Three LGBT activists have been sentenced for their role in an attack on a van displaying and broadcasting anti-LGBT messages on the streets of Warsaw. The pretrial detention of one of the activists, known by the name Margot, prompted mass protests by supporters in 2020.

The incident in question took place in June of that year, when the trio attacked a van being used by a conservative group, Fundacja Pro, to show images and slogans linking LGBT to paedophilia.

The three suspects – Margot, Paweł Sz. and Zuzanna M., whose surnames are withheld under Polish privacy – were indicted in 2021 for the crimes of hooliganism, assault and property damage.

Yesterday, a district court in Warsaw found all three guilty and sentenced them to periods of community service: one year for Margot, 11 months for Paweł Sz., and six months for Zuzanna M, reports the Polish Press Agency (PAP).

Additionally, Margot and Paweł Sz. were ordered to fix the damage they caused, pay Fundacja Pro 6,000 zloty (€1,332), and pay the aggrieved individuals in the case, named as Jan B. and Łukasz K., 5,000 zloty and 3,000 zloty respectively.

In issuing the sentence – which can still be appealed – judge Aleksandra Smyk noted that there was no doubt as to the identity of the perpetrators as the incident was caught on film. She added that, while people have the right to express their views, they must do so within the bounds of the law.

As the sentences were being issued, supporters of the activists verbally clashed outside the courthouse with Mariusz Dzierżawski, the head of Fundacja Pro, who had parked one of the anti-LGBT vans in the street.

The incident in 2020 came amid heightened tensions over LGBT issues in Poland. The national-conservative Law and Justice (PiS) party – and its candidate for that year’s presidential elections, Andrzej Duda – had been campaigning against what they call “LGBT ideology”.

In response, some LGBT activists hit back, including by hanging rainbow flags on monuments around Warsaw.

Fundacja Pro has itself drawn legal scrutiny for its anti-LGBT campaigning. Earlier this year, Dzierżawski was found guilty of criminal defamation for his “hate speech against homosexuals”.

Main image credit: Adam Stepien / Agencja Wyborcza.pl

 

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