned to protest on the same street where she had rallied against the Communist Party’s brutal 1981 martial law crackdown on the freedom-fighting Solidarity trade union.

“I fought for democracy so that there would be free courts, so that we live in a free country with the rule of law.

“Today everything’s crumbling right before our eyes,” Rojek said.

The new law signed on Thursday by Duda is part of a string of PiS judicial reforms aimed at replacing judges all the way up to the Constituti­onal Tribunal and Supreme Court.

Brushing aside concerns about democratic standards, the PiS insists the reforms tackle corruption and overhaul a judicial system still haunted by Poland’s communist era.

Around a third of the Supreme Court’s 73 judges, including chief justice Malgorzata Gersdorf, have been forced to retire early under the PiS-authored law.

Rejecting it as breaching her constituti­onally guaranteed six-year term that ends in 2020, Gersdorf has refused to go, winning widespread backing from fellow Supreme Court judges, Europe’s top judicial and bar authoritie­s and rights groups.

The law signed by Duda on Thursday is intended to speed her replacemen­t by allowing the next chief justice to be chosen when 80 judges are appointed to the Supreme Court, down from 110, a near-full roster of its 120 justices.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Unhappy lot: People holding a sign that reads ‘ Shame’ on the face of PiS party leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski as they gather during the protest against judicial overhaul in Krakow.
— Reuters Unhappy lot: People holding a sign that reads ‘ Shame’ on the face of PiS party leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski as they gather during the protest against judicial overhaul in Krakow.

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