World
Polish judicial reforms struck down & major Ukraine dam bursts

The EU’s top court ruled that Warsaws changes to its judiciary were incompatible with European law.
It was a bad week for Poland’s right-wing government after the European Court of Justice ruled that several aspects of the country’s judicial reforms violated EU law.
And this law is what defines the EU’s “very identity”, the judges in Luxembourg said on Monday.
In response to the ruling, the Polish Justice Minister Zbigniew Ziobro said the Court was “corrupt”.
The controversial judicial reform is not the only way the Polish government wants to cement its power though. Its new law, ostensibly to counter Russian influence, is designed to curb the running room of political opponents, critics say.
This had aroused the suspicion of the European Commission which, just two days after the ruling, went on the offensive.
“The College [of Commissioners] agreed to start an infringement procedure by sending a letter of formal notice in relation to the new law on the state committee for examination of Russian influence,” European Commission Vice-President, Valdis Dombrovskis said.
This week’s ruling and the announced new proceedings mean that Poland could face further EU fines – and would not see any of the pandemic recovery money that Brussels is withholding to force Warsaw to comply with EU law any time soon.
Dam blown in Ukraine
There is one topic, though, where Poland has proven to be a reliable partner, and that is its steadfast support of Ukraine – which brings us to the horrifying escalation of the war this week.
A huge Soviet-era dam on the Dnipro River that separates Ukrainian and Russian forces in southern Ukraine was breached. It unleashed floodwaters across the combat zone.
More than 40,000 people were at risk from the mass flooding, many of them have been evacuated, several have drowned in what has been described as a humanitarian and ecological disaster of monumental proportions.
At the same time, and this was a curious coincidence, Russia and Ukraine met for hearings at the International Court of Justice in the Hague in a case brought by Kyiv against Moscow, linked to the Russian annexation of Crimea in 2014.
Seizing an unexpected opportunity, representatives of both sides accused each other of acts of sabotage and destruction.
“Russia cannot defeat us on the battlefield. So, it targets civilian infrastructure to try to freeze us into submission,” Anton Korynevych, a Ukrainian diplomat said.
“Actually, Ukraine did it. The Kyiv regime not only launched massive artillery attacks against the dam (…), but it also deliberately raised the water level of the Kakhovka reservoir to a critical level by opening the gates,” Russian diplomat Alexander Shulgin responded.
It is still not clear what happened, although Western capitals seemed to put the blame on Russia.
And some see it as a desperate attempt by Putin to escalate a war he has not been winning so far.
Is this the beginning of Putin’s end game? Is this his strategy to destroy the things he cannot get?
Sven Biscop, Director for Europe in the World programme at the Egmont Royal Institute for International Relations in Brussels told Euronews not just yet.
“For the moment, one sees very few signs of this and it seems that there is still strong popular support for the war,” Biscop said in an interview.
“That may evolve, but for the moment it is there. It is also difficult to see who might take the initiative to push Putin away, because this would obviously be an enormous risk. And I think the only ones who can do that are those who are in control of military force.
“So, for the moment, I think we better base our strategy on the most likely scenario, which is that the regime will stay in power and will continue the war.”

