Prospero Posted November 25, 2015 Posted November 25, 2015 New Polish government shelves EU flag EurActiv.com with agencies 07:55 Beata Szydlo with her new Polish government. [Reuters] Journalists gathered yesterday (24 November) in the press room of Poland's new conservative government discovered that the blue and gold star-studded European Union flag normally on display was gone, leaving only its red-and-white Polish counterpart. While the governing Law and Justice (PiS) party that won last month's general election after eight years in the opposition supports Poland's membership in the EU, it is eurosceptic and desires greater independence from Brussels. Asked about the missing flag by reporters after a cabinet meeting, Prime Minister Beata Szydlo said: "We're an active EU member... but we adopted the approach that statements after government meetings will take place against a backdrop of the most beautiful ... white-and-red flags." "We're going to pursue a policy that, while appreciating our EU membership, secures maximum benefit for our Polish citizens, for Poland's economy and for our homeland," she added, surrounded by a dozen large Polish flags. "I'm very happy that in today's difficult times we are members of the EU and NATO." Szydlo's predecessors from the centrist Civic Platform (PO) party, in power since 2007, had always held government press briefings in front of both flags. Anti-Semitic minister? Meanwhile, Israel's leading newspaper, Haaretz, has unearthed a statement made by the new Polish defence minister Antoni Macierewicz (PiS) it considers to be anti-Semitic. Back in 2002, Macierewicz told Radio Maryja that he had read the infamous Protocols of the Elders of Zion, and is reported to have said that 'experience shows that there are such groups in Jewish circles.' The “Protocols,” which purports to be about a Jewish cabal planning world domination through the economy and media, has been proven to be a hoax. Macierewicz, a former member of Poland’s anti-Communist opposition movement and deputy defense minister, is known for his efforts to purge the country’s military intelligence services of communist and Russian influence.
bigvlada Posted November 27, 2015 Posted November 27, 2015 Challengers vow to publish Anne Frank diaries as foundation moves to keep control of copyright Charity that guards world-renowned account of a Jewish girl’s life in hiding from the Nazis says copyright – which some argue ends this year – extends from father’s death http://www.theguardian.com/books/2015/nov/25/french-copyright-challenge-publish-anne-frank-diary-online-otto-frank
Prospero Posted November 30, 2015 Posted November 30, 2015 (edited) Pravo & pravda izgleda trasiraju 1 kvalitetan put za Poljsku WARSAW — Poland’s transition from the long-ruling Civic Platform to its conservative rivals from the Law and Justice party was always going to bring change. Few predicted how swift and deep that change would be.In a matter of weeks after taking full control of the country, Poland’s new rulers are moving fast to assert control over public media, the top court, intelligence agencies and the diplomatic service. Their recent moves have angered the opposition, attracted criticism from civil rights groups and unsettled foreign partners. “Now begins the process of reconquering the country, and it may be brutal,” said a senior adviser to President Andrzej Duda, who asked to remain anonymous. Law and Justice (PiS) swept the table of Polish politics this year, first unexpectedly winning the presidency in May and then in October taking an outright majority in the parliament. The party now wields more clout over Poland than any government since the end of communist rule a quarter century ago.Brutal change is something of a Polish political tradition. Because the country has never been able to create an apolitical civil service, and state-controlled corporations remain an important part of the economy and a source of lucrative jobs, every new government tends to enact wide-ranging purges, removing supporters of the ousted administration and replacing them with loyalists to the new regime. Over its eight years in power Civic Platform did the same. Now the PiS is moving quickly. Controversial nominees The first surprise from PiS was the makeup of the cabinet, which didn’t jibe with the centrist message that the party pushed during the election campaign.Antoni Macierewicz, an activist who had battled communists decades back, became defense minister. He said one of his priorities would be to reopen an investigation into the 2010 crash of a government airliner that killed President Lech Kaczyński and other senior officials while trying to land in Smolensk, Russia. Polish and Russian investigations put the bulk of the blame on undertrained Polish air force pilots, but Macierewicz has long maintained that the airliner was blown up as it tried to land. The web page of the government investigation that had concluded that the crash was an accident was taken offline last week.