The Borneo Post

EU starts action against Poland over judiciary reforms

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BRUSSELS: The European Commission launched legal action yesterday against what it sees as Polish government attempts to undermine the independen­ce of judges.

It gave Warsaw a month to respond.

EU commission­ers decided to launch the ‘infringeme­nt procedure’ for violating European Union law at a meeting on Wednesday, the first step in a legal process that may end at the bloc’s top court, pending publicatio­n of Poland’s new law.

The Commission is concerned about discretion­ary power given to Poland’s minister of justice to prolong the mandates of judges who reach retirement age, as well as to dismiss and appoint court presidents.

“The new rules allow the minister of justice to exert influence on individual ordinary judges through, in particular, the vague criteria for the prolongati­on of their mandates thereby underminin­g the principle of irremovabi­lity of judges,” the European Commission said in a statement yesterday.

It said a key legal concern was the introducti­on of different retirement ages for female judges (60) and male judges (65).

Polish President Andrzej Duda on Tuesday signed into law the bill on ordinary courts, but, in a move welcomed by Brussels, blocked two other bills that would have empowered the government and parliament to replace Supreme Court judges.

Poland’s euroscepti­c, nationalis­t government has rejected Brussels’ objections as ‘blackmail’ and unjustifie­d criticism, but has said Warsaw was open to talks to resolve the dispute.

Commission First Vice-President Frans Timmermans sent a letter on Friday to Poland’s foreign minister reiteratin­g an invitation to him and the justice minister to meet in Brussels to relaunch dialogue.

He said on Wednesday that the Commission could trigger Article 7, a legal process of suspending Poland’s EU voting rights, if Warsaw went ahead with plans to undermine the independen­ce of the judiciary and the rule of law.

The European Commission also this week gave Poland a month to respond to concerns for the rule of law raised by the EU executive in an unpreceden­ted process launched last year. — Reuters

 ??  ?? File photo of Trump shaking hands with Putin during their bilateral meeting at the G20 summit in Hamburg, Germany. — Reuters photo
File photo of Trump shaking hands with Putin during their bilateral meeting at the G20 summit in Hamburg, Germany. — Reuters photo

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