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Matej Varga faces up to 10 years in prison over covert operation during a politically charged case involving PM Robert Fico.
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Fico’s party brands protester with axe a ‘threat’ – but police saw no reason to prosecute - MSNAs Slovakia marks one year since the attempted assassination of Prime Minister Robert Fico, his party, Smer, is using the anniversary not only to call for an end to political hatred – but also ...
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Slovak opposition leads Fico's party in the latest polls - MSNThe largest opposition party, Progresívne Slovensko (Progressive Slovakia), is ahead of Prime Minister Robert Fico's Smer-SD party, in opinion polls. The gap between them is slight, this is ...
Robert Fico of Slovakia's left-wing Smer party has once again been sworn in as the eastern European nation's prime minister. Fico has previously held the office three other times.
The mood soured further when a journalist from the news website 360 tried to ask about political matters. “Learn the ...
Slovakia’s populist Prime Minister Robert Fico suggested Tuesday that his country might be better off neutral as he and other ...
Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico addresses the nation for the first time after the shooting, before the EU Parliamentary Election, in Bratislava, Slovakia, in this screengrab ...
Mr Fico and his SMER, or Direction party, ... Robert Fico is a populist leader who staged a political comeback last year. The 59-year-old has previously been compared to former US president Donald ...
BUDAPEST, Hungary — Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico was shot multiple times after a political event Wednesday afternoon, an episode of violence that punctuated his decades-long career in politics.
The party of Robert Fico, the former prime minister, received an unprecedented 44.4 percent of the vote, which will allow for ruling without a coalition partner.
Michal Šimečka, the head of Progressive Slovakia, which is currently the most popular party in the country, said the opposition will do what it takes to protect freedom and democracy.
Slovakia's populist Prime Minister Robert Fico has suggested that his country might be better off neutral as he and other officials prepared for a NATO summit next week.
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