Showing posts with label Poland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Poland. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 26, 2023

Polish Court Convicts LGBT Marchers of Offending Religious Feelings

 Notes from Poland reports that a district court in Częstochowa, Poland last week concluded that two women were guilty of "offending religious feelings" in violation of Article 196 of Poland's Penal Code. The defendants were identified only as Kamila Ł.-B. and Magdalena W.-D.  During the 2021 Equality March in Częstochowa, they displayed images of the Virgin Mary and Jesus with rainbow haloes above their heads. In a procedure which did not require a full trial, the court relied on the opinion of an expert who said that the haloes were not of the Biblical, seven-colors symbolizing hope and closeness to God, but instead were the six-colored LGBT symbol. The court imposed 5 months of community service on one defendant and fined the other 2,000 zloty. Defendants' lawyer says they will contest the judgment, requiring the case to go to a full public trial.

Friday, October 23, 2020

Poland's Top Court Invalidates Law Permitting Abortion In Cases of Fetal Defects

Amnesty International and AP report that yesterday Poland's Constitutional Court has held unconstitutional the provision in Poland's Act on Family Planning, Human Embryo Protection, and Conditions of Legal Pregnancy Termination that permits abortion in cases of  "severe and irreversible fetal defect or incurable illness that threatens the fetus’ life." In an 11-2 decision, Poland's top court further narrowed Poland's strict abortion law. According to AP:

The ruling came in response to a motion from right-wing lawmakers who argued that terminating a pregnancy due to fetal defects — the most common reason cited for legal abortions in Poland — violates a constitutional provision that calls for protecting the life of every individual.

The challenged law was introduced in 1993 as a hard-won compromise that also allows abortions when a pregnancy endangers a woman’s health or life, or results from rape or other illegal act. Even before Thursday’s ruling, many Polish women have sought abortions abroad.

In justifying its decision, the court said there can be no protection of the dignity of an individual without the protection of life. The verdict was announced by the court’s president, Julia Przylebska, a loyalist of the right-wing government.

[Thanks to Scott Mange for the lead.]

Sunday, October 16, 2016

European Court Rules On Jurisdiction In Annulment Action By Third Party

Last week, the Court of Justice of the European Union issued an interpretation of European Council regulations on judicial cooperation in civil matters in the context of an extremely unusual annulment action.  Edyta Mikołajczyk (EM) is heir to the estate of Zdzisława Czarnecka (ZC), first wife of Stefan Czarnecki (SC).  SC died apparently in 2012. ZC died in 1999.  SC had remarried in 1956, to Marie Louise Czarnecka (MLC). In a suit in Poland, EM brought an action to annul SC's second marriage to MLC, claiming that SC's first marriage to ZC had not been dissolved at the time of his marriage to MLC.  If successful, this would presumably mean that EM stands to inherit a larger portion of SC's estate than otherwise.  In Mikołajczyk v. Czarnecka, (CJEU, Oct. 13, 2016), the Court of Justice held that its regulation on recognition and enforcement of judgments in matrimonial matters applies to an action for annulment of marriage brought by a third party following the death of one of the spouses.  However, the Court of Justice went on to hold that under the jurisdictional provisions of the regulation, the annulment action should have been brought in France, where SC and MLC had lived, and not in Poland where EM resides. Law & Religion UK has more on the decision.

Friday, May 20, 2016

Polish Court Upholds Refusal To Recognize Pastafarians

Radio Poland reports that in Warsaw, Poland yesterday the Voivodship Administrative Court upheld the refusal by the Internal Affairs Ministry to list the Church of the Flying Spaghetti Monster in the register of religious denominations.  The court said that the Pastafarians still have the right to practice their religion, so neither the country's constitution nor international conventions were breached.  The church says it will appeal to the Supreme Administrative Court.

Thursday, December 11, 2014

Polish Constitutional Tribunal Rules Ban On Ritual Slaughter Unconstitutional

Poland's Constitutional Tribunal ruled yesterday, in a 5-4 decision, that a ban on kosher and halal slaughter of animals is unconstitutional. JTA reports that the ruling came in a case filed by the Union of Jewish Religious Communities in Poland and other organizations claiming that the ritual slaughter ban that went into effect last year violates the European Convention on Human Rights. As previously reported, in late 2012 the Constitutional Tribunal held that Jewish and Muslim ritual slaughter of animals without first stunning them violates Poland's animal protection laws.  That ruling ended a $500 million industry in the country of processing halal and kosher meat for export. Poland's Parliament will now take up a bill drafted by the National Council of Agricultural Chambers that would legalize ritual slaughter. Jerusalem Post reports on the tensions between local Polish Jewish leaders and the Brussels-based European Jewish Association that arose over choice of strategies to fight the ritual slaughter ban.

Thursday, September 18, 2014

Poland's Supreme Court Upholds Airport Security Requirement To Remove Sikh Turban

According to Sikh Sangat News, Poland's Supreme Court yesterday ruled against Shaminder Singh Puri, an environmental expert who does a great deal of international travel, who sued the the Chief of Poland's Border Guard for violation of his religious rights.  Puri, a practicing Sikh, was asked on five occasions between 2009 and 2011 to remove his turban at Warsaw Airport. Puri, seeking damages and an apology, argued that security officials acted disproportionately by immediately requiring him to remove  his turban instead of first using other screening methods.  The Supreme Court held however that security guards were respectful of Puri's religion and, when ordering him to remove his turban, allowed him to do so in a separate room away from other passengers.

Saturday, February 15, 2014

Illegal Kosher Slaughtering Reportedly Continuing In Poland

As previously reported, in Poland a 2012 court decision which Parliament refused to reverse effectively banned kosher and halal slaughter by eliminating an exemption from the requirement that animals be stunned before they are killed.  Previously some $400 million per year of kosher and halal meat exports had benefited the Polish economy.  JTA reported this week, however, that kosher slaughtering is continuing in three Polish slaughterhouses. The firms are certifying to the government that the animals are stunned before slaughter, a representation that is false if the requirements for kosher slaughtering have been met.  Poland's chief rabbi has suspended an aide who was responsible for the misrepresentations, pending an investigation.

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Polish Appellate Court Refuses To Order Removal of Cross Hanging In Parliament

In Poland yesterday, the Court of Appeal in Warsaw dismissed a suit by members of Your Movement party, a liberal Polish political party, seeking to have a cross which hangs in the Plenary Hall of the Sejm (lower house of Parliament) removed. Polskie Radio reports that challengers, invoking both the Polish constitution and EU directives, argued that that the presence of the cross violates their rights to freedom of conscience and religion.  In rejecting their challenge, the court said: "The cross is a religious symbol, but its importance as a symbol of national identity and culture cannot be ignored." The court's press release on the decision (in Polish) is available online. The head of Your Movement says that they will appeal the decision to the European Court of Human Rights. (See prior related posting.)