Warsaw / AFP
Dozens of Polish MPs protested in parliament over plans to restrict journalists’ right to cover proceedings, as thousands of demonstrators marched outside in support for their stance.
The demonstration at the gates of parliament in Warsaw was called by the KOD pro-democracy movement, which is critical of the ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party’s policies on media, education and the Constitutional Court.
The restrictions planned by the conservative party grant access to the parliament’s press gallery to only two journalists per outlet, and ban them from shooting still pictures or video. The limits prevent the media from recording images of lawmakers when they break the rules, for example by voting for an absent colleague.
The only video images available will be provided by the parliament’s official video service.
The new system forces journalists to work at a media centre located in another building, limiting their access to lawmakers. Inside the parliament opposition lawmakers chanted “Democracy!†and “Free media!â€.
The speaker of parliament had to interrupt the session and hours later transferred the proceedings to another gallery so lawmakers could vote on the state budget for 2017.
The quorum for the vote was met, though the opposition slammed it as illegal. PiS leader Jaroslaw Kaczynski condemned the protesting lawmakers’ actions as “parliamentary
hooliganismâ€.