“The page was shut down and will remain closed,” said Beata Szydło, Poland’s new prime minister. Elżbieta Witek, a government spokeswoman, told Poland’s TVN television that it’d be a “good idea” for Donald Tusk, now president of the European Council and Polish prime minister at the time of the crash, to be placed before a special court over his alleged negligence in preventing the crash. She later clarified that she was speaking privately and not on behalf of the government.Duda raised more eyebrows by pardoning Mariusz Kamiński, the current head of Poland’s special services, who had been convicted of abuse of power and sentenced to three years in prison for the way he ran an anti-corruption agency during the party’s previous 2005-2007 stint in government. A fight over courts The government is putting its stamp on the Constitutional Tribunal, the country’s highest court, which can vet parliamentary laws and potentially derail Law and Justice’s legislative agenda. Parliament adopted a bill to invalidate the election of five new judges to the 15-member court. Two of those judges were voted through by Civic Platform just before the party lost power, replacing two judges whose nine-year terms still had a month to go before expiring. That bending of principle by one party moved PiS to claim the moral high ground and reshape the court more to its liking. Most of the opposition walked out of parliament before the vote was taken.“Over the past eight years only judges from one [political] camp were chosen,”Jarosław Kaczyński, Law and Justice’s founder and leader who’s now Poland’s most powerful politician, said in a television interview. “The goal is to make the Constitutional Tribunal more diverse.” Parliament is set to choose new judges on Wednesday. The Constitutional Tribunal is to consider the legality of this parliamentary move a day later, possibly setting up a clash between the country’s legislative and judicial branches. Gaining control of Hungary’s constitutional court was one of the steps taken by Viktor Orbán to cement his grip on the country. Kaczyński’s critics say he’s on the same path. “This is an anti-democratic march in the direction of a dictatorship,” warned Andrzej Zoll, a former chief judge of the Tribunal. The new order is imposing itself on culture. PiS wants to reorganize the public media, which the party has long seen as too beholden to Civic Platform. Piotr Gliński, the new culture minister, berated a television interviewer for asking him questions instead of letting him give a statement, telling her, “This program is propaganda.”Gliński was defending his attack on a play, “Death and the Maiden,” by Nobel prize winner Elfride Jelinek, which he said was “pornography” because actors fondle each other on stage. He demanded the play’s cancellation, as the theater receives part of its financing from the state. PiS has built an alliance with the powerful Roman Catholic Church, and has vowed to resist social liberalism allegedly imported from Western Europe.“Single-sex marriage, abortion, gender ideology — these are red lines for us,” the presidential adviser told POLITICO. During its time in power, the center-right Civic Platform tried not to offend social liberals, but did very little to pass legislation that helped them.A new tone from WarsawPoland’s foreign and defense policies are taking on a new look.Macierewicz called into question two large defense contracts, a €5 billion deal to buy Patriot missile defense systems from Raytheon of the U.S., and a €3 billion deal for 50 multipurpose Airbus Caracal helicopters. He has fired the heads of military intelligence agencies.Witold Waszczykowski, the foreign minister, wants to scrap the 1997 NATO-Russia accords, under which the alliance agreed, for the time being, not to build permanent bases in countries that had once been part of the Soviet bloc. The previous government pushed for permanent NATO bases on Polish soil, but Waszczykowski is being more pointed and public in his views. There’s a new willingness to challenge European diplomatic niceties.Konrad Szymański, the Europe minister, astonished Poland’s EU partners when, in a column published hours after the December 13 Paris terror attacks, he declared that Poland would not follow through on earlier pledges to accept about 7,500 asylum seekers, citing the security risk.A senior PiS MP, Piotr Naimski, who helped formulate his party’s energy policies, called for Poland to block a deal at the COP21 Paris climate summit — standing up for Polish coal even more aggressively than the previous Civic Platform government. Jan Szyszko, the environment minister, later backtracked on Naimski’s comments, saying Poland would not torpedo a global climate agreement. However, Warsaw has made clear it wants to renegotiate the EU’s 2030 emissions reduction and renewables goals, fearing they may hurt Poland’s economy.Warsaw has become stroppier with Berlin, the country’s closest EU ally. When Martin Schulz, the German president of the European Parliament, criticized Poland for not being more generous towards refugees, pointing out that Poland has taken billions in EU structural funds and was also asking for help in deterring the threat from Russia, he was quickly denounced by Mariusz Błaszczak, the interior minister.Schulz was “arrogant,” said Błaszczak, reminding the German of the war and that tens of thousands of people in Warsaw had been murdered by “agents of the German state.” All those moves have Law and Justice’s opponents warning that the party is bending democratic norms to accumulate power. About 100 demonstrators turned up in front on Parliament last week, chanting, “Hands off the Tribunal.”The party insists it is doing nothing more than cleaning up the mess it found after Civic Platform.“The fears that Poland is going in the direction of Hungary are hugely overstated,” said the presidential adviser. “Orbán has the state in his hands. Here, we are at a completely different stage.” Edited November 30, 2015 by Prospero
Budja Posted November 30, 2015 Posted November 30, 2015 Pa, dobro, kada se takav put nagradjuje sa 3 mlrd. u Turskoj, cuti o Madjarskoj i gleda kroz prste kandidatima (Srbija), dok su se usi zavrtale Grckoj, sta je sad tu cudno.
