Poland holds centenary parade alongside far-right march
- Some 200,000 Poles joined the state military parade, which combined with the march organised by the anti-EU far-right groups
Leaders of Poland’s right-wing government marked the nation’s centenary with a military parade on Sunday, which took place at the same time and along the same route as an annual independence day march organised by marginal far-right groups.
Across the country on the stroke of noon Poles stopped to sing the national anthem in a rare show of unity, while marchers in Warsaw carried red and white Polish flags and set off flares to mark the centenary, filling the streets with crimson smoke.

Authorities said an estimated total of 200,000 Poles joined the state military parade, which effectively combined with the march organised by the anti-EU far-right groups.
The anniversary comes as Poland has become isolated within the European Union bloc and deeply polarised internally under the right-wing Law and Justice (PiS) party, whose controversial judicial reforms have put the country on a collision course with Brussels.
Before November 1918, Poland had not existed at all for 123 years, having been carved up between the Prussian, Russian and Austro-Hungarian empires.