Poland to question ex-justice minister over Pegasus spying

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Poland to question ex-justice minister over Pegasus spying

Donald Tusk’s government has accused its predecessor of using spyware against political opponents

A Warsaw court has ordered the arrest of former Justice Minister Zbigniew Ziobro unless he shows up to testify before a parliamentary committee investigating the alleged use of Israeli-made spyware against the current ruling coalition.

Prime Minister Donald Tusk’s government has claimed that its predecessor used Pegasus, developed by Israel’s NSO Group, to spy on almost 600 people between 2017 and 2022, including political rivals and their campaigns.

The Sejm’s (lower house of parliament) commission investigating the allegations has petitioned to have Ziobro arrested if he does not appear at the January 31 hearing. On Monday, the District Court in Warsaw approved the request.

“Even though I am abroad, I will come to Poland because I am not afraid of the officers,” Ziobro told Polsat News in response to the subpoena.

“I will not resist,” he added, clarifying a remark he made on Friday about having an arsenal of weapons and believing in self-defense.

Ziobro, a member of parliament from the opposition Law and Justice (PiS) party, has argued that the inquiry is illegal, citing a September 2024 ruling by Poland’s Constitutional Tribunal.

“There is no commission of inquiry into Pegasus, because the Constitutional Tribunal banned it,” MP Michal Wojcik of PiS said on Monday. “Despite this, a group of MPs are demanding that Ziobro be forcibly brought in. This is being endorsed by a judge who spoke on the merits of the case, but does not want to recuse herself. Sick!”

Krzysztof Brejza, a member of the European Parliament from Poland’s ruling Civic Platform coalition, countered that “the law applies to everyone,” even to Ziobro, claiming that the former justice minister was “mocking the law.”

Ziobro missed four summons by the committee before the Sejm voted to lift his parliamentary immunity last month. He then said he would testify voluntarily, following the arrest of the former head of the Internal Security Agency (AWB), Piotr Pogonowski.

PiS ruled Poland from 2015 to late 2023, when Tusk’s coalition took over. The new government has launched multiple inquiries into its predecessor’s alleged misdeeds. According to reports in the Polish media, PiS spent substantial sums to use spyware against political opponents, including the Civic Platform’s election campaign leader.

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