Poland's Minister of the Interior and Administration and Coordinator for Special Services, Tomasz Siemoniak, announced on Monday that he has submitted 24 notifications to the prosecutor's office regarding possible crimes committed by special services between 2016 and 2023.
Minister Siemoniak shared information about these notifications in a Monday (December 9) post on the X platform.
"As a result of audits conducted in 2024, the special services submitted 24 notifications to the prosecutor's office regarding possible crimes in the activities of these services between 2016 and 2023: CBA (Central Anti-Corruption Bureau) - 9 notifications, ABW (Internal Security Agency) - 3 (with additional materials submitted for two ongoing investigations), AW (Foreign Intelligence Agency) - 5, and SKW (Military Counterintelligence Service) - 7" - he wrote.
"The results of the audits were presented to the College for Special Services and the Parliamentary Committee for Special Services," the minister added.
In August, Siemoniak reported submitting a dozen motions to the prosecutor's office, with several more in preparation.
During Tuesday's meeting, the government is set to discuss a draft bill to dissolve the Central Anti-Corruption Bureau (CBA). The proposer of the bill, which addresses the coordination of anti-corruption activities and the dissolution of the CBA, is the Minister Coordinator for Special Services and the Minister of the Interior and Administration (Siemoniak).
The dissolution of the CBA is part of the coalition agreement between the parties forming the current government.
According to the draft bill, some of the CBA's responsibilities will be transferred to an anti-corruption division within the police. A new Central Bureau for Combating Corruption will be established, the Internal Security Agency (ABW) will be strengthened for this purpose, and the task of examining asset declarations will be taken over by the National Revenue Administration.
Źródło: TVN24 News in English, PAP
Źródło zdjęcia głównego: Darek Delmanowicz/PAP