Prospero Posted December 4, 2015 Posted December 4, 2015 Danes reject further integration into EU 03/12 21:34 CET Denmark has voted ‘no’ to further integration into the European Union. Some 53.1 percent of Danes have rejected the adoption of EU legislation on justice and home affairs the centre-right government said would help strengthen cross-border policing. In the country’s seventh referendum on EU integration, wary citizens have once again defended national sovereignty. Leaving Europol? Denmark may now be forced to leave Europol, the EU’s law enforcement agency, which deals with organised crime, trafficking and terrorism. Its legal status is expected to change in 2016. If this happens, Copenhagen’s 1993 decision to opt out of several key EU policy areas (including justice and home affairs),means it will be unable to stay in the agency. A win for the ‘yes’ camp would have meant opting in to some of these policies and would, therefore, have enabled Denmark to maintain its Europol membership. Attacks on European capitals The referendum comes nearly ten months after shootings at an exhibition and outside a synagogue in Copenhagen, a matter of weeks after the Paris attacks and as Europe struggles to cope with record numbers of migrants. Immigration Opponents of a ‘yes’ vote argued it would result in the EU eventually dictating Denmark’s immigration policies. While a ‘yes’ result would have given the Danish parliament the power to adopt further EU justice legislation without consulting the electorate, the government said it would hold a referendum to decide any potential changes to immigration laws. Denmark is up there with some of Europe’s strictest immigration policies. Between January and the end of November, 2015, it had received far fewer asylum seekers than neighbouring Sweden or Germany.
Prospero Posted December 15, 2015 Posted December 15, 2015 Poljska polako kreće već utabanim stazama, miks Orbana i Putina poprskanih starim dobrim antisemitizmom i klerikalizmom: As Poland Lurches to Right, Many in Europe Look On in AlarmBy RICK LYMAN and JOANNA BERENDTDEC. 14, 2015 WARSAW — In the few weeks since Poland’s new right-wing government took over, its leaders have alarmed the domestic opposition and moderate parties throughout Europe by taking a series of unilateral actions that one critic labeled “Putinist.” Under their undisputed leader, Jaroslaw Kaczynski, they pardoned the notorious head of the security services, who was appealing a three-year sentence for abuse of his office from their previous years in power; tried to halt the production of a play they deemed “pornographic”; threatened to impose controls on the news media; and declared, repeatedly and emphatically, that they would overrule the previous government’s promise to accept refugees pouring into Europe. But the largest flash point, so far, has been a series of questionable parliamentary maneuvers by the government and the opposition that has allowed a dispute over who should sit on the country’s powerful Constitutional Tribunal to metastasize into a full-blown constitutional crisis — with thousands of protesters from all sides taking to the streets. Countries across Europe have seen nationalist movements rise in popularity, particularly in the wake of the refugee crisis and the terrorist attacks in Paris. But Poland’s rightward lurch under the newly empowered Law and Justice Party is unsettling what had been the region’s strongest economy and a model for the struggling post-Soviet states of Eastern Europe. “I am very agitated and depressed,” Andrzej Zoll, a former president of the Polish Constitutional Tribunal, said in an interview with Gazeta Wyborcza, one of the country’s leading newspapers. “Twenty-five years of democratic Poland is coming to an end.” On Saturday, antigovernment protesters marched peacefully through central Warsaw chanting for “democracy.” On Sunday, a pro-government “March of Freedom and Solidarity” drew a somewhat smaller crowd of peaceful participants and featured chants of “God, Honor, Fatherland” and the singing of patriotic anthems like “Let Poland Be Poland.” At Saturday’s protest, Ryszard Petru, leader of a new opposition party called Modern, bemoaned the moves of the new government and its leader. “Kaczynski has managed to divide Poles yet again,” Mr. Petru said. “And he has done it in just one month.” Top leaders of the Law and Justice Party — who did not respond to repeated requests for comment — describe such sentiments as overblown and insist they are only fulfilling the legitimate desires of the constituents who put them in office. Nor, they insist, will there be significant changes in relations between Poland, the European Union, NATO and the United States, despite whatever changes the new conservative