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Thousands in Poland mourn liberal mayor after fatal stabbing

Mayor of Warsaw Rafal Trzaskowski (R) joins thousands of people in the Polish capital, on January 14, 2019, to protest against violence and honor Pawel Adamowicz, the late mayor of the port city of Gdansk, who died after being stabbed in the heart at a weekend charity fundraiser. (Photo by AFP)

Thousands of people in cities across Poland have joined anti-violence rallies to protest the stabbing murder of the popular mayor of the city of Gdansk, who advocated refugee rights.

Pawel Adamowicz succumbed to his injuries early on Monday afternoon after being stabbed in the chest Sunday evening by a recently-released inmate while on stage for a charity Christmas concert.

Thousands gathered in cities across the Eastern European country a day after the stabbing to protest what some local observers see as the creeping of hate speech into the national discourse of Poland, which is currently being ruled by a right-wing, anti-refugee government.

Thousands also converged on Gdansk’s statue of Neptune in the city’s Long Market — which also houses the city hall, where Adamowicz served as mayor for more than 20 years — as European Council President Donald Tusk, a Gdansk native and longtime ally of the mayor, addressed the crowd.

A file photo of Gdansk Mayor Pawel Adamowicz, who was assassinated on January 13, 2019 (by AFP)

“My dear Pawel, we are here with you today as your friends. You had to wait so long, until such a tragic moment, to see from up there just how many friends you have here in Gdansk,” Tusk said during an emotional speech.

According to local press reports, Adamowicz had long been the target of hate in Poland’s far-right circles for his liberal views and vigorous defense of refugees, though there is no firm proof yet that the fatal stabbing was politically motivated.

Moreover, some in the country are also blaming the attack on a more general surge of social tensions and a growing prevalence of hate speech, insisting that even before Adamowicz’s death, silent protest gatherings had been planned in a number of Polish cities on Monday.

In Gdansk, the city flag was lowered to half-mast, and a mass was planned for later on Tuesday as the assassination of the six-term mayor — who reportedly often mingled freely with the citizens — sent shock waves throughout Poland.

A man is held on the ground by security personnel after he attacked the mayor of Gdansk during a charity event in Gdansk, Poland, on January 13, 2019. (Photo by AFP)

Politicians from across the political spectrum censured the assassination, including Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki, Interior Minister Joachim Brudzinski, and other members of the ruling nationalist Law and Justice Party (PiS), which Adamowicz had opposed.

Adamowicz was part of the democratic opposition established in Gdansk under the leadership of former Solidarity labor leader, Lech Walesa, during the 1980s. He was re-elected for a sixth term as an independent candidate late last year.

The assailant was identified only as 27-year-old Stefan, with his full name being withheld. He is reportedly from Gdansk and was released from prison just last month.

After the stabbing, the attacker grabbed the microphone on the stage and told the crowd he blamed Adamowicz’s former political party, Civic Platform, for his jailing and alleged torture in 2014 for a series of violent attacks.

Death threat against president leads to arrest

Meanwhile, Polish police officers have taken into custody a man who made death threats against President Andrzej Duda on Monday, said an official police statement posted in a Twitter message.

According to the statement, a 72-year-old resident of Warsaw was detained after he called a local Family Assistance Center and made threats against the president, saying, “Adamowicz died and Andrzej Duda may die tomorrow.”


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