Polish travel eased
NZPA-Reuter . Warsaw A domestic travel ban was eased yesterday by Poland’s martial law rulers, but Poles must still obey an all-night curfew, submit to strict censorship, a'nd cannot leave the country, according to the official news agency, Pap. The Interior Minister (General Czeslaw Kiszczak), the nation’s chief law inforcer, also said that the Govern-' ment would crack down hard on any new “acts of terror-ism-and that dissidents who worked against the Communist > Government’s supreme
authority may face deportation. Poland’s Catholic bishops were allowed to broadcast demands for a political role for free trade union leaders. ( The bishops’ call for the suspended Solidarity trade union to join political talks was heard on the State radio. But their plea for an end to martial law and an amnesty for detained union supporters was cut out . of the broadcast version of their pastoral message. . The full text, one of the toughest from the Church during the crisis, was read
, ... from v, pulpits across the nation.; . Two sons of Solidarity’s ■ leader, Lech Walesa, said <yesterday that he was in “a' 7/very; good” mood during their visits ,to him jn the ■ apartment where he is being held by the Government. Bogdan, aged 11, and Slawek, aged 9, visited their father in the Warsaw suburb of Otwock on Friday and ' Saturday. The boys, who have five brothers and sisters, said their father had a “very nice ! apartment” and access to 1 television, radio, newspapers, 1 and books. .
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Press, 2 March 1982, Page 8
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244Polish travel eased Press, 2 March 1982, Page 8
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