Polish Police set to Ban Spontaneous Protests and Secretly Gather Personal Data at UN Climate Talks

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Participants of the next UN climate talks in Poland could be banned from taking part in spontaneous demonstrations and have their personal data collected, stored and used by Polish police without their consent if a draft piece of legislation becomesย law.ย 

The proposed measures are going through Polandโ€™s legislative process as the southern city of Katowice โ€” located in the countryโ€™s coal heartland โ€” prepares to host the annual UN climate talks thisย December.ย 

The draft bill, which sets out specific regulations for this yearโ€™s climate talks, known as COP24, was passed by the lower house of the Polish Parliament on 10 January. On Friday, the Senate passed the bill almost unanimously with only three MPsย abstaining.ย 

The text provides a raft of initiatives to โ€œensure safety and public orderโ€. This includes a ban on all spontaneous gatherings in Katowice between 26 November and 16 December, spanning the entire period of the annual UN climateย talks.ย 

The clause suggests that only demonstrations previously registered with the local authority in Katowice will be allowed to go ahead โ€” effectively preventing environmental activists reacting to events unfolding during talks to stage protests in the city. The ban is not expected to apply to demonstrations organised inside the conference centre, which have to be approved by the conferencesโ€™ organising committee.ย 

The draft bill also allows police to โ€œcollect, obtain, process and use information, including personal data about people registered as participants of the COP24 conference or cooperating with its organisation, without the knowledge and consent of the people involvedโ€. This would include volunteers and people employed to help with the running of theย conference.

In order to register for the talks, participants including government officials, NGOs, business representatives, journalists and members of civil society have to provide the UN with their full name, date of birth, nationality, a copy of their passport or another identification document, the dates they will attend the conference and an emailย address.ย 

But the UNโ€™s online registration website states that participantsโ€™ identification number, date of birth and name โ€œwill not be made available to anyone outside of the UNFCCC [United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change]โ€. So it is unclear exactly how the police will access thisย information.ย 

Last year, just over 19,000 people attended the climate talks in Bonn and close to 50,000 people attended the talks in Paris in 2015, according to UNย data.

The Polishย President still has to sign the bill in order for it toย become law. But one Polish activist, who preferred not to be named, told DeSmog UK it was โ€œvery unlikelyโ€ for the bill to be rejected since there had been so little opposition to it inย Parliament.ย 

This yearโ€™s climate talks in Poland are due to be pivotal for the successful implementation of the Paris Agreement. Countries are expected to finalise the accordโ€™s rulebook and start the process of a global stocktake to ramp out ambition to reduceย emissions.ย 

The choice of the city of Katowice, which is home to the EUโ€™s largest coal company Polska Grupa Gรณrnicza (PGG), has angered some environmental campaigners who denounce Polandโ€™s reluctance to fully engage in the UN process while still being influenced by a strong domestic coalย industry.ย 

Hoda Baraka, from 350.org, called the draft bill โ€œa worrying developmentโ€ but added it was โ€œnot unexpected or unplanned forโ€. She told DeSmog UK that the pending decision was โ€œa step in the wrong directionโ€ at a time when โ€œcivil society groups are increasingly squeezed out of the UNFCCC process and their rights areย infringedโ€.ย 

She added: โ€œIn many of the countries that groups like 350.org operate, ongoing restrictions on civil society, above and beyond the UNFCCC, is a reality that we are challenged with on a daily basis – but these clampdowns will not stop a resilient and innovative climateย movement.โ€ย 

Polandโ€™s right-wing populist partyย reformsย 

The proposed regulations for the climate talks come as the Polish governmentโ€™s ruling right-wing populist Law and Justice party have been strongly criticised by the European Commission for breaching the EUโ€™s democraticย values.ย 

Since the party came into power in 2015, it has embarked on a series of reforms of the judiciary, the civil service, state media and other areas of public life, which have been widely denounced by human rights campaigners.ย 

The new laws include an expansion of police and secret services surveillance powers, making it easier to access electronic and digital data, and a crackdown on freedom of assembly.

Environmental campaigners have also recently foundย themselves in an open conflict with the Polish government over the logging of the ancient Unesco-listed forest Biaล‚owieลผa, located on Polandโ€™s eastern border withย Belarus.ย 

The government said it gave permission for the logging to go ahead because of damage caused by a spruce bark beetle infestation and to fight the risk of forest fires. But the claims have beenย denounced as a cover for commercial activitiesย byย activists.ย 

Greenpeace activists staged numerous protests and previously chained themselves to the woodcutting equipment to stop the logging. The governmentโ€™s draft bill restricting rights during the next climate talks has been seen by some campaigners as another step to stifle environmental activists inย Poland.ย 

Katarzyna Guzek, from Greenpeace Poland, told DeSmog UK the draft bill was โ€œyet another step towards a process of limiting possibilities of civil society to manifest theirย opinionโ€.ย 

โ€œIt is a part of a bigger trend of making life of NGO‘s as well as citizens harder when it comes to demonstrating their disagreement with the government,โ€ sheย said.

UNFCCCย response

Reacting to DeSmog UK‘s story, spokesman for the UNFCCC Nick Nuttall acknowledged the organisation shares some participant data with governments, but that it supports the right to protest both inside and outside the conferenceย centre.

In a statement on January 25, posted to Twitter by Guardian environment editor Damian Carrington, Nuttall said that since the terrorist attack on New York on September 11 2001, โ€œit has been the practice of UN Climate Change (UNFCCC) to share some information on participants when requested by governments hosting climateย conferencesโ€.

He added the UN โ€œtrustโ€ the information is used โ€œfor the purposes for which it is sharedโ€, – mainly โ€œthe timely processing of visaย applicationsโ€.

In the statement, he admitted the online registration portal for delegates was โ€œout of dateโ€ and said the UNFCCC would โ€œbe updating it to reflect that some data is shared with hostย governmentsโ€.

Nuttall said the UNFCCC would not directly comment on DeSmog UK‘s report that Poland plans to ban spontaneous demonstrations in Katowice during the next climate talks in December, but that the UNFCCC โ€œsupports the right of peaceful protests and demonstrations within and outsideย conferencesโ€.

He said the UN recognised that host governments โ€œmay need to make security and public safety judgements outside the official UN zonesโ€,ย however.

Updated 19/01/2018: The story was updated as the news broke of the Senate passing the bill.ย  Updated 25/01/2018: The section on the UNFCCC response wasย added.

Image Credit: Takver/ Flickr/ CC BYSAย 2.0

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