Bydgoszcz events: Difference between revisions

Content deleted Content added
m Fixed a typo.
Added content
Tags: canned edit summary Mobile edit Mobile web edit
Line 7:
It was a turning point in the early history of Solidarity. Following the registration of Solidarity by the authorities of Poland in 1980, the farmers were also pushing for creation of a separate trade union, independent from the official system of power. The ''NSZZ RI Solidarność'' (Independent Self-Governing Trade Union of Individual Farmers ''Solidarity'', also called [[Rural Solidarity]]) was created, but not legalized by the authorities. Because of that on March 16, 1981 in [[Bydgoszcz]] a strike was proclaimed.
 
This forced the authorities to finally hold the meeting of the Voivodeship National Council, a governing body of the [[Bydgoszcz Voivodeship]]. The meeting was attended by several members of Solidarity, among them [[Jan Rulewski]], [[Mariusz Łabentowicz]] and [[Roman Bartoszcze]], who were to explain the reasons for the strike. However, the Council decided not to discuss the issue of Rural Solidarity, which made the members of Solidarity protest and they refused to leave the session. The authorities responded by calling in the [[Citizen's Militia]] and the [[ZOMO]], who entered the seat of the Council and, forcibly removed the delegates of Solidarity, beatingbrutally beat them, uptransported them down to the Vistula River and threw them off a pier into the icy water below.
 
Even though the authorities had a monopoly on media, the underground press reported of the ''Bydgoszcz events'' and the matter became widely publicised in a matter of days. On March 24 Solidarity decided to go on a [[1981 warning strike in Poland|nationwide strike]] in protest against the violence aimed at the delegates. The authorities bowed down and on 25 March the deputy prime minister [[Mieczysław F. Rakowski]] started a conference with the leaders of the Solidarity. This led to the signing of the so-called "Warsaw accord" (Polish: ''porozumienie warszawskie'') on March 30, 1981. According to the agreement, Solidarity was allowed to report the Bydgoszcz events on public television (the first such independent news behind the [[Iron Curtain]] since the 1940s) and the government pledged to continue the talks on registration of a trade union of farmers.