Polls gave Bronislaw Komorowski up to 41.54% of the vote, short of the 50% needed for an outright win. He beat Mr Kaczynski’s brother, Jaroslaw, into second place with 36.46%.
In third place is Grzegorz Napieralski (Democratic Left Alliance) with 13.68 percent. Turnout was 54.85 percent.
The results of the first round of the presidential election have split Poland in half, with western and northern regions supporting Bronislaw Komorowski
and eastern and southern Jaroslaw Kaczynski.
National Election Committee, PKW, data.
The campaign to elevate the status of Estonian and to marginalize Russian goes on.
Article – New York Times – June 2010
While the country is far from being a democracy, its cultural scene is beginning to instigate change.
Article – Deutsche Welle.
Father Jerzy Popiełuszko was beatified during an open-air Mass held in Piłsudski Square. Close to 150,000 faithful flooded into Warsaw for the ceremony. Popiełuszko’s 100-year-old mother Marianna Popiełuszko and his siblings attended the services, along with Poland’s Prime Minister Donald Tusk and Jerzy Buzek, the head of the European Parliament.
Pope Benedict XVI, on a visit to Cyprus, said, speaking in Polish “May his example and his intercession fire the enthusiasm of the priesthood and fill the faithful with love,” “His passionate service and his martyrdom are a special token of the victory of good over evil,” he added.
Father Popiełuszko, who was a vocal supporter of Lech Wałęsa’s anti-communist Solidarity trade union movement, drew thousands of people to his sermons during the crackdown by communist authorities against the opposition in the early 1980s. Calling for peaceful resistance against the communist regime, Popiełuszko urged Poles to “overcome evil with good.”
At the Holy Mass in Warsaw Archbishop Angelo Amato, prefect of the Vatican’s Congregation for Saints’ Causes, recalled how Father Jerzy Popiełuszko “did not yield to temptation to survive in this death camp” under communist rule.
“Father Jerzy … helped only by spiritual means, such as truth, justice and love, demanded freedom of conscience for citizen and priest,” Archbishop Amato said. “But the lost ideology did not accept the light of truth and justice.”
“So this defenseless priest was shadowed, persecuted, arrested, tortured and then brutally bound and, though still living, thrown into water by criminals with no respect for life, who thus left him contemptuously to his death,” he said.
As SIR agency reports, over the years, 18 million people have visited, individually or in groups, the tomb of Father Jerzy Popiełuszko in the parish of St Stanislao Kostka in Warsaw.
The 37-year-old priest was murdered by Communist intelligence agents on 19 October 1984. The persons who were directly responsible for his assassination served their punishment, but the instigators of the murder have never been officially identified.
Although Communist authorities had placed a ban on attending public demonstrations, more than 500,000 people took part in the funeral of Father Jerzy, celebrated in Warsaw on 3 November 1984, as for them the priest symbolised the justice and truth denied by the regime.
The first request for the beatification of Fr. Jerzy was submitted to the Chancery Office of the primate of the Polish Church just two days after his funeral. In the course of 1985, 15,000 similar requests were sent to the Vatican’s Secretariat of State, one year after the death of the priest.
John Paul II initiated the process of Popiełuszko’s beatification in 1997.
At the summit held in the Russian city of Rostov-on-Don Presidents Medvedev and Van Rompuy signed a joint declaration on the modernization partnership, which is supposed to give Russia easier access to Western know-how and technology while committing the country to more democratic reforms and fighting corruption.
The EU leader cautioned that the program needed political will from Moscow to succeed. “For the partnership to become successful, the Russian modernization needs to become a reality and it needs to follow certain patterns to avoid protectionism,” he said,
Mr Medvedev took the opportunity to push for progress on Russia’s accession to the World Trade Organisation. Negotiations for Russian accession have been ongoing for 16 years, and it remains the only G20 country outside the grouping. The customs union between Russia, Kazakhstan and Belarus which came into effect earlier this year has threatened to further stall progress, although the USA has indicated that it is willing to push Russia’s application through.
The summit failed to yield progress on visa-free travel. EU officials dashed Kremlin hopes that a roadmap toward visa-free travel could be forged soon. In a surprising move, Moscow submitted its own framework convention for future visa-free travel between Russia and the EU-dominated Schengen zone. Russia is keen to attract skilled workers for key modernisation projects such as the new Skolkovo business park, under construction near Moscow.
Statement – EU Press release.
The Central and Eastern Europe continues to believe in the euro, despite the many problems in recent months, particularly for the crisis in Greece. Joining the single currency remains a goal of many countries in the area, but the eurozone must set its own house in order first. According to a study by the Financial Times, these are the reasons.
The EU does not forget Ukraine. In the same time as Russian President Medvedev was on an official visit to Kiev the European Parliament has approved a EUR 500 million loan to Ukraine to help it overcome the financial crisis.
The European Parliament speaker Jerzy Buzek welcomed the decision of the European Parliament to support Ukraine through a loan facility and declare Ukraine a close strategic partner of the European Union.
“The assistance is provided at a time when the EU is helping to mobilize financing to support the reform of the Ukrainian energy sector, including developing a sustainable solution to Ukraine’s medium-term gas transit and gas payment obligations,” Buzek said.
“Nevertheless, EU macro-financial assistance can only contribute to economic stabilization if the main political forces in Ukraine ensure political stability and establish broad consensus on the rigorous implementation of the necessary structural reforms,” he added.
