Slovakian President Robert Fico Assassination Attempt

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Slovakian President Robert Fico Assassination Attempt

Postby stickdog99 » Thu May 16, 2024 6:08 pm

This attempt my yet come true.

Was he shot for opposing escalating the Ukraine war, rejecting the WHO pandemic treaty, or ordering a national investigation into COVID-19 vaccines and pandemic measures?

That's hard to tell.

But he has been right-washed by corporate media.

Here are his domestic policies according to Spookipedia:

Domestic policy

Labour policies

At the start of his second term as Prime Minister in 2012, Fico introduced a new Labour Code, which granted entitlement to a lay-off notice period as well as severance pay, reduced overtime, making layoffs more expensive for employers, shorter temporary work contracts and more power for trade unions. In addition, it curbed the 'chaining' of fixed-term employment contracts, whereby currently it is possible to extend a fixed-term employment contract three times over three years.[62] The Code was revised in 2014 when it introduced severe restrictions of the work on agreement performed outside regular employment. Under the latest revision, employers will be able to conclude agreements with employees for 12 months only.[63]

Finance

One of few modifications Fico's government did implement was a slight modification to the unusual flat tax system introduced by the previous government, in a way that slightly decreased or eradicated a tax-free part of income for higher income earners. A lower value added tax was imposed on medications and books, though in spite of his election promises Fico failed to extend this onto a wider group of products such as groceries. Among the measures were controversial legislative changes which effectively banned private health insurance companies from generating profit. As a result, Slovakia is being sued by several foreign shareholders of local health insurers through international arbitrations.[64]

Road toll failure

In 2010, Fico faced large-scale protests and a blockade of major cities by truckers upset about what they considered to be badly implemented tolls on the highways. Truckers demanded that fuel prices be lowered to compensate for the tolls.[65] Fico initially refused to speak with representatives of the truckers, saying he would not "be blackmailed", but a few days later capitulated. The cuts given to truckers will amount to about €100,000,000.[65]

Food price regulation failure
In 2007, Fico unsuccessfully tried to regulate retail food prices, an unprecedented effort in a generally free market European Union.[66]

Nationalization attempts
In August 2008, Fico threatened the foreign shareholders of a local gas distributor SPP (the French Gaz de France and the German E.ON) with nationalization of their subsidiary and seizure of their ownership shares in a dispute over retail gas prices.[67][68]


Yep. A total right wing goon! Thank God we in the USA have viable, capable, philantrophic non-populist choices such as Trump and Biden!
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Re: Slovakian President Robert Fico Assassination Attempt

Postby DrEvil » Sat May 18, 2024 2:07 pm

He's leftist/center-left, always has been, but with some populism/nationalism usually associated with the right on top.
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Re: Slovakian President Robert Fico Assassination Attempt

Postby stickdog99 » Sat May 18, 2024 4:16 pm

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Re: Slovakian President Robert Fico Assassination Attempt

Postby stickdog99 » Sat May 18, 2024 4:40 pm

https://www.bnnbloomberg.ca/eu-tracking ... -1.2074037

The European Commission said it’s “actively monitoring” the spread of fake news about Wednesday’s shooting Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico and warned it can slap Big Tech platforms with fines for failing to tackle disinformation.

The regulator “is equipped with wide-ranging investigatory and supervisory powers, including the power to impose sanctions and remedies,” it said in an emailed statement.

Violations could be punished under the European Union’s tough new Digital Services Act, which forces online platforms to put into place measures to tackle illegal content and disinformation, uphold user rights, and protect user’s health and wellbeing.
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Re: Slovakian President Robert Fico Assassination Attempt

Postby stickdog99 » Sat May 18, 2024 4:49 pm

EU Big Brother is Watching News of Fico Assassination Attempt

Link includes 3 minute video of Fico discussing his crimes against hegemony.
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Re: Slovakian President Robert Fico Assassination Attempt

Postby SonicG » Sun May 19, 2024 4:47 am

Image

In memoriam of HMW who once postulated that "Fonzie" was named after a minor player in the Kennedy assassination to, uhm, distract us...
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Re: Slovakian President Robert Fico Assassination Attempt

Postby Joe Hillshoist » Thu May 23, 2024 5:51 pm

Statement by Commissioner Várhelyi

With reference to the statement made by the Prime Minister of Georgia on 23 May 2024, hereby I would like to express my very sincere regret that a certain part of my phone conversation was taken out of context.

As a Commissioner responsible for Neighbourhood and Enlargement I am in regular contact with Government officials of my portfolio countries, since communication channels always have to be kept open for direct political exchanges.

In the current political situation of Georgia, I have been investing major efforts in dissuading the Georgian political leadership to adopt the Law on Transparency of Foreign Influence which can undermine Georgia's EU path.

