
EU Commission reacts to Poland's alleged misuse of recovery funds
What began as a simple publication online quickly sparked a dispute online, particularly on X, as users began to point out examples of alleged misallocations of EU funds. Politicians and the media subsequently commented on the matter, calling for answers. The expenditures of companies that received EU grants allegedly included company yachts, solariums, furniture, and coffee machines.
Poland qualified for almost €60 billion in funding from the EU's Reconstruction and Resilience Fund. Such allocations were aimed at rebuilding member states' economies after the COVID-19 pandemic.
In order to receive the funding, each EU country had to submit a National Recovery Plan (NERP) detailing how the funds would be spent to support post-pandemic economies.
Under the former Law and Justice (PiS) government, Poland's access to funding was blocked by the EU due to a rule-of-law dispute between the bloc and its member state. Unblocking reconstruction funds was a key election promise made by Donald Tusk and his Civic Platform party ahead of the 2023 parliamentary elections.
Some €280 million was earmarked for the hospitality sector, which suffered heavy losses due to successive pandemic-related lockdowns. A dedicated website presented requests from businesses in the sector, but this service has since become unavailable. Nevertheless, media reports have emerged detailing how some of the money was spent, including on yachts, saunas, solariums, and furniture.
The issue of KPO aid to the hotel and catering industry was addressed by Prime Minister Donald Tusk during a speech given on Friday.
"I will not accept any waste of KPO funds" - said the Prime Minister.
Polish president's reaction
Numerous politicians, from both the left and the right, quickly reacted to accusations of misallocation of funds, a number of politicians. Among them was the recently-inaugurated president of Poland, Karol Nawrocki.
"I am often asked by journalists where we should get the money for [my proposed programs]. Today is a very important day [regarding this matter]. We have found out how the NRP funds have been distributed in Poland. I do not want funds on behalf of 10.5 million Poles spent on saunas, solariums and coffee machines. I want funding for Polish families," Nawrocki said during a speech on Friday.
The Regional Public Prosecutor's Office in Warsaw has begun preliminary investigations into media reports of irregularities in the awarding of grants from the NRP. The President of the Polish Agency for Enterprise Development, Katarzyna Duber-Stachurska, was dismissed after doubts emerged about how EU funds were spent.
European Commission intervention
European Commission spokesman Maciej Berestecki stressed in an interview with Polish radio station RMF FM that "Poland is obliged to take clarifying action" on the awarding of KPO grants".
Poland will now have to submit a payment request in November so that the European Commission can assess the projects' compliance with the NRP criteria.
According to the Commission's press service, "It is the duty of Member States to take all appropriate measures to protect the financial interests of the Union."
The Commission has the possibility to intervene if the Polish authorities do not react appropriately, above all in situations of fraud. "If we see that this does not work, the European Public Prosecutor's Office and OLAF [the Commission's anti-fraud office] will step in," they explained.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Euronews
3 hours ago
- Euronews
EU calls for 'transatlantic unity' ahead of Trump-Putin summit
EU foreign ministers on Monday called for "transatlantic unity" to support Ukraine and increase pressure on Russia following an emergency meeting convened ahead of a Trump-Putin summit later this week. Kaja Kallas, the EU's top diplomat, said following the informal virtual foreign affairs council (FAC) that ministers "expressed support for US steps that will lead to a just peace". "Transatlantic unity, support to Ukraine and pressure on Russia is how we will end this war and prevent future Russian aggression in Europe. "Meanwhile, we work on more sanctions against Russia, more military support for Ukraine and more support for Ukraine's budgetary needs and accession process to join the EU," she added. The meeting was hastily convened on Sunday following the announcement two days earlier that US President Donald Trump and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin will meet on 15 August in Alaska. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy is not expected to join them although Trump has said he hopes to chair a trilateral meeting involving the Ukrainian premier. The upcoming summit has led to a flurry of contacts between European heads of state who fear being sidelined from a deal they will probably have to uphold the bulk of. In a joint statement issued over the weekend, the leaders of Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Poland, the UK, and European Commission reiterated their stance that "the path to peace in Ukraine cannot be decided without Ukraine". They also rejected Putin's ceasefire proposal to trade the Ukrainian territories of Donetsk and Luhansk stating that "the current line of contact should be the starting point of negotiations" and stressed that they "are united as Europeans and determined to jointly promote our interests". "We will continue to cooperate closely with President Trump and with the United States of America, and with President Zelenskyy and the people of Ukraine, for a peace in Ukraine that protects our vital security interests," they added. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz, French President Emmanuel Macron, and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer will on Wednesday chair an emergency meeting of the coalition of the willing which Trump and Zelenskyy will join. The leaders of Italy, Finland, Poland, NATO's Secretary-General as well as Ursula von der Leyen and Antonio Costa, who helm the European Commission and European Council respectively, are also expected to participate. The Elysee said other videoconference meetings will be held on the same day in various formats, "including one attended by President Trump". The situation and latest developments in the Middle East, in particular the catastrophic humanitarian situation in Gaza, were also on the agenda for today's foreign affairs council.


