Poland's Walesa visits disabled protesters in parliament
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Former Polish president and anti-communist leader Lech Walesa is meeting with disabled people who have been staging a sit-in at the parliament for over a month, offering them his solidarity.
The young adults in wheelchairs and their parents, their full-time caretakers, want more state aid, a demand that the government has not fully met.
As the protest continues, it is increasingly becoming a headache for the conservative ruling party, Law and Justice, which faces accusations of treating society's weakest members in a heartless way.
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Law and Justice leaders, however, accuse their political opponents, who let the protesters into parliament, of using them as a tool in a political fight.
Walesa, a strong government critic, joined the protesters Monday, telling them: "You called me, so here I am."