featured News Trending

Poland has demanded explanations from Hungary and the United States after former Justice Minister Zbigniew Ziobro, wanted on abuse of power charges, reportedly travelled from Hungary to the US despite having his passport revoked. Polish officials said they want to know what legal documents allowed Ziobro to leave Hungary and enter the United States while facing criminal charges in Poland.

Ziobro and his former deputy Marcin Romanowski had earlier been granted asylum in Hungary under Prime Minister Viktor Orbán’s government. Warsaw had hoped political changes in Hungary following recent elections could pave the way for their return to Poland for trial. Romanowski’s current whereabouts remain unknown, while Ziobro confirmed in an interview that he is now in the United States and will work as a political commentator for a Polish broadcaster supportive of the nationalist Law and Justice (PiS) party.

The former minister is accused of misusing funds intended for crime victims for political purposes and faces 26 charges linked to abuse of power. Ziobro was also a key architect of judicial reforms introduced during the PiS government between 2015 and 2023, reforms that drew criticism from the European Union over concerns about weakening judicial independence in Poland.

Pic courtesy: google/ images are subject to copyright

featured News

Romania’s coalition government on Monday survived a no-confidence vote in parliament over its economic policies and reform agenda, marking the sixth such challenge it has overcome in just six months. The motions were largely driven by public opposition to tax increases and spending cuts aimed at narrowing the European Union’s largest budget deficit and protecting Romania’s investment-grade credit rating.

Despite remaining in power, internal divisions within the four-party coalition were once again exposed. The leftist Social Democrats, the largest coalition partner, backed the government in the confidence vote but joined the hard-right opposition in a separate, non-binding motion against Environment Minister Diana Buzoianu. The Social Democrats have also warned they could leave the coalition unless Prime Minister Ilie Bolojan agrees to raise the minimum wage next year, while demanding Buzoianu’s dismissal over a recent water supply crisis.

The government is simultaneously pushing ahead with controversial judicial pension reforms, including plans to raise the retirement age for judges and prosecutors and cap pensions. After an earlier version of the bill was struck down, the Constitutional Court is set to rule again on December 28. Failure to pass the reform could further strain the fragile coalition and jeopardise access to key EU recovery funds, as protests continue over alleged dysfunction within Romania’s justice system.

Pic courtesy: google/ images are subject to copyright