Poland Court Compensates Woman for $23K

Published: 24 February 2005 y., Thursday
A former shipyard worker whose 1980 firing triggered the labor protest that spawned Poland's Solidarity movement was awarded $23,000 on Tuesday for her imprisonment more than two decades ago. A regional court in the central Poland city of Torun ruled Tuesday that Anna Walentynowicz's 1983 incarceration ruined her health and caused her substantial financial losses. "I'm very pleased," Walentynowicz, who did not attend the court proceedings, said by telephone from her home in the city of Gdansk. Walentynowicz, 75, said she has often found it difficult to buy expensive medicine that she requires with her regular pension of $433 a month. Walentynowicz, an activist in the illegal free-union movement, was dismissed from her job as a crane operator at Gdansk's Lenin shipyard in August 1980 - prompting employees to stop work in protest. Lech Walesa, then a union organizer who also had been dismissed, took charge of the strike. In two dramatic weeks, the workers won guarantees for the first independent union in the Soviet bloc and broad social political concessions.
Šaltinis: ASSOCIATED PRESS
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Saddam, bin Laden, get votes in Finland

Saddam Hussein's time might be running out, but he can take small comfort that at least one Finn thought he should serve in the Nordic country's parliament more »

CEBIT: Little 3G buzz this year

An acronym that had dominated headlines at previous CeBIT shows seemed to be little more than a footnote at this year's event more »

Finnish National Polls Set to Be a Close Call

As Finns head to the polls on Sunday, the outcome still remains far from clear more »

The biggest socio-economic research effort ever

Commission presents EUR 81 million socio-economic research networks to address major European challenges more »

Talking washing machine gets a CeBit spin

A talking washing machine on display at CeBit this week could pave the way to home electrical devices that respond to voice commands--and can even help inexperienced users to operate them more »

CeBit cleans up with new tech

Thousands of companies and visitors are descending on the annual tech extravaganza in Hannover, Germany more »

Early debut

CEBIT' 2003: Intel's Canterwood, Springdale get early debut more »

Baltic states cleaning up to impress EU

Globalization drives former republics of the Soviet Union to raise standards to levels required for membership in European market more »

Old Europe's New Economy Expo

Three years after the Nasdaq bubble popped, the technology trade show is still a much-hyped phenomenon more »

Privacy Activist Takes on Delta

Bill Scannell, organizer of the successful Boycott Adobe campaign launched when Russian programmer Dmitry Sklyarov was arrested in the summer of 2001, is now calling for a boycott on Delta. more »