POLAND'S PRESIDENT SAYS WILL SIGN HOLOCAUST BILL, DEFYING CRITICS
Poland's President Says Will Sign Holocaust Bill, Defying Critics |
Poland’s
president said on Tuesday he would sign into law a bill that imposes jail terms
for suggesting the country was complicit in the Holocaust, defying criticism
from Israel, the United States and activists.
Andrzej Duda said in a televised
address the legislation would safeguard Poland’s international reputation, but
Israel called for amendments, saying the two countries had a “joint
responsibility” to preserve the memory of the Holocaust.
“(This bill) ... protects Polish
interests ... our dignity, the historical truth... so that we are not slandered
as a state and as a nation,” said Duda, an ally of the ruling Law and Justice
party (PiS) which introduced the legislation.
But it also “takes into account the
sensitivity of those for whom the issue of historical truth, the memory of the
Holocaust is incredibly important”, Duda added.
Poland's President Andrzej Duda speaks during his media announcement about his decision on the Holocaust bill at Presidential Palace in Warsaw, Poland, February 6, 2018. REUTERS |
The Polish law would impose prison
sentences of up to three years for using the phrase “Polish death camps” and
for suggesting “publicly and against the facts” that the Polish nation or state
was complicit in Nazi Germany’s crimes.
PiS, a socially conservative,
nationalist party that has clashed with the European Union and human rights
groups on a range of issues since taking power in late 2015, says the new law
is needed to ensure that Poles are recognized as victims, not perpetrators, of
Nazi aggression in World War Two.
Israel says the law will curb free
speech, criminalize basic historical facts and stop any discussion of the role
some Poles played in Nazi crimes. Activists say the passage of the bill has
encouraged a rise in anti-Semitism.
More than three million of the 3.2
million Jews who lived in pre-war Poland were murdered by the Nazis, accounting
for about half of all Jews killed in the Holocaust.
Jews from across the continent were
sent to be killed at death camps built and operated by Germans in occupied
Poland - home to Europe’s biggest Jewish community at the time - including
Auschwitz, Treblinka, Belzec and Sobibor.
“JOINT RESPONSIBILITY”
Duda said he would also ask the
Constitutional Tribunal for a number of clarifications about the bill. The
legislation provides exemptions for academic research and art.
Israel said it still hoped Poland
would make amendments.
“We hope that within the allotted
time, until the court’s deliberations are concluded, we will manage to agree on
changes and corrections. Israel and Poland hold a joint responsibility to
research and preserve the history of the Holocaust,” the Israeli government
said in a statement on Twitter.
Israel’s education minister said on
Monday he was “honored” Poland had canceled his visit to Warsaw this week
because he refused to retract his condemnation of the bill.
“The blood of Polish Jews cries from
the ground, and no law will silence it,” Bennett later said in a statement.
According to figures from the U.S.
Holocaust Memorial Museum, the Nazis, who invaded Poland in 1939, also killed
at least 1.9 million non-Jewish Polish civilians.
The legislation, which comes at a time
of electoral gains for anti-immigrant parties like PiS across Europe, has
reopened a painful debate in Poland over the Holocaust.S
Thousands of Poles risked their lives
to protect Jewish neighbors during the war. But research published since the
fall of communism in 1989 showed that thousands also killed Jews or denounced
those who hid them to the Nazi occupiers, challenging the national narrative
that Poland was solely a victim.
The bill will also make it illegal to
deny the murder of about 100,000 Poles by units of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army
(UPA) during World War Two, a move likely to increase tensions with neighboring
Ukraine.
Source: Reuters
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