Warsaw’s mayor has banned a pro-Palestinian demonstration that would have finished outside the Israeli embassy. He cited security concerns and pointed to an antisemitic sign that appeared at a previous march in support of Palestine in the city.

The organisers of the march, who expected around 2,000 people to attend, have exercised their right to appeal to a court against the mayor’s decision. Given that the event is planned for Saturday, any ruling will have to be issued quickly.

Warsaw has already allowed a number of demonstrations in support of both Palestine and Israel to take place since the Hamas attack on 7 October that set off a renewed conflict in the region. Similar events have also been held in other Polish cities. All have so far passed peacefully.

This Saturday’s protest was due to be held under the slogan “Not one more bomb – free Palestine”. In accordance with regulations, the organisers of the event applied to city hall to register it.

The march was meant to start from Zbawiciela Square, then the route was to lead along Nowowiejska and Ludwika Krzywickiego Streets, finishing in front of the Israeli embassy on Krzywickiego Street.


Yesterday, however, the municipal authorities issued a ban on the gathering. It was signed on behalf of mayor Rafał Trzaskowski by Jarosław Misztal, deputy director of the city’s security bureau.

A spokeswoman for city hall, Monika Beuth, told newspaper Gazeta Wyborcza that the decision was unrelated to the slogan of the march and was “purely about security”

She pointed out that the demonstration was supposed to end in front of the Israeli embassy, on the narrow Krzywicki Street, where 2,000 people would be relatively cramped and the police could have difficulties guaranteeing the security of both participants and the diplomatic facility.

An assessment by the deputy chief of the capital’s police force, Tomasz Znajdek, also raised concern about the event, saying that it could be used as an opportunity for some to take “radical actions increasing the terrorist threat”.

“It cannot be ruled out that, under the influence of negative emotions, [participants] may seek confrontation with embassy staff,…throw dangerous objects into the embassy premises, as well as attempt forcible entry,” he wrote in a letter to city hall cited by Gazeta Wyborcza.

Following Znajdek’s assessment, the authorities asked the organisers to change the route of the march. In response, it was shortened to the intersection of Filtrowa and Krzywickiego Streets. But that change was deemed insufficient.

“This is basically the same place as before, still right next to the Israeli embassy,” explained Beuth. City hall again requested an opinion from the police and, after receiving another negative assessment, refused permission for the march.

In their document announcing the decision, the officials cited the police assessment and pointed to the context of “the current unstable geopolitical situation, in particular the ongoing armed conflicts in Ukraine and the Middle East”. This “poses a serious threat” and necessitates “far-reaching precautions”.

The authorities also noted the incident at a pro-Palestine march in Warsaw last month during which one participant – a Norwegian student – held a banner featuring the Israeli flag being thrown in a bin alongside the words “Keep the world clean”. They called this an example of the “glorification of aggression”.

“In a city like Warsaw, which was particularly affected by the extermination and persecution of Jews during World War II,… there can be no place for hatred and antisemitism or any manifestation thereof,” reads the city’s decision to ban this Saturday’s march.

It expressed concern that “the planned gathering may lose the attribute of a peaceful gathering, and its deliberate termination in front of the Israeli embassy must raise serious concerns about security”.

In a post on Facebook, the organisers of the march shared the mayor’s decision but added that “solidarity with Palestine cannot be banned” and declared “see you this Saturday at 1 p.m. on Zbawiciela Square”.

Beuth told Gazeta Wybrocza that the organisers had exercised their right to appeal against the city’s decision, which they argue violates the constitutional values of freedom of speech and assembly. A court will now further decide the fate of the event.


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Main image credit: Slawomir Kaminski / Agencja Wyborcza.pl

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