Euronews
3 hours ago
- Euronews
Zelenskyy warns Trump not to trust Putin before Alaska meeting
Over the past few days, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy made tens of phone calls with world leaders after his US counterpart Donald Trump confirmed his meeting with Russian leader Vladimir Putin in Alaska on Friday. 'The end of the war must be fair, and I am grateful to everyone who stands with Ukraine and our people today for the sake of peace in Ukraine, which is defending the vital security interests of our European nations', Ukrainian leader said as the joint statement was issued with the leaders of France, Italy, Germany, Poland, Finland and the European Commission. With the carefully chosen diplomatic language, the statement is meant to support Trump's efforts to put an end to Russia's all-out war against Ukraine and, at the same time, to pass on a cautious warning to the US president not to trust Putin. 'Meaningful negotiations can only take place in the context of a ceasefire or reduction of hostilities," the leaders said in the joint statement. "The path to peace in Ukraine cannot be decided without Ukraine. We remain committed to the principle that international borders must not be changed by force', the statement said as Europe's top politicians emphasised they 'continue to stand firmly by the side of Ukraine'. For Zelenskyy, the message to Trump is clear and firm. 'We understand Russia's intention to try to deceive America – we will not allow this', he said, adding that he 'greatly values the determination with which President Trump is committed to bringing an end to the killings in this war'. 'The sole root cause of these killings is Putin's desire to wage war and manipulate everyone he comes into contact with. We in Ukraine know Russia well', Zelenskyy concluded. Does Putin want peace? Prior to Russia's first invasion of Ukraine in 2014 and then Moscow's full-scale war in 2022, Putin repeatedly said he had no intentions of attacking Ukraine. In February and March 2014, as the Russian soldiers were blocking the main airport and military bases of Ukraine in Crimea, Putin kept repeating that these were not Russian forces. Despite looking like Russian soldiers and operating like Moscow's paratroopers, Putin repeatedly denied that those were Russian troops. He even said that their equipment could easily be bought in a military surplus shop. The Kremlin never commented on where exactly anyone could buy a Russian uniform together with an automatic weapon and a grenade launcher. Russian soldiers were referred to as 'little green men' until it was too late. Putin denied everything until the very last moment, when he proudly announced the annexation of Crimea, admitting that he had deployed Russian troops to the peninsula weeks before the annexation. Celebrating the beginning of the invasion of Ukraine in 2014, Putin was denying the presence of the Russian troops in eastern parts of the neighbouring country, as Moscow's soldiers were already attacking and occupying territories in Ukraine's Donetsk and Luhansk regions. By the end of 2021 Western intelligence authorities were intensifying their warnings that Russia was preparing to invade Ukraine. As Moscow amassed 200,000 troops at the border, Putin repeatedly said military drills were 'purely defensive' and 'not a threat to any other country'. 'Russia has no plans to invade Ukraine,' the Kremlin said a few days before 24 February 2022. 'Vladimir, stop!' During the debate last summer in the run-up to the presidential elections in the US, Trump refused to say whether he wanted Ukraine to win Russia's war of aggression. 'I want the war to stop', he stated before the presidential elections and ever since his return to the White House. Until recently, Trump had repeatedly said Russia seemed more willing than Ukraine to get a deal done, going as far as saying he has known Putin for a long time and 'we have always gotten along well'. At the same time Trump's rhetoric on Zelenskyy was the opposite. In February the US president called him 'a dictator without elections', partially repeating the Kremlin's narrative. At the unprecedented scandal in the White House on 28 February, Trump accused Zelenskyy of not showing gratitude and ultimately not wanting Russia's war to end. 