Poland asks EU Parliament to strip former CEO of state energy company of immunity

Adam Bodnar, Poland's justice minister and prosecutor general, has asked the European Parliament to strip opposition MEP Daniel Obajtek of immunity to face charges over alleged offenses committed while he was head of Polish state energy giant Orlen under the former Law and Justice (PiS) government.
Obajtek – who, after being removed as Orlen CEO by the current government , became a PiS MEP – is accused of giving false testimony in court and of unlawfully restricting the distribution of a left-wing magazine at Orlen-owned sales outlets.
He denies the charges. saying that the recordings cited as evidence of false testimony were edited and that pulling the magazine from sale was justified because it offended religious feelings.
Today I signed a request to the President of the European Parliament to waive the immunity of Daniel Obajtek.
The evidence collected by the prosecutor’s office indicates that there is a sufficiently justified suspicion that D. Obajtek committed two crimes.
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— Adam Bodnar (@Adbodnar) July 21, 2025
On Monday evening, Bodnar announced that he has sent a request to the president of the European Parliament, Roberta Metsola, because “ evidence collected by prosecutors indicates that there is a sufficiently justified suspicion that D. Obajtek committed two offenses.”
As a sitting MEP, Obajtek is protected by legal immunity, which must be lifted by a majority vote in the European Parliament before charges can proceed.
The first charge relates to allegedly giving false testimony on May 11, 2023 before Warsaw district court during private criminal proceedings. That crime carries a potential prison sentence of between six months and eight years.
According to Polish news outlet Onet, Obajtek tested under oath that he had no informal contact with a right-wing journalist, Piotr Nisztor. However, in a recording from 2018, the two are heard discussing personal favors and employment for Nisztor's wife.
The second charge concerns Obajtek's decision in March 2023 to order the immediate withdrawal from sale at all Orlen-owned outlets of an issue of Nie , a satirical left-wing weekly magazine.
The decision was made in response to Nie publishing a controversial cover featuring the late Polish Pope John Paul II holding a crucified doll on the cross of his papal staff. That was a response to media reports alleging that the former pope had failed to act against priests accused of child sexual abuse.
Orlen is a major distributor of the press in Poland, with sales points at petrol stations and stores. It also held a controlling stake in the now-defunct press distribution company Ruch , which operated more than 2,000 kiosks and newsagents across the country.
Prosecutors allege that Obajtek's decision violated the press law, which forbids restricting the distribution of a publication due to its editorial line or content. That offense can result in a fine or community service.
A leading satirical magazine has been withdrawn from sale by Poland's post office and state oil firma Orlen due to a cover featuring Pope John Paul II with a crucified doll in reference to new claims he was negligent in dealing with child sex abuse https://t.co/PrJbge49DS
— Notes from Poland 🇵🇱 (@notesfrompoland) March 15, 2023
Commenting on the accusation last week, Obajtek said he had provided explanations to prosecutors and claimed that the recordings at the center of the perjury charge had been “edited”.
He also defended his decision to withdraw the issue of Nie , arguing it was justified because the cover offended religious feelings, which is itself a crime in Poland .
“If they want to lift my immunity for that, I am proud of it,” he wrote in a post on X, accusing the current government of masking its poor performance by targeting those “who acted for the good of the country.”
Regarding the allegations: I explained everything to the prosecutor's office. The recordings are edited. As for the second: I consider the withdrawal of one issue of the weekly "NIE" absolutely appropriate, as it offended religious feelings, the cross, and Saint John Paul II. If they're going to waive my immunity for that, then... pic.twitter.com/DLW99r5zf0
— Daniel Obajtek (@DanielObajtek) July 18, 2025
Main image credit: MAP (under CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 PL )
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