government unleashes domestically. “Law and Justice supported Poland’s accession to the European Union,” said Konrad Szymanski, the new government minister for European affairs. “We support integration as a framework for European cooperation but, as almost every member state, we have our opinions about the future of the union.” Yet the leadership has often seemed to confirm its critics’ worst fears. After some opposition members called for a European Union investigation of the new government’s actions, Mr. Kaczynski described them as traitors. “In Poland, there is a horrible tradition of national treason, a habit of informing on Poland to foreign bodies,” Mr. Kaczynski said. “And that’s what it is. As if it’s in their genes, in the genes of Poles of the worst sort.” The speed with which Law and Justice moved to capitalize on its definitive victory in October’s parliamentary elections has deeply unsettled Polish politics — as has the re-emergence of older faces from the party’s previous days in power, from 2005 to 2007. Rather than showcasing Mr. Kaczynski and other figures from the party’s last time in government, Law and Justice ran younger, more moderate candidates, first Andrzej Duda for president in the spring and then Beata Szydlo for prime minister in the fall. But in the closing days of the campaign, and certainly since the government took power, Mr. Kaczynski reasserted himself, and brought back many of his oldest allies. “Their attitude is that every four years there are elections, but afterwards the party that has won the election should have full power, practically unlimited,” said Aleksander Smolar, president of the Stefan Batory Foundation, which promotes civic issues. “They want very much to enlarge their power and weaken the institutions that control the political process.” Nationalist fervor is on the rise. At a rally of right-wing youth groups in Wroclaw last month, the figure of an Orthodox Jew was burned in effigy. For years, under the previous center-right governing party, Civic Platform, top officials spoke before a backdrop of Polish and European Union flags. Now, Ms. Szydlo has decreed that only Polish flags will be used. “I am happy that in these difficult times, Poland belongs to the E.U. and NATO,” Ms. Szydlo said. “But we decided that Polish government sittings and press conferences after these meetings will, from now on, take place against the background of, in my opinion, the most beautiful white-and-red flags.” While Law and Justice was in the opposition for eight years, it agitated repeatedly for fresh investigations into the 2010 crash of a plane in Smolensk, Russia, that killed Mr. Kaczynski’s twin brother, Lech Kaczynski, then the country’s president, as well as dozens of other top Polish officials. Some party officials, including a few with top positions in the new government, suggested that the crash might have been orchestrated and covered up by the Russians, perhaps with the connivance of Civic Platform and its then-leader, Donald Tusk, who is now president of the European Council in Brussels. These conspiracy theories were rarely raised during the recent election, but now that Law and Justice has assumed power they are back in the public discussion in a major way. The new foreign minister, Witold Waszczykowski, called on Russia to cooperate in a fuller investigation of the crash. “Either they solve this case amicably, or it will become necessary to hand it over to international tribunals,” he said. A top government spokeswoman, Elzbieta Witek, said in a television interview that a state tribunal should investigate Mr. Tusk, too. That was just her “personal opinion,” she said. In November, the new culture minister, Piotr Glinski, tried to halt performances of a play — “Death and the Maiden” by Nobel Prize-winning Austrian author Elfriede Jelinek — because he feared it would be pornographic. The performances went on, but not before drawing concern that the new government intended to control artistic productions it did not approve of. Those concerns were not lessened by a television interview with Mr. Glinski in which he derided the program he was on and hinted that the new government intended a firmer grip on the media. “This is a pornographic program, in fact, just as your station has been spreading propaganda and manipulation for a few years,” he told an interviewer on the public television channel. “And that is going to end as this is not how the public television should function.” But the most significant dust-up came over the composition of the country’s Constitutional Tribunal. In the run-up to the election, Civic Platform appointed five new judges to the 15-member panel, even though two of the vacancies would not occur until a new government took