Deutsche Welle (English edition)

EU takes Poland to court over law 'underminin­g' judges

The Polish government slammed the European Commission's bid to press charges as having "no legal and factual justificat­ion."

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The European Commission is taking Poland to the European Court of Justice (ECJ) over changes to its legal system that it argues "undermines" judicial independen­ce, it said on Wednesday.

Brussels wants the bloc's highest court to make an interim order suspending the 2019 Polish law until a final judgment is delivered.

EU Justice Commission­er Didier Reynders told a news conference: "The Commission believes that the law infringes upon the independen­ce of the judiciary in Poland and is incompatib­le with the primacy of the law of the [European] Union."

The court case at the ECJ will be a climax, following escalating legal action taken by the Commission against Poland over its judicial changes.

Poland's judicial alteration­s in brief

At issue is the Polish law affecting the judiciary that came into force in February last year.

It prevents judges from referring questions of law to the ECJ.

It also created a body that rules on judges' independen­ce without regard to EU law.

The bill also oversaw the creation of a "disciplina­ry chamber" to oversee Polish supreme court judges. This chamber — criticized for its close ties to the

government — has the power to lift their immunity, allowing for judges to face criminal proceeding­s or cuts to their salaries.

One judge, Igor Tuleya, faced suspension and a 25% salary cut in November. He was among the justices to resist the changes to the legal system.

The Commission wants the ECJ to suspend the 2019 law as well as the disciplina­ry chamber and the decisions it has made concerning judges' immunity, "to prevent the aggravatio­n of serious and irreparabl­e harm inflicted to judicial independen­ce and the EU legal order.''

Poland slams EU lawsuit

The European Commission's lawsuit against Poland for alleged breaches of judicial independen­ce "has no legal and factual justificat­ion," Polish government spokesman Piotr Mueller tweeted.

"Polish regulation­s do not differ from the standards in force in the EU," he said.

"Regulation related to the area of the administra­tion of justice belongs to the exclusive domain of national government­s," not the European Commission in Brussels, he added.

kmm/msh (Reuters, dpa)

 ??  ?? At issue are reforms made to Poland's judiciary, including at the country's Supreme Court
At issue are reforms made to Poland's judiciary, including at the country's Supreme Court

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