Poland’s state audit office has notified prosecutors of suspected crimes by former Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki and other senior officials from the Law and Justice (PiS) government that was in power until late last year.

The Supreme Audit Office (NIK) accuses them of “abuse of powers and failure to fulfil official duties and thus acting to the detriment of the public interest” during the response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The crimes can carry a jail sentence of up to three years.

Specifically, NIK says that its “analysis of evidence collected in the course of inspections” indicates that the actions of the officials caused financial “losses at the local government level of at least 4 billion zloty” (€931 million).

In a press release on Tuesday, NIK did not specifically name the officials in question but said that its notification concerned the former prime minister (a post held by Morawiecki throughout the pandemic).

It also said that notifications had been issued against a former finance minister (with use of the female grammatical form indicating this refers to Magdalena Rzeczkowska), a deputy finance minister, and “other state officials”.

The notifications follow the presentation last month of the results of a NIK audit, which found that the increased financial burden and range of activities imposed on local authorities during the pandemic had left some facing “financial collapse”.

NIK’s president, Marian Banaś (a former member of the PiS government who then became one of its main opponents), noted that these growing burdens had been accompanied by government tax reforms that reduced funding for local authorities.

In 2022, Warsaw’s mayor, Rafał Trzaskwoski, estimated that his city stood to lose 3.5 billion zloty (€820 million) in revenue over two fiscal years due to the government’s tax reforms.

NIK found that the government’s actions were particularly discriminatory against the capital, but that other large cities, such as Kraków, Łódź, Poznań, Szczecin and Wrocław, also suffered losses.

According to the auditors, work on the tax overhaul by the PiS government was non-transparent and undocumented. NIK recommended that the new government, which has been in power since December, amend the law so that local authorities are compensated “in the event of any future changes”.

NIK is also expected today to submit further notifications to prosecutors of suspected crimes by Morawiecki, his former chief of staff Michał Dworczyk, and former PiS state assets minister Jacek Sasin in relation to the purchase of protective equipment by state-owned companies during the pandemic.

The notifications will also concern a former CEO of state oil firm Lotos and employees of the government’s Material Reserves Agency (ARM), according to the Polish Press Agency (PAP).

The decision was taken after auditors concluded that Morawiecki’s chancellery had spent nearly 200 million zloty “wastefully, unreliably and unintentionally” between 2020 and 2021

NIK found that the personal protective equipment, such as face masks, was purchased from vendors who did not have prior experience in that market. The products they provided were “many times more expensive” and of questionable quality.

NIK also found that although the state-owned companies imported masks and protective suits from companies designated by the state assets ministry, the prime minister’s office only reimbursed Lotos for part of the money spent on this purpose.

In response to the accusations, Morawiecki today said that he is happy to “take full responsibility myself” for the purchases in question. He noted that the decisions were taken early in the pandemic, when there was a global scramble for protective equipment.

“I asked everyone who can, wherever they can, to buy what can save the lives of Poles,” said Morawiecki. “I believe that…a court will have enough common sense and honesty to look at what was happening then around the world, in Europe and in Poland.”

As far back as 2021, NIK notified prosecutors of a possible criminal offence by Prime Minister Morawiecki and three ministers in the context of the abandoned attempt to organise a presidential election by post at the start of the pandemic.

The public prosecutor’s office, which was under the government’s influence at the time, found no grounds to bring charges after four months of investigation and dropped the case.

However, the matter is currently being investigated by a special parliamentary committee set up by the new government.


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Main image credit: KPRM (under CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 PL)

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