Lustracja obejmie też zagraniczne spółki na GPW

16.03.07, 13:25
a oni sie maja zlustrowac pod katem wspolpracy z naszymi czy swoimi sluzbami?
    • omcrew a z jakiej okazji sposrod zagranicznych 16.03.07, 13:35
      spolek wymieniany jest tylko MOL??
      jakas sugestia??
    • Gość: prof. Lepper Dziś lustrujemy Polskę IP: *.jjs.pl 16.03.07, 13:44
      und heute die ganze Welt!
      • Gość: m-kow Re: Dziś lustrujemy Polskę IP: *.crowley.pl 16.03.07, 13:49
        Już się zbiera Zarząd PepsiCo :)
        • Gość: Wojtas Re: Dziś lustrujemy Polskę IP: *.a1.net 16.03.07, 14:37
          Już się zbiera Zarząd PepsiCo i lustruje się......
          wzrokiem.
    • kwakwarakwa A kiedy nastąpi lustracja samej lustracji 16.03.07, 14:46
      to wtedy przyjdzie sanitariusz Zenek i da niektórym zastrzyk, co bardziej
      agresywni pacjenci dostaną lewatywę i płukanie żołądka (ewentualnie lizanie
      chininy).
      A po kolacji siostra oddziałowa zgasi światło na oddziale z napisem IV RP.
      Pacjent Antoni M. dostanie pluszaka do wybebeszenia, ale tylko jak będzie grzeczny.
    • ludvica Re: MI6 odmówiło przesłania mojej teczki 16.03.07, 15:22
    • galan12 i po co tu wymyślać polish jokes? vide Kaczoland 16.03.07, 15:36
      i po co tu wymyślać polish jokes? vide Kaczoland
      • Gość: Bajdy z Kaczolandu Re: i po co tu wymyślać polish jokes? vide Kaczol IP: *.natpool5.outside.ucf.edu 16.03.07, 16:23
        Fakt! To co sie w Polsce ostatnio dzieje (i co jeszcze moze sie dziac...) juz
        dawno przekroczylo wyobraznie autorow tych tzw. "Polish jokes"!!!
    • galan12 Re: Lustracja obejmie też zagraniczne spółki na G 16.03.07, 15:40
      wszystkie byle nie watykańskie
    • Gość: Alex O Kaczolandzie w zachodniej prasie (1) IP: *.europe.hp.net 16.03.07, 16:00
      Poland's anti-communist witch-hunt 'risks business chaos'
      By Jan Cienski in Warsaw

      Published: March 15 2007 02:00 | Last updated: March 15 2007 02:00

      Polish companies fear the government's anti-communist witch-hunt could lead to
      chaos, the organisation that represents Warsaw-listed groups says.

      A law that comes into force today will compel board members and managers of
      listed companies to confess if they had been informants for communist-era
      secret police. Executives who refuse to co-operate with the so-called
      lustration process or who are caught lying about their past would be banned
      from working for public companies for 10 years.

      "What happens if the result is a paralysis in a company without a board and
      management?" said Beata Stelmach, the president of the Association of Stock
      Exchange Issuers, which represents Warsaw-listed companies.

      Arkadiusz Mularczyk, an MP for the ruling Law and Justice party who was
      instrumental in widening the law to cover public companies, said: "If someone
      has nothing to hide they have nothing to worry about. It is a simple
      declaration: if you were or were not a secret agent. If you were there is still
      no problem, as long as you admit what you did."

      Lustration was necessary because "communists used their contacts and money to
      take important positions in corporations" in the transition to democracy, he
      said.

      The law covers all institutions under the jurisdiction of the Financial
      Supervision Authority (KNF), Poland's new unified banking, corporate and
      financial markets regulator. It also covers journalists, local and national
      politicians, lawyers, directors of public and private schools and university
      professors born before August 1 1972 - up to 700,000 people, by some estimates.

      Law and Justice has long been obsessed with the influence that ex-communists
      and former secret agents still supposedly wield, although investigations have
      found little proof of the "grey web" that Jaroslaw Kaczynski, the prime
      minister, sees as entwining and corrupting the country.

      The KNF had asked the Institute of National Remembrance, which will oversee the
      process, to clarify the situation of foreign companies, said Lukasz Dajnowicz,
      a KNF spokesman. There are 13 foreign companies listed on the Warsaw exchange,
      including MOL, the Hungarian oil company.

      The Catholic church is exempt from the legislation, although priests who work
      as teachers or who publish, even if only a parish bulletin, must "lustrate"
      themselves.

      Lustration has been boycotted by some prominent journalists. Others, like Igor
      Janke, a columnist for the Rzeczpospolita newspaper, say Poland needs to rid
      itself of the spectre of communism, 17 years after the system collapsed and
      long after other Soviet bloc countries forced people to come clean.

      "The people reading us should know if we have hidden motives," he said.
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