The Borneo Post (Sabah)

EU mulls sanctions against Poland over court reform

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BRUSSELS: The EU held highlevel talks yesterday on whether to act on its threat to sanction the Polish government over its bid to exert control over national courts.

The European Union last week warned the right-wing government in Warsaw against enacting new bills that would further undermine the judiciary’s independen­ce, which EU treaties guarantee.

Polish President Andrzej Duda surprised many Monday when he vetoed two of the controvers­ial reforms but later signed into law a third bill despite opposition from Polish demonstrat­ors.

With only one of the reforms adopted, it was not clear what steps, if any, EU First VicePresid­ent Frans Timmermans will announce yesterday.

The commission, the 28-nation EU executive, last week urged Poland to put the reforms on hold and warned it would “swiftly prepare infringeme­nt procedures for breach of EU law” against Warsaw.

Under these procedures to be debated, EU states can be hauled before the bloc’s highest court and eventually given stiff fines for the breaches.

Duda on Tuesday signed into law one of the reforms while Polish Prime Minister Beata Szydlo insisted that her Law and Justice (PiS) party would press ahead with the others.

On top of possible infringeme­nt proceeding­s, Timmermans said the EU is also “very close to triggering Article 7,” the bloc’s never-before used ‘nuclear option’ that can halt a country’s right to vote in EU decisionma­king.

However, populist Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has vowed he would instantly veto any such move by the EU against a sovereign country.

Ultimately, officials admit that Brussels is not fully prepared for events like those in Poland.

When the EU brought in Article 7 it was less a response to fears about the rule of law in the wave of eastern states like Poland joining after 2004, but more as a backstop that had little chance of being used.

EU Justice Commission­er Vera Jourova, meanwhile, said the Polish crisis had caused a “very high level of nervosity” about whether it would “affect the whole EU system of mutual recognitio­n of court decisions”.

The new government headed by the PiS, which won the 2015 elections, triggered its first warning from Brussels last year after reforming the Constituti­onal Court.

This month it pushed through a bill that would have reinforced political control over the Supreme Court and another allowing parliament to choose members of a body designed to protect the independen­ce of the courts.

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? People gather during the protest against judicial reforms in Wroclaw, Poland.
— Reuters photo People gather during the protest against judicial reforms in Wroclaw, Poland.

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