A court has refused to register the move made by Poland’s culture minister, Bartłomiej Sienkiewicz, last month to put state broadcaster Polskie Radio into liquidation.

The decision marks a further legal blow to the new government’s efforts to regain control of public media from the former ruling Law and Justice (PiS) party. But Sienkiewicz notes that today’s decision is not final and is likely to be appealed.

On 27 December, Sienkiewicz, announced that he was putting state broadcasters TVP and Polskie Radio as well as the Polish Press Agency (PAP) into liquidation. He justified the decision on the basis that President Andrzej Duda, a PiS ally, had vetoed funding for public media.

Duda had done so in response to an earlier move by Sienkiewicz to replace the management of public media, which PiS had condemned as unlawful. Earlier this month, a court agreed, refusing to register those management changes in the National Court Register (KRS), Poland’s official company register.

Now in a separate decision, the district court in Warsaw has also refused to register the liquidation of Polskie Radio in the KRS.

“The unprecedented nature of this case requires broader considerations and a thorough analysis of the provisions of specific laws, case law and doctrine,” wrote the court in its justification.

The decision was welcomed by PiS. Mariusz Błaszczak, the head of the party’s parliamentary caucus, said that it shows that the liquidator appointed by Sienkiewicz to run Polskie Radio “no longer has any basis” to do so.

“The presence at the headquarters of Polish Radio of ‘authorities’ assigned by Sienkiewicz is unlawful,” wrote another PiS MP, Marcin Przydacz

“It was physical strength that put them there,” he added. “And in a democratic state ruled by law, the force of law should decide. Mr Sienkiewicz, it’s time to end this usurpation.”

However, in response to today’s court decision, Sienkiewicz issued a statement arguing that it currently has no legal force. He claimed that entry or not into the KRS has only “declaratory” and “informational” value. “It does not establish the rights or status of bodies.”

The minister also announced that Polskie Radio’s liquidator is likely to immediately file a complaint against today’s decision, which would result in it having no legal force until that complaint is examined by the court. There would then also be a further right of appeal.

“Only a final judgement by a commercial court invaliding the resolution [to put Polskie Radio into liquidation] could effectively question the legality of the process,” wrote Sienkiewicz.

The minister also noted that a number of other decisions to put local branches of Polskie Radio into liquidation have already been accepted into the KRS, including one in a decision made by the same court in Warsaw.

Upon coming to power last month, the new ruling coalition, led by Donald Tusk, pledged to “depoliticise” public media, which had been turned into a propaganda mouthpiece by the PiS government.

However, its efforts to do so have drawn controversy, being criticised not only by PiS but also many legal experts.


Notes from Poland is run by a small editorial team and published by an independent, non-profit foundation that is funded through donations from our readers. We cannot do what we do without your support.

Main image credit: Adrian Grycuk/Wikimedia Commons (under CC BY-SA 3.0 PL)

Pin It on Pinterest

Support us!