'You're gambling with World War III', Trump told Zelenskyy, backing Moscow's line on Kyiv not agreeing to an end to the war. Ukraine's president devoted considerable time and effort to not only repairing diplomatic relations with the Trump administration but also demonstrating that Ukrainians are more eager than anyone else to end Russia's war, with the obstacle being in Moscow, not Kyiv. Trump changed his rhetoric towards Putin when, in April, he reacted to Russia's serial attacks on Kyiv, posting on Truth Social, 'Vladimir, stop!' As Moscow and Kyiv restored the direct talks in Istanbul, Trump was getting more irritated by the absence of any tangible result and Moscow's unwillingness to agree to a ceasefire as the first step towards a possible peace deal. In July, as Russia has massively intensified its daily aerial attacks on Ukraine, the US president for the first time admitted that he was not happy with his Russian counterpart. 'We get a lot of bull***t thrown at us by Putin, if you want to know the truth. He's very nice all the time, but it turns out to be meaningless," Trump said. 'I am very disappointed with President Putin, I thought he was somebody that meant what he said. He'll talk so beautifully and then he'll bomb people at night. We don't like that.' Trump pushed even harder against Putin later as he imposed the ceasefire deadline for Moscow set for last Friday. 'I don't want to say he's an assassin, but he's a tough guy. It's been proven over the years.' Trump said about Putin as he threatened to impose secondary tariffs, targeting Russia's trading partners in an effort to isolate Moscow if the Kremlin didn't agree to a ceasefire by 8 August. 'He's fooled a lot of people before,' Trump added, just two weeks before Moscow ignored the deadline and Washington did not introduce the sanctions in response. Instead the presidents of the US and Russia are now set to meet in Alaska on 15 August. '(Putin) fooled Clinton, Bush, Obama, Biden, he didn't fool me'', Trump said as Russia's president did manage to avoid tougher sanctions for Moscow and secondary sanctions on his trading partners, ignored the ceasefire deadline and set up a meeting with the US president on his own terms: without Zelenskyy and the EU representatives, putting an end to overwhelming diplomatic isolation, but not stopping his all-out war on Ukraine.


France 24
5 hours ago
- France 24
EU clears Just Eat takeover by Dutch group Prosus
Prosus announced its plans to purchase the Amsterdam-based food delivery platform in February, saying it would create the fourth-largest food delivery group globally. The European Commission, the EU's antitrust regulator, gave the green light for the acquisition after Prosus offered commitments to address the bloc's concerns. Prosus has stakes in food business across more than 70 countries including full ownership of iFood, Latin America's leading food delivery platform, plus stakes in Delivery Hero and China's Meituan. One of Europe's most popular food delivery platforms, Just Eat operates in 17 international markets. The South African tech conglomerate Naspers Limited is the majority owner of Prosus. The remedies offered by Naspers include significantly reducing its share in Delivery Hero, "below a specified very low percentage, within 12 months and to implement a set of additional commitments". The commission said it could not disclose the ownership percentage for Delivery Hero, a Just Eat rival. Prosus currently holds a minority share of 27.4 percent in Delivery Hero. "The divestment and additional commitments ensure that Naspers will have no influence over nor material interest in Delivery Hero's commercial decisions or strategy," the commission said in a statement. Just Eat and Delivery Hero both offer online food delivery services in EU member states Austria, Bulgaria, Italy, Poland, and Spain. "We had concerns that the acquisition... could allow the parties to coordinate their behaviour in the food delivery market, reducing competition and consumer choice," EU competition chief Teresa Ribera said.