Being fully aware of the very strong pro-EU sentiment of the Georgian society, during my phone conversation I felt the need to call the attention of the Prime Minister on the importance not to enflame further the already fragile situation by adopting this law which could lead to further polarisation and to possible uncontrolled situations on the streets of Tbilisi. In this regard, the latest tragic event in Slovakia was made as an example and as a reference to where such high level of polarisation can lead in a society even in Europe.

Once again, I regret that one part of my phone call was not just fully taken out of context but was also presented to the public in a way which could give rise to a complete misinterpretation of the originally intended aim of my phone call.

I am still urging the Georgian authorities not to adopt this law.

I ask this also as a well known and so far respected friend of Georgia.

I am continuing to support Georgians working towards a European future.


https://ec.europa.eu/commission/pressco ... nt_24_2821

TBILISI -- Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Kobakhidze said he was warned by a European commissioner that if his government goes ahead with a controversial "foreign agent" law, he should be "very careful" in light of the recent assassination attempt of Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico, but an EU commissioner said his comments were taken out of context.

The Georgian prime minister alleged in a statement on May 23 that the commissioner "listed a number of measures that Western politicians might take" if the parliament overrides the president's veto of the law in a vote expected next week."

According to Kobakhidze, "While listing these measures, [the commissioner] mentioned, 'You've seen what happened to Fico and you should be very careful."

Fico was shot four times while greeting citizens last week in the central Slovakian town of Handlova. He is recuperating, and his condition was described on May 20 as stable.


https://www.rferl.org/a/georgian-prime- ... 61152.html
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Re: Slovakian President Robert Fico Assassination Attempt

Postby stickdog99 » Fri May 24, 2024 10:09 am

Nice to see you, Joe.

Great post.
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Re: Slovakian President Robert Fico Assassination Attempt

Postby Joe Hillshoist » Mon May 27, 2024 5:13 am

Thanks SD.

Its pretty crazy what that fella Kobakhidze said. Meanwhile people are trying to pin the unrest in New Caledonia on Russian interference.
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Re: Slovakian President Robert Fico Assassination Attempt

Postby stickdog99 » Mon Jun 03, 2024 5:02 pm

Many hyperlinks are provided at the link below.

Robert Fico’s failed assassination raises specter of Western plotting

Slovak PM Robert Fico’s independent stance earned him the wrath of NATO and the EU. Did a Western-directed plot to remove his troublesome government from office trigger his assassination attempt?

On May 15, Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico was almost murdered in broad daylight. While shaking hands with supporters during a public appearance, a gunman shot him twice in the abdomen and once in the shoulder. The attack left him fighting for his life while authorities raced for clues, and many observers at home and abroad puzzled about the would-be assassin’s motives and whether foreign actors were in some way responsible for the attack. And despite the shooter’s instantaneous arrest, those questions still linger weeks later.

Fico, a veteran Slovak political figure, was re-elected in September 2023 amid a wave of public resentment over the proxy war in Ukraine, pledging to end arms supplies to Kiev and anti-Russian sanctions. On the campaign trail, Western leaders, journalists and pundits aggressively stoked fears of the “pro-Putin,” “populist” candidate returning to office. Ukraine’s Western-backed “Center for Countering Disinformation” publicly accused him of spreading “infoterror” back in April 2022.

But many Slovakians see it differently. They say Fico is merely committed to defending Slovakia’s sovereignty, and governing in his nation’s interests, not those of Brussels, Kiev, London, and Washington. For Western politicians, his victory came at a highly inopportune time, with public and political consensus on the proxy war in Ukraine rapidly fraying across Europe.

Since Fico’s election, media outlets like Germany’s state broadcaster, Deutsche Welle, have branded him a “threat” to the EU and NATO. His declaration that Kiev must cede territory to Russia to end the war was not well-received in Western capitals. In April, the premier seemingly predicted his own shooting, warning that the virulent political climate in Bratislava could result in politicians getting killed.

Domestically, a number of foreign-funded media assets and NGOs have relentlessly targeted Fico for pursuing neutrality in the conflict. But over two years after Russia’s intervention, local polling indicates just 40% of the population blame Moscow for the proxy war, and 50% consider the US to be a threat to national security. Meanwhile, 69% of Slovakians believe by continuing to arm Ukraine, the West is “provoking Russia and bringing itself closer to the war” and 66% agreed that “the US is dragging [their] country into a war with Russia because it is profiting from it.”

