Poles commemorate Warsaw Uprising on 73rd anniversary
WARSAW, Poland — Sirens wailed across Poland’s capital on Tuesday as the country marked the 73rd anniversary of the Warsaw Uprising, a doomed revolt against the occupying Germans during World War II.
Sirens sounded for about two minutes starting at 5 p.m., the hour the 1944 uprising began, bringing traffic mostly to a standstill while people stopped to pay respect to the Poles who fought and died.
President Andrzej Duda, veterans, scouts and others took part in ceremonies, as did several thousand far-right extremists who marched through Warsaw.
The German Embassy in Warsaw flew its flags — a German and a European Union flag — at half-staff to honour the victims.