World
Maldives parliament removes two Supreme Court judges

The Parliament of the Maldives has impeached two judges of the country’s Supreme Court, deepening a political crisis triggered by President Mohamed Muizzu’s push to amend the constitution and strip legislators of their seats if they switch political parties.
The Parliament, where the governing People’s National Congress holds a supermajority, voted on Wednesday to remove Justices Azmiralda Zahir and Mahaz Ali Zahir on allegations of abuse of power.
The vote, which passed 68 – 11, took place as dozens of opposition supporters rallied outside the Parliament House, calling for Muizzu’s resignation and an end to what they called the intimidation of judges.
The move comes more than two months after the judicial watchdog, dominated by Muizzu’s allies, suspended the two judges and their colleague, Justice Husnu al-Suood. At the time, the seven-member Supreme Court bench had been holding hearings into a petition challenging the anti-defection amendments.
Suood later resigned from the top court, accusing Muizzu and Attorney General Ahmed Usham of intimidating all the judges of the Supreme Court to secure a judgement in their favour.
The president and his lawyer deny the charges.
“I do not interfere with the judiciary,” Muizzu told reporters during a 14-hour news conference on May 3. “I have never done so. I do not control the [the judicial watchdog].”
The crisis has brought the Maldives’s Supreme Court to a near halt, pausing hearings in all ongoing cases, including on the constitutional amendments. It has also raised fears of renewed instability in the Indian Ocean honeymoon destination, which held its first multiparty elections in 2008, but has been roiled by political turmoil since, including a coup d’etat, disputed elections, and the killings and jailing of dissidents.
‘Attack on judiciary’
Azmiralda and Mahaz denounced their impeachment.
“This is an attack on the Maldivian judiciary. It is no ordinary matter to bring the Maldives Supreme Court to a halt,” Azmiralda said in a statement. “My hope is that one day, when the rule of law is established in this country … all of the various officials who took part in destroying the Supreme Court are held accountable.”
The case against the two judges stems from the arrest of Azmiralda’s husband, Ismail Latheef, during a police raid on a spa where he was receiving a massage in the Maldivian capital, Male, on December 4 of last year.
The incident happened two weeks after Muizzu ratified the anti-defection measures.
The controversial amendments stipulate that legislators elected on a political party ticket would lose their seat if they switch parties, or if they resign or are expelled from their party. The provisions effectively allow Muizzu to maintain his supermajority in Parliament, where his party controls 79 of the chamber’s 93 seats.
The president has argued they are necessary to “improve political stability”, but opponents say they would destroy the country’s system of checks and balances.
At the time of Latheef’s arrest, a former member of parliament had filed a petition at the Supreme Court challenging the legality of the amendments, but the bench had yet to decide to take up the case.
Latheef was held overnight for more than 12 hours, on charges of soliciting a prostitute, but was released by a judge at the Criminal Court. In the ruling, the judge noted that the masseuse treating Latheef was fully clothed at the time of the raid, and that the room they were in was unlocked.
The prosecutor’s office later shelved the case against Latheef, citing a lack of evidence.
But after the Supreme Court began reviewing the constitutional amendments in February, the watchdog Judicial Services Commission (JSC) took up a separate case against Azmiralda and Mahaz, claiming the two judges had unlawfully lobbied lower court judges to secure Latheef’s release.
The JSC recommended that the Parliament impeach them last month.
‘No ulterior motives’
The judges have denied the charges, with lawyers for Azmiralda saying that the case was “manufactured by top government officials to suspend” them “in order to influence the outcome of the constitutional case before the Supreme Court”.
Usham, the Attorney General, has told Al Jazeera that the government “categorically denies these allegations”.
“There is absolutely no truth to the claim that the executive branch had any hand in the JSC’s [the judicial watchdog’s] decision,” he wrote in an email. “The suspension was pursuant to law and… any suggestion of ulterior motives is firmly rejected by the Government.”
The case, however, has drawn criticism from the United Nations and rights groups.
Margaret Satterthwaite, the UN’s special rapporteur on the independence of judges and lawyers, expressed grave concern last month over the action against the three judges, saying they appear to be aimed at undermining the Supreme Court’s judicial review of the anti-defection measures.
“The disciplinary proceedings brought against three of the Supreme Court’s Justices appear to violate the principle that judges can only be dismissed on serious grounds of misconduct or incompetence and in accordance with fair procedures guaranteeing objectivity and impartiality as provided for by the Constitution or the law,” she wrote. “The pressure of suspensions, disciplinary proceedings and investigations may amount to an interference in the independence of this institution.”
World
Top US Senate Democrat to block Trump DOJ nominees over Qatar airplane

World
Self-proclaimed 'king of Germany' arrested in plot to overthrow government

The self-styled “king” of Germany and three of his senior “subjects” were arrested for attempting to overthrow the state, according to media reports.
Peter Fitzek, 59, was taken into police custody during morning raids conducted Tuesday in seven German states, the BBC reported.
Fitzek’s group, the Reichsbürger, or “citizens of the Reich,” has also been banned by the government.
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Peter Fitzek, the self-proclaimed head of the so-called “Kingdom of Germany,” poses for a photo with the kingdom’s constitution in Wittenberg, Germany, Oct. 23, 2023. (Jens Schlueter/AFP via Getty Images)
The group’s aim is to establish the Königreich Deutschland, or “Kingdom of Germany.”
“I have no interest in being part of this fascist and satanic system,” Fitzek previously told the news outlet in a 2022 interview.
Reichsbürgers reportedly have their own currency, flag and identification cards and want to set up separate banking and health systems.
The Reichsbürger undermined “the rule of law,” said Alexander Dobrindt, Germany’s interior minister, by creating an alternative state and spreading “antisemitic conspiracy narratives to back up their supposed claim to authority,” the news report states.
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Peter Fitzek, the self-proclaimed head of the so-called “Kingdom of Germany,” shows the paper currency he created himself in Wittenberg, Germany, Oct. 23, 2023. (Jens Schlueter/AFP)
He said the group finances itself through crime.
Fitzek, who claims to have thousands of “subjects,” denied having violent intentions but also called Germany “destructive and sick.”
In 2022, dozens of people associated with the Reichsbürger were arrested for plotting to overthrow the German government in Berlin. They were accused of planning a violent coup, which included kidnapping the health minister in an effort to create “civil war conditions” to bring down German democracy, according to the BBC.

Self-made identity and banking documents of the so-called “Kingdom of Germany” are pictured in Wittenberg, Germany, Oct. 23, 2023. (Jens Schlueter/AFP via Getty Images)
Once dismissed as eccentric by critics, the group is now seen within Germany as a serious threat as the far right has grown politically over the past decade, the report said.
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