Centralne Biuro Antykorupcyjne

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Logo of the CBA

The Centralne Biuro Antykorupcyjne ( CBA ; German  Central Anti-Corruption Bureau ) is a special authority in Poland to fight corruption in the public sector and in the economy.

history

It was created under the Law and Justice Government (PiS) by law of January 23, 2006 and its employees are largely recruited from police officers, the domestic secret service Agencja Bezpieczeństwa Wewnętrznego ( Internal Security Agency ) and the Centralne Biuro Śledcze ( Central Investigation office ).

ladder

The CBA was set up by Mariusz Kamiński (CBA construction agent from July 6, 2006 to August 3, 2006, Sejm deputy for the III, IV, V and VII terms of office) and headed it until October 13, 2009 . After a short vacancy , Paweł Wojtunik took over the post from December 30, 2009 to December 1, 2015. Ernest Bejda has been the head of the authority since December 1, 2015 .

Employee

The office has around 1000 employees and an annual budget of around 108.1 million zlotys (2013). For a CBA employee, 113,000 zlotys are spent annually, for a police officer (earnings and equipment) only 83,000 zloty. The average gross wage of CBA employees is 5200 zloty per month.

Web links

Commons : Centralne Biuro Antykorupcyjne  - collection of images, videos and audio files