In response to criticism of the musician’s position on the Ukraine war, Roger Waters, the co-founder of Pink Floyd, has cancelled scheduled performances in Poland.
Live Nation Poland, the concert’s promoter, confirmed the cancellation but provided no explanation.
The controversy was triggered by an open letter Waters wrote to Ukraine’s first lady, Olena Zelenska.
In it, he said, “extreme nationalists” in Ukraine “have set your country on the path to this disastrous war”.
He accused her husband, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, of failing to fulfill his election campaign promises to bring peace to the Donbas region and made no mention of Russia’s responsibility for the war.
In response, Mrs Zelenska wrote on Twitter that it was Russia that invaded Ukraine and was now destroying its cities and killing civilians. “Roger Waters, you should ask for peace from the president of another country,” she wrote.
City councillors have drafted a resolution to declare Mr Waters persona non grata, due to be voted on at a session on September 28.
“Taking into account Russia’s criminal attack on Ukraine as well as the increasing number of war crimes committed by Russian soldiers that are coming to light, [the councillors] express outrage at the theses and statements made by Mr Roger Waters in connection with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine,” the resolution states.
Mr Waters, currently on tour in the US, hit back in another Facebook post entitled “Hey Łukasz Wantuch, Leave them kids alone”, referencing the lyrics of the classic Pink Floyd song, Another Brick in the Wall.
He denied an earlier media report that he or his management had canceled the concerts themselves and accused Mr Wantuch of the “draconian censoring” of his work.
Asked whether the cancellation was connected to Mr Waters’ comments, a venue spokesman for the Tauron Arena in Krakow told the BBC: “No comment.”
Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February, the government decided to open Poland’s borders to millions of Ukrainian women and children fleeing the fighting.
According to the United Nations Refugee Agency, UNHCR, close to 1.4 million Ukrainians have registered for temporary protection in neighboring Poland.
Hundreds of thousands of refugees have been put up by Poles in their own homes.