Oman Daily Observer

EU heads towards tougher action on Poland

- GABRIELA BACZYNSKA

Germany’s entry alongside France into a battle between the European Commission and Poland over the rule of law increases the likelihood of unpreceden­ted EU action to punish Warsaw. German Chancellor Angela Merkel abandoned her usual public restraint last week by criticisin­g Poland’s governing Law and Justice (PiS) party, showing the European Union’s executive has the firm backing of its most influentia­l member.

It may be a watershed moment in the dispute over an overhaul of the judiciary and other steps taken by PiS which Brussels says undermine democracy in the largest ex-communist EU state.

Poland risks a reprimand under procedures known as Article 7 that have never been used before and would deal a heavy blow to its prestige, deepen its isolation in the bloc and diminish its ability to influence EU policies. Much is also at stake for the EU.

The row has deepened divisions as the EU comes to terms with Brexit and failure to act against a member seen as flouting democracy could raise questions about its determinat­ion to defend its core values.

“As much as I wish for good relations with Poland — they are our neighbour and I will always strive for this given the importance of our ties — we can’t simply keep our mouth shut in order to keep the peace,” Merkel said in Berlin.

“This goes to the very foundation­s of our cooperatio­n within the European Union.”

For a decade after it joined the EU in 2004, Poland was the poster child of the bloc’s eastward expansion as it was seen as faithfully upholding the EU’s democratic values and its economy thrived.

But relations have deteriorat­ed rapidly since the euroscepti­c PiS led by former prime minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski, long a political foe of European Council President Donald Tusk, won power in late 2015. The Commission opened an inquiry into the rule of law in Poland in January 2016 after new legislatio­n put more power in the hands of the Warsaw government, a move seen in Brussels as weakening democratic checks and balances.

The main battle now is over reforms that the Commission says undermine the judiciary’s independen­ce, giving the justice minister discretion­ary power to prolong the mandates of judges at retirement age and dismiss and appoint court presidents.

In another unpreceden­ted developmen­t, Warsaw has also ignored a ruling by the EU’s top court by continuing with large-scale logging in an ancient forest. Until now Berlin has let French President Emmanuel Macron take the lead on Poland since he took office last May. He says Warsaw is isolating itself and shunned Poland and its close EU ally, Hungary, during a recent tour of eastern Europe.

But Merkel, who will seek a fourth term as chancellor in an election on September 24, showed her concern by speaking out against Poland last Tuesday and by discussing Poland last week with the head of the Commission, Jean-Claude Juncker.

A diplomatic source said their talks included discussion of how quickly to proceed in the row with Warsaw.

PiS denies accusation­s by the Commission, Western EU states, political opponents in Poland and rights groups that it is eroding democracy in the country of 38 million people.

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