At the end of April the European Commission gave to Kiev a list of 18 reforms, implementation of which will provide an opportunity to attract additional financial assistance to Ukraine from the EU. The document contains specific activities and possible EU assistance in response to their implementation. The list includes political reforms to ensure macro-financial stability, business climate, energy sector reform, civil aviation and the environment.
Ukrainian President Yanukovich is also hoping to secure a new $19bn credit programme from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for its struggling economy after ramming through Rada a 2010 budget with a relatively tight deficit target of 5.3 per cent of GDP.
“Russia, as a participant in the G20 and the G8, is ready, as a partner, to advance all issues relating to Ukraine, including International Monetary Fund and World Bank support,” president Medvedev said during his visit.
Russia has stepped pressure on Kiev. The Kremlin is ready to fund a complete overhaul of Ukraine’s gas network if it agreed to the merger between Ukraine’s energy holding Naftogas and Russia’s state gas giant Gazprom. “If the two companies merge, Gazprom can rely on its financial resources to fully modernise Ukraine’s gas transportation system,” said Alexei Miller, the head of Gazprom.
Yanukovich has suggested the European Union should be involved in any talk of a merger. The Ukrainian leader is for the creation of a consortium involving the EU as well as Russia to modernise the ageing pipelines. Energy minister Yuri Boiko said that gas transportation system needs $ 600 million in 2010. The complete modernisation will cost about $ 3bn.
Statement – EU Parliament May 18th, 2010.
A panel of experts met in Brussels to begin to lay the foundation for the future NATO Strategic Concept to be approved at Lisbon’s summit in November. A document has been issued at the end of the work.
The Alliance now faces a variety of “new threats from non-state actors”, including terrorism, cyber-crime, and maritime piracy. There are also internal differences over its relationship with Russia. While some countries are keen to improve relations with Moscow, some new members from central and eastern Europe have deep-seated suspicions about Kremlin’s plans.
NATO and Russia should work more closely together on fields of mutual interest such as missile defense, counterterrorism, counternarcotics and maritime security, the document said.
The new mission statement emphasized the threat posed by Iran’s nascent ballistic missile capability.
“Missile defense is most effective when it is a joint enterprise and cooperation … between the alliance and its partners — especially Russia — is highly desirable,” the blueprint said.
Criteria for membership in NATO in the recommendations to the new strategic vision are the same as before. Organization’s policy towards Ukraine also remains unchanged – Kiev may be a member of NATO, if it wants, and if it reaches the criteria of the Alliance.
Statement – NATO – Brussels – 17.05.2010
On May 10th, Benedict XVI appointed Archbishop Jozef Kowalczyk, 71, as the archbishop of Gniezno and primate of Poland. He succeeds Archbishop Henryk Muszynski, who presented his resignation for reasons of age. Archbishop Kowalczyk had been serving as the apostolic nuncio to Poland since 1989. He witnessed firsthand the radical changes in his motherland.
Interview – Zenit -.
There’s little uncertainty in these early presidential elections. Civic Platform’s Bronislaw Komorowski is the clear favourite front-runner and Jaroslaw Kaczynski, candidate for Law and Justice, is the best outsider. At the beginning of the presidential race the main interrogative is whether the speaker of the Sejm (Parliament) might win without a risky run-off.
Current surveys give Komorowski around 45 percent of the vote, 15 percentage points more than Kaczynski. If none of the candidates receives over 50 percent of the vote on June 20th, a second round will be held on July 4th.
In autumn 2005, in the very last hours of campaigning, Lech Kaczynski succeeded in overturning the results of the first round of the presidential elections and the surveys that showed him as the loser against Donald Tusk.
To avoid any bad surprise, Komorowski shouldn’t forget the past and try to find the best way to keep his voters watch. Jaroslaw Kaczynski, like his dead brother, is a good and experienced fighter. He will never surrender before the end of the contest.
Till now, the emotional effect doesn’t seem to play a role after the air tragedy in Smolensk. The nationalist wave, whose chiefs were the twins Kaczynski, was already crushed in October 2007, when a record turnout – with 13% more voters – marked their defeat in the parliamentary polls. But, again, it was a record turnout.
The new element is that Poland in 2010 is a different country from the one that got a complicated EU membership in May 2004. The followed psychological and political crisis after the adhesion fostered the rise of the Kaczynskis’.
Today the scenario is more positive for the liberals. The Polish economy will grow at the fastest pace in the European Union this year, driven by export growth and investment, the European Commission said at the end of April, raising its November forecasts. Poland will expand 2.7 percent, compared with an average of 1 percent for the 27-member EU. Warsaw’s budget deficit will widen to 7.3 percent of gross domestic product in 2010 from 3.7 percent last year. The debt level estimate was revised to 53.9 percent of GDP from the earlier 57%.
The 58-year-old Komorowski has all the cards to win. It depends on him not to make too many mistakes. Before the air tragedy in Smolensk, he pledged to work together with the Tusk government, saying that the country needs someone “who helps and doesn’t disturb, doesn’t block this modernisation process” as it was during Lech Kaczynski’s presidency. Now he has the chance.
List of candidates by signatures gained
Jaroslaw Kaczynski (PiS) – 1,650,000
Bronislaw Komorowski (PO) – 770,000
Grzegorz Napieralski (SLD) – 380,000
Andrzej Olechowski – 233,000
Waldemar Pawlak (PSL) – 190,000
Marek Jurek (Prawica RP) – 180,000
Boguslaw Zietka (WZZ Sierpien ’80) – 170,000
Janusz Korwin-Mikke (UPR) – 138,000
Andrzej Lepper (Samoobrona) – 122,000
Kornel Morawiecki – 110,000
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