Here’s the latest I can provide based on recent reporting:
- Zbigniew Ziobro, Poland’s former justice minister, has been at the center of legal scrutiny related to alleged misuse of funds from the Justice Fund and accusations of leading an organized crime group. Several outlets reported that Parliament moved to strip his immunity and pursue charges, with some updates indicating he remained abroad during key parliamentary actions.[1][3]
- In late 2025 and early 2026, reports noted conflicting positions on his immunity and potential arrest, including mentions of him staying outside Poland and seeking to be questioned abroad, amid ongoing proceedings in Warsaw and international interest from Hungary and other EU states.[3][4]
- By January 2026, a notable development was that Ziobro was granted asylum in Hungary, a significant turn in the saga that potentially shields him from immediate extradition or arrest within Poland’s legal framework.[5][7]
If you’d like, I can pull more concrete, up-to-date details from specific outlets or summarize the key legal milestones (immunity waivers, charges, dates of parliamentary votes, and asylum status) with precise citations.
Sources
Poland's Sejm committee is considering waiving Zbigniew Ziobro's parliamentary immunity over allegations of leading a criminal group that misallocated €35 million from the Justice Fund.
www.euronews.comZiobro has so far failed to respond to four summonses to appear before the committee. He has cited both health grounds (he is undergoing cancer treatment) and the fact that the constitutional court (a body regarded as under PiS influence) has deemed the committee unlawful. However, yesterday a majority of 241 MPs in the 460-seat Sejm, the lower house of parliament, voted in favour of a request from current justice minister Adam Bodnar for Ziobro to be brought in by force. Their consent was...
notesfrompoland.comZbigniew Ziobro, a former Polish justice minister who has been granted asylum in Hungary, is no stranger to conflict, regularly unleashing tirades against the "losers" and "softies" who opposed his judicial reforms or approach to the European Union.
www.reuters.comNews NEWS Swedish Bankruptcies on the Rise One of the major problems for businesses that survived the pandemic is that many of them had significant back tax ...
europeanconservative.comA former Polish justice minister skipped parliamentary proceedings on Thursday that could see him stripped of immunity and arrested, seemingly choosing to observe them from Hungary as he believes he will not get a fair hearing in Warsaw.
www.reuters.comGranting asylum to a citizen of a fellow EU member goes against the spirit of EU standards.
www.bbc.comCheck out this page via the Business and Human Rights Resource Centre
www.business-humanrights.orgWARSAW (Reuters) -A former Polish justice minister accused of abuse of power has offered to be questioned in Hungary or Belgium, his lawyer told Rzeczpospolita daily in comments published late on
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