Poland is the country where Communists are being persecuted for their activity and ideology by the bourgeois state's mechanisms, the Communist Party faces every kind of repression by the government (which demolishes Soviet monuments) and where fascists, racists and neo-Nazis march in the streets, spreading their poison of hate! This is capitalism and EU's Poland.
According to news agencies, an estimated ten thousand far-right
nationalists marched in Poland’s capital city of Warsaw on
Saturday, dwarfing the official celebrations and casting a pall on
the country's Independence Day commemoration.
The far-right... ‘We Want God' march, while just one of several public events marking Poland's independence in 1918, was by far the largest and loudest, with participants traveling from around the world to march in solidarity with anti-immigrant, racist and, in many cases, fascist causes.
Prior to the nationalist march, Polish
President Andrzej Duda and European Union President Donald Tusk — a
former Polish prime minister himself — attended a much smaller
formal state ceremony.
The presence of the far-right in Warsaw
was said to be the largest in recent memory, eclipsing the official
state commemorative events, according to Abcnews.com. The annual
march, initiated in 2009, appears to be the most popular global
celebration of racism, and has consistently grown in size each year,
cited by the New York Times.
Many white supremacist marchers waved
xenophobic banners encouraging a growing racial divide in Europe that
follows the massive influx of north African refugees fleeing several
US-led ‘color revolutions,' notably those in Tunisia, Libya and
Egypt, as well as an enormous and ongoing human rights crisis in
Syria.
Calling for a ‘White Europe of
brotherly nations,' marchers chanted racist slogans, including
anti-Semitic calls to "remove Jewry from power," cited by
the Daily Mail.
Occurring at dusk and continuing into
the later hours, marchers carried Christian symbols and red torches
that ominously lit up the city, while red flares and firecrackers
created a warlike urban scene.
Banners displaying the far-right 1930s
falanga symbol were held aloft by many marchers, as well as a diverse
array of posters, including those claiming that all Muslim immigrants
are terrorists; same-sex marriage denouncements; and in support of
the anti-Semitic National Radical Camp, a pre World War II group
historically espousing extreme nationalist sentiments.
According to Russia Today, about 6,000 policemen were deployed to
keep public order throughout the city. Warsaw seen a number of
marches and events, such as a counter-protest organized by the
anti-fascist movement. Around 1,500 people attended that rally which
comprised members from a dozen or so left-wing organizations.
Holding banners with the wordings: “For
your freedom and ours,” “Women against fascism,” “Nationalism
is a disease,”and “Class struggle, not national,” activists
were on the streets to counter nationalism, racism, sexism and other
kinds of hatred.