Poland's popular Gdansk Mayor
dies after attack during charity event
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| Gdansk's Mayor Pawel Adamowicz speaks during the 27th Grand Finale of the Great Orchestra of Christmas charity in Gdansk.(foto-kraj) |
Poland’s government says Gdansk Mayor Pawel Adamowicz has died
from stab wounds a day after being attacked onstage by an ex-convict at a
charity event. He was 53. His death has shocked Poland as Adamowicz played a
crucial role in the pro-democracy movement during the late 1980s and became a
popular leader.
By Stefan J. Bos
The mayor of Gdansk was attending a charity concert raising
money for equipment to treat children in Poland's state-run hospitals. But as
some fireworks brightened up the sky, this colorful event turned into tragedy.
A man rushed onto the stage stabbing Mayor Adamowicz in front of thousands of
people, many holding white lights.
Before being arrested, the attacker waved his knife in the
air and spoke through a microphone: ‘Hello! Hello! My name is Stefan. I sat
innocently in prison; I sat innocently in prison. Civic Platform tortured me,
and that’s why Adamowicz is dead."
He referred to Mayor Adamowicz's past. The mayor was a
member of Poland’s pro-European Civic Platform, which governed Poland between
2007 and 2015. But he left the party to participate in local elections as an
independent.
The mayor was resuscitated at the scene and rushed to a
nearby hospital. There, he underwent five hours of surgery, and hundreds of
people visit health clinics to donate blood.
But doctors soon warned they had little hope as he had lost
a lot of blood and suffered oxygen deprivation in the knife attack. Gdansk
Archbishop Leszek Slawoj Glodz, who was at the hospital during the surgery,
said he was praying for a miracle.
But by Monday afternoon doctors had lost their battle to
save his life.
Mayor Adamowicz is a native of Gdansk, the birthplace of the
pro-democracy movement Solidarity in the 1980s that eventually helped topple
the Communist government.
in his self-written online biography he says he helped to
organize student strikes in 1988 - a year of nationwide mass strikes against
the communist government. Poland would declare a new democratic republic a year
later.
In 1990, he became a city councilor for Gdansk, rising to
the mayor of the city in 1998. He has held the office ever since. The popular
mayor was a strong liberal voice, known for his pro-immigration stance and
support for the rights of minorities.
A graduate of Gdansk university's law school, he married a
professor there. The couple has two daughters - one a teenager and one under
ten years old.
Family members were among the many mourning his death. In
the words of Poland's Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki: "The attack on
the life and health of [Mayor] Adamowicz is worthy of the highest
condemnation."

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