Political Science, asked by rj258998, 9 months ago

what changes occurred in Poland after the 21 point agreement

Answers

Answered by singhjaspal8456
5

Answer:

Poland was ruled by the Polish United Worker's Party in 1980. No other political party was allowed to function.

(ii) The government in Poland was supported and controlled by the government of the Soviet Union (USSR), a powerful communist state.

(iii) On 14 August 1980, the workers of Lenin Shipyard in the city of Gdansk went on a strike as the shipyard was owned by the government. All the factories and big property too were owned by the government. As the strike continued, Lech Walesa, a former electrician of the shipyard, joined the strikers. On becoming their leader and after the strike spread across the city, the workers demanded the right to form trade unions, release of political prisoners and an end to censorship on press.

(iv) On gaining popularity, the government gave in. A 21-Point Agreement signed between Walesa and the government ended their strike. A new trade union called Solidarity was formed which got immense popularity in Poland.

(v) It revealed widespread corruption and mismanagement in the government. The government soon imposed martial law in Poland. Thousands of Solidarity members were put in prison.

(vi) This resulted in another wave of strikes in 1988. The Polish government was weaker, the support from Soviet Union was uncertain and the economy was declining.

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Answered by Rishavrana98
0

Answer:

Explanation:

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