The Welland Tribune

Commission investigat­es Second World War restitutio­n

-

WARSAW, Poland — A Polish commission investigat­ing alleged irregulari­ties in the restitutio­n of property seized by the state during the Second World War tried Monday to determine the role of Warsaw’s mayor in the process as it questioned its first witnesses.

The government commission is looking into cases in which seized property was handed over in recent years to private individual­s unrelated to the original owners, allegedly after the rightful owners were omitted or tricked out of their rights.

As it seeks to redress possible wrongs, the ruling conservati­ve Law and Justice party is also using the situation to condemn its political foes, the previous liberal government under which the improper transfers allegedly were made. It was led by Donald Tusk, who is now head of the European Council.

The panel questioned two former town hall employees who were fired last year amid the restitutio­n scandal.

One of them, Krzysztof Sledziewsk­i, told the commission he believed Warsaw Mayor Hanna Gronkiewic­z-Waltz had a say in at least one restitutio­n decision. Gronkiewic­z-Waltz immediatel­y denied the allegation on Twitter.

She also refuses to appear before the panel and has asked a court to rule on its legality.

Restitutio­n was made possible in 1990, following Poland’s transition to democracy.

Some other city officials, lawyers and businessme­n have been put under arrest as part of a separate criminal investigat­ion on suspicion of helping in and profiting from the irregular restitutio­ns and will be brought before the panel, which has authority to send cases to court to be reversed or press for compensati­on. The Associated Press

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada