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Poland slams 'neo-Nazi' march claim

Organised since 2009 by far-right groups, the Independence Day event in Warsaw attracted a large following this year

Poland's president on Friday slammed remarks by a senior European Parliament member who called the tens of thousands of people at a controversial Polish Independence Day march "fascists" and "neo-Nazis". President Andrzej Duda termed "absolutely scandalous" and "inadmissible" the remarks made by European Parliament liberal leader Guy Verhofstadt during a Wednesday debate in the chamber. Ex-Belgian premier Verhofstadt said that "on Saturday 60,000 fascists marched in the streets of Warsaw –- neo-Nazis, white supremacists." "I'm not talking about Charlottesville in America, I'm talking about Warsaw, Poland, 300 kilometres (186 miles) more or less from (World War II Nazi German death camps) Auschwitz and Birkenau," he added. Organised since 2009 by far-right groups, the Independence Day event attracted a large following this year. However, many marchers denied membership of or sympathy for extreme right groups, insisting they simply wanted to mark the day. Aside from avowed members of Poland's far-right, the event also drew representatives of similar parties from Britain, Hungary, Italy and Slovakia, among others. Dramatic images of the event showed some marchers holding banners saying "Pure blood" and "Europe will be white", while others chanted "Pure Poland, white Poland" and "Refugees get out", triggering outcry both at home and abroad. Duda himself had insisted on Monday that "there is no place or consent in our country for xenophobia, there is no place in our country for sick nationalism, there is no place in our country for anti-Semitism." The American Jewish Congress (AJC) urged the "Polish government to expressly oppose the hatred fuelled by the Polish extreme right." The AJC added that the march "was used to promote the slogans of white supremacists and neo-Nazi rhetoric."