power. In response, Law and Justice refused to seat any of those five judges and, instead, appointed five judges of its own. The Constitutional Tribunal ruled this month that Civic Platform had the authority to appoint only three judges, and it declared unconstitutional large parts of new legislation covering the tribunal introduced by Law and Justice. But the new government continues to insist that its five judges — and none of Civic Platform’s — be admitted to the tribunal. Confusion about how this will play out, and who actually has ultimate authority over the Constitution, has unsettled Polish politics and raised passions on all sides. “You are developing Putinist standards,” said Robert Kropiwnicki, a Civic Platform member of Parliament. “The master himself would be proud.” For weeks, during a fall campaign that resulted in Law and Justice winning an outright majority in Poland’s Parliament, the question people kept asking was whether the party had changed since its earlier, contentious stint at the helm of the government. Both of Poland’s leading parties believe themselves inheritors of the Solidarity movement that propelled the country’s independence movement in the 1980s. But while Civic Platform has championed free market principles and enthusiastically embraced Poland’s rising role in European affairs, Law and Justice, with its deep ties to rural parts of the country and to the powerful Catholic Church, had pitched itself as the champion for those left behind by the country’s post-communist prosperity. Mr. Kaczynski made explicit the link his party sees between the government and the church in a speech celebrating the 24th anniversary of a religious radio station. “The church and its teachings are the foundations of Polishness,” he said. “And everyone, even if they are not believers, has to accept it. Any hand raised against the church is also a hand raised against Poland.” While Law and Justice champions socially conservative causes, including opposition to same-sex marriage, abortion and even in vitro fertilization, it also promised voters such traditionally left-wing policies as a rise in the minimum wage and a lowering of the retirement age. “The transition phase between communist and post-communist Poland was very painful for a large part of the population,” Mr. Smolar said. “For a lot of people, especially the older population, it was perceived as a catastrophe.” Now there are concerns that the party, simmering in opposition for so long, will seek to redress a litany of grievances, even if it means bending the Constitution. “This is not the problem in Poland only,” said Aleksander Kwasniewski, Poland’s left-wing president from 1995 to 2005. “This is happening in countries across Europe. This is the problem of democracy in general. Traditional democracy is in crisis.”
Tribun_Populi Posted December 15, 2015 Posted December 15, 2015 In the meanwhile, u Bruxellesu. The European Commission will today formally launch a proposed new European Border and Coast Guard which would in future bring much tighter controls to the union's external borders. The move has been described as the biggest proposed transfer of sovereignty since the creation of the euro. http://www.rte.ie/news/2015/1215/753567-european-border-control/ Počinje polagano.
hausmaistor Posted December 15, 2015 Posted December 15, 2015 (edited) Poljska polako kreće već utabanim stazama, miks Orbana i Putina poprskanih starim dobrim antisemitizmom i klerikalizmom: Strasno... Kako li ce Evropa, koja se poslednjih godina navikla samo na lidere sirokih shvatanja, bastinike emancipatorske socijaldemokratske tradicije, bez 'n' od nacionalizma ispod skalpa, a narocito bez trunke krvi na rukama, poput Mila, Hashima i Ace, uspeti da se izbori sa ovim poljsko-ugarskim orcima u svojim redovima? Edited December 15, 2015 by hausmaistor
bigvlada Posted December 16, 2015 Posted December 16, 2015 Poljska polako kreće već utabanim stazama, miks Orbana i Putina poprskanih starim dobrim antisemitizmom i klerikalizmom: Poland considering asking for access to nuclear weapons under Nato program Deputy defence minister says Poland is discussing whether to join other European countries in hosting nuclear arms to strengthen defences http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/dec/06/poland-considering-asking-for-access-to-nuclear-weapons-under-nato-program This is madness. Madness? This is Pooooland!.
Tribun_Populi Posted December 18, 2015 Posted December 18, 2015 Šta Kameron hoće od EU, da bi se amortizovalo opt-out raspoloženje biračkog mu tela. Jel uopšte neko sa kontinenta odradio nekakvu C/B analizu šta se gubi time što ostrvo odlazi? Ja u tome vidim samo pozitivne stvari, subjektivan sam, njega posmatram kao strano telo i remetilački faktor.
