REUTERS-Poland's centrist opposition ended a month-long blockade in parliament on
Thursday after securing a reversal of plans to curb media access to proceedings
but without
resolving a dispute with ruling conservatives over the 2017 budget.
Opposition MPs had blocked the podium of parliament's plenary hall,
protesting at the Law and Justice party's (PiS) move to restrict journalists
and accusing it of passing the 2017 budget in a side-room without a legal
quorum.
In last-minute negotiations on Wednesday, PiS rejected the centrists'
appeal to delay the reopening of parliament after the Christmas and New Year
recess to allow time to settle the budget stand-off. The conservatives,
however, on Monday scrapped planned curbs on journalists covering legislative
proceedings.
"Considering that we have been able to bring back media access to
parliament, we are suspending our protest," Grzegorz Schetyna, leader of
the centrist Civic Platform (PO), which the PiS ousted from power in the 2015
election, told reporters.
Laying bare mounting political divisions in Poland, the parliamentary
confrontation deepened fears for democracy in the European Union state.
Poland's western EU allies have accused the eurosceptic PiS of pushing
the country in the direction of authoritarian rule by seeking more state
control over the media and judiciary.
The PiS rejects opposition accusations that it passed the 2017 budget
illegally in December, after shifting the vote to a small auxiliary room to
sidestep the opposition's occupation of the plenary hall over media rights.
In a threat that could escalate its conflict with the opposition, the PiS
threatened deputies with fines and even jail terms over the sit-in.
"Financial penalties in line with (parliamentary) rules are
appropriate for those who occupy the plenary hall," Interior Minister
Mariusz Blaszczak told public radio.
"Preventing the parliament speaker from fulfilling his duties is a
crime according to the penal code ... and carries a penalty of a 10-year jail
term."
In December, PiS MPs moved the budget vote when opposition lawmakers
blocked the speaker's access to the podium.
PiS leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski said parliament's rules should be reworked
to prevent similar situations in the future.
After a brief reopening of parliament on Wednesday evening, authorities
postponed further sessions until Jan. 25. The agenda ranges from pensions for
soldiers to environmental issues but no votes on major policies are immediately
scheduled.
REUTERS
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