Slovak leaders set for tense meeting on political reconciliation
The office of the currently serving President of Slovakia, Zuzana Čaputová, sent out invitations on Friday to the leaders of parliamentary political parties for a scheduled meeting with President-elect Peter Pellegrini on Tuesday at 9:30 AM Greenwich Time. Čaputová and Pellegrini want to issue a joint statement about rejecting hate. Two coalition parties have not confirmed their participation in this meeting.
18 May 2024 13:23
The meeting is seen as a gesture, which could help in ending hate and deep divisions in the country. Čaputová and Pellegrini proposed the idea on Thursday, a day after the attack on Slovakia's Prime Minister, Robert Fico.
In the context of the planned meeting, President-elect Pellegrini proposed issuing a joint statement emphasising core values and rejecting hate and aggression. Pellegrini expressed the belief that politicians should send a signal of solidarity and reconciliation. Four opposition parties have confirmed their attendance at the meeting. Their representatives believe that the country needs a strong gesture that could put an end to the campaign of hateful slander and mutual accusations. This should be a clean break from the past at the "round table."
Not everyone confirmed participation in the meeting
The ruling coalition in Slovakia consists of three parties. The leader of one of them, the Voice of Social Democracy (Hlas-SD), is the President-elect. At the scheduled meeting, Hlas will most likely be represented by Interior Minister Matusz Szutaj Esztok. The participation of the President-elect’s party in the meeting raises no doubts.
The largest party in the coalition is the Direction – Slovak Social Democracy (Smer-SSD). This is the party of Prime Minister Fico, who was seriously injured in the attack and is currently fighting for his life in hospital. After the attack, the forefront of the party, which won the parliamentary elections in the autumn of 2023, became Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Defence, and Deputy Chairman of Smer, Robert Kaliňák. When asked about his participation in the meeting at the Presidential Palace, Kaliňák responded that he knew about the invitation but had not yet had time to consider it and could not discuss it with the Prime Minister.
"We cannot move forward until there is accountability"
"There is no doubt that our society needs reconciliation and mutual respect. The way to achieve this is not through false political correctness," emphasised Kaliňák. He added that we cannot move forward until there is accountability for the statements of some politicians and journalists who labelled Fico as a criminal, dictator, or evil that must be stopped.
Similar sentiments were expressed by another Deputy Chairman of Smer and Deputy Chairman of the Parliament, Ľuboš Blaha, who, in a post on social media, distanced himself from the meeting, accusing the opposition of still "spreading hate while Robert Fico lies in hospital." Blaha is a politician who last year was banned by a court from calling President Čaputová an American agent or a traitor.
The strongest opposition to the planned meeting came from the leader of the smallest coalition party, the Slovak National Party (SNS), Andrej Danko. - What do I have to do with Čaputová? - He said. He added that the only person who can tell him to go to the Presidential Palace on Tuesday is Fico. - If Robert Fico says we should cooperate, I will stand beside Smer - emphasised the SNS leader.