Prospero Posted December 18, 2015 Posted December 18, 2015 ...And the Poland goes rolling along... Poland changes head of NATO office, just after midnightDec. 18, 2015 5:09 AM ESTWARSAW, Poland (AP) — Poland's government has replaced the head of a new NATO experts' office, saying he failed to obey an earlier dismissal order.The move appears to be part of efforts by the conservative government, which took office last month, to place loyalists at top state posts.Around 1 a.m. local time on Friday, a Defense Ministry official entered the building of the NATO Counterintelligence Experts Center in Warsaw with the new head and with some troops. The official, Bartlomiej Misiewicz, said the previous head, Col. Krzysztof Dusza, has failed to act on a dismissal order last week. The counterintelligence experts' center is being jointly organized by Poland and Slovakia, within NATO. There was no immediate reaction from NATO. Macierewicz had earlier appointed Colonel Robert Bala to the post of acting chief of NATO's Counterintelligence Center of Excellence (CEK), the Defense Ministry said in a statement released on Thursday night.Defense Ministry officials accompanied by military police entered the centre after midnight on Friday.Local press reported on Friday that staff close to Macierewicz as well as members of the military police, “broke doors” to get into the centre at around 1:30 am CET, although these reports have not been confirmed.When contacted by Radio Poland on Friday, a NATO official who asked not to be named said that the centre in Warsaw is not “directly operated by NATO” and that it is jointly run by military and civilian personnel from Poland and Slovakia.The official could not immediately confirm the events that took place overnight. Change of guard“Polish staff members working for the centre have lost access to classified information and had to be replaced,” Foreign Affairs Minister Witold Waszczykowski said on Friday."In cases concerning changes in the military, such decisions are taken with immediate effect," Waszczykowski added. Former Defence Minister Tomasz Siemoniak, from the opposition Civic Platform (PO) party, condemned the move, saying, “This is probably the first time in NATO’s history that an alliance member has attacked a NATO facility.”(rg/aba/pk)
Lezilebovich Posted January 2, 2016 Posted January 2, 2016 to je ta EU kojoj težimo U znak protesta protiv izmena zakona i gušenja nezavisnosti javnih medija u Poljskoj, direktori svih programa poljskog javnog TV servisa TVP podneli su ostavke, a nacionalni radio protestuje emitovanjem himne, koju na svakih sat smenjuje emitovanje Betovenove Ode radosti. Uprkos protestima evropskih novinarskih udruženja, Evropske komisije i OEBS-a, poljski vladajući konzervativci bivšeg premijera Jaroslava Kačinjskog zahvaljujući komotnoj većini u oba doma parlamenta progurali su pred Novu godinu na noćnim sednicama prvi korak u reformi medija, kojim su sve nadležnosti za postavljanje direktora televizije TVP, Poljskog radija i novinske agencije PAP i članova njihovih nadzornih saveta poverili ministru državnog trezora i ukinuli javne konkurse. Nove čelnike javnih poljskih medija i članove saveta neće više birati na neko određeno vreme, već ministar može da ih smeni po svom nahođenju pošto su izmene zakona ukinule i precizne uslove pod kojima direktori mogu da budu smenjeni. ... Zbog pretvaranja poljskih javnih elektronskih medija iz javnih u državne, odnosno partijske, pošto evroskeptična konzervativna stranka Pravo i pravda ne krije da će dovesti svoje partijske aktiviste, protestovali su i Asocijacija evropskih novinara, Evropska novinarska federacija, Reporteri bez granica, OEBS, a potpredsednik Evropske komisije Frans Timermans uputio je protestno pismo i zatražio u ime EK objašnjenje od šefa poljske diplomatije Vitolda Vaščikovskog. ... "Ako mediji zamišljaju da će u narednim sedmicama zabavljati Poljake kritikovanjem naših reformi ili naših predloga promena, to treba prekinuti", kazao je otvoreno zašto nove poljske vlasti toliko žure nakon blokade Ustavnog suda i sa preuzimanjem medija šef poslaničkog kluba Prava i pravde, Rišard Terlecki. bar je transparentno.
MancMellow Posted January 2, 2016 Posted January 2, 2016 Mi imamo veće demokratske tradicije od Poljaka
Eraserhead Posted January 2, 2016 Posted January 2, 2016 to je ta EU kojoj težimo bar je transparentno. Ruku na srce imam utisak da se u EU prilicno zakuvalo oko ovoga.
vememah Posted January 2, 2016 Posted January 2, 2016 56% Poljaka smatra da je demokratija u toj zemlji ugrožena, kaže Ipsosova anketa iz prve polovine decembra. http://www.tvp.info/23091481/sondaz-ponad-polowa-polakow-uwaza-ze-demokracja-w-kraju-jest-zagrozona
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