Warsaw:Poland’s Prime Minister appealed Monday for talks with the leaders of massive protests that were triggered by the tightening last month of the nation’s strict abortion law and are continuing despite a resurgence of COVID-19.
Just hours before nationwide street blockaders and marches were to begin Monday, the head of the right-wing government, Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki, made a video appeal to the protesters and the opposition leaders.
“I ask you to sit down together for talks. May our disputes not be held in the streets and may they not be the cause of more infections,” Morawiecki said.
Earlier Monday, a leader of the protests said the contested court ruling that unleashed public anger must be withdrawn.
Klementyna Suchanow, leader of the “Women’s Strike” rights organization, said that a 12th daily round of street blockades and marches was planned Monday and more will come during the week, despite an anti-COVID-19 ban on public gatherings of more than five people.
Read:|Poland sees more protests over abortion limit
Nationwide protests by hundreds of thousands of people have been held daily since Oct. 22 when a constitutional court barred abortions of fetuses with congenital defects, further narrowing one of Europe’s most restrictive abortion laws in the predominantly Catholic nation.
The court ruling means that abortion is only permitted in Poland when a pregnancy threatens the mother’s health or is the result of crime like rape or incest.