When Fico was re-elected in September 2023, this journalist speculated that a color revolution could soon be impending in Slovakia. We are now left to ponder whether the Prime Minister’s attempted assassination was a Western-directed plot to remove his troublesome government from office. Even though he is finally on the road to recovery, the threat of an overseas-orchestrated coup remains. A vast US-sponsored opposition political and media infrastructure is causing havoc in Bratislava, and this could easily escalate further.

Slovakia has since the end of the Cold War stood apart from its neighbors. Folding the country into the EU and NATO and neutralizing its rebellious politics and population has required an enormous investment in time and money by Brussels and Washington, and relentless meddling in the country’s internal affairs by foreign-funded organizations and actors. Fico’s return to power threatened to not only derail that project, but create a regional contagion effect. Disinfecting the country therefore became of the utmost urgency for the West.

Facebook purge suggests shooter was no ‘lone wolf’
Fico’s shooter, 71-year-old Juraj Cintula, is among the Slovaks who do not support Fico’s positions. A discrepant picture of the man has emerged since his arrest. Some acquaintances describe him as “weird and angry,” and “against everything.” Others report he was meek and mild-mannered, a far from obvious candidate to attempt a high-level political assassination. Cintula, an avowed Kiev ultra, claims he acted alone, his actions motivated by a desire to replace Fico’s government with a pro-Ukrainian administration. Slovakian court documents state that Cintula “wants military aid to be provided to Ukraine and considers the current government to be Judas towards the European Union,” and say this perception is why the would-be assassin “decided to act.”

The mainstream media has made much of Cintula’s background as a dissident poet and writer, in a seeming effort to humanize the would-be killer. By contrast, Aaron Bushnell, who in February self-immolated in protest of Washington’s facilitation of the Gaza genocide, was widely tarred by journalists as a maladjusted, mentally unwell outcast. Unmentioned by any Western outlet is that during the 1980s, Cintula was under surveillance by Czechoslovak security services.

The reason for the Czechs’ interest is unclear, although it may have been due to anti-Communist actions, or foreign contacts. Whether Cintula had seditious confederates within or without Slovakia is a key line of inquiry for police. That all traces of the shooter’s Facebook profile were comprehensively scrubbed from the internet two hours after the shooting, before investigators could access the information, is also source of intense suspicion.

While it is customary for the social network to purge the profiles of “dangerous individuals” – a fate this journalist has suffered for investigative reporting – following such incidents, in Bratislava Facebook relies on cooperating local individuals and organizations to police content. Apparently, Cintula’s profile was wiped before his identity had been reported in local media. Slovak authorities must now rely on the FBI to secure and provide the deleted information. Whether whatever is turned over will be unexpurgated is an open question.

Another disturbing feature of mainstream reporting on the shooting is ubiquitous, persistent reference to Slovakia’s unstable politics. According to this narrative, Fico’s anti-Western policies have fueled the chaotic state of affairs, provoking the assassination attempt and making him ultimately responsible for the attempt on his life. In the days following the shooting, the BBC, Financial Times, New York Times and Germany’s esteemed Der Spiegel pinned the blame on Slovakia’s alleged “toxic” political culture. The latter revised its wording after significant public backlash.

One could be forgiven for concluding Western journalists take it as self-evident that defying EU/US will provides legitimate grounds for getting shot. Western politicians clearly do. On May 23rd, Georgian prime minister Irakli Kobakhidze revealed that EU commissioner Oliver Varhelyi warned him he could suffer the same fate as Fico, if his government didn’t drop a highly controversial “foreign influence transparency” law, which would compel local NGOs to disclose their sources of income.

After listing the various ways the EU could retaliate against Georgia in a phone call with Kobakhidze, Varhelyi allegedly stated: “Look what happened to Fico, you should be very careful.”

Varhelyi has since confirmed that he cited Fico’s fate in private conversations with Kobakhidze, but claimed he was merely concerned with “dissuading the Georgian political leadership” from adopting restrictions on foreign-funded NGOs. Varhelyi insisted in a written statement that he simply “felt the need” to caution the Prime Minister “not to enflame [sic] further the already fragile situation,” arguing that he only mentioned “the latest tragic event in Slovakia… as an example and as a reference to where such high levels of polarisation can lead in a society.”

Public records show the US government regime change specialists at the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) have pumped millions into NGOs and media outlets in Slovakia under the aegis of mundane-sounding initiatives such as “strengthening civil society” and “promoting democratic values among youth.” Similar language is used to describe the purpose of Endowment grants in Georgia, financing groups at the forefront of recent violent unrest on the streets of Tbilisi, as The Grayzone has documented. Perhaps unsurprisingly, NED grantees are unanimous in their opposition to Fico.

Anyone searching for the source of Slovakia’s “toxic” politics need not look further than these US-backed organizations. Washington has stirred this cauldron for almost three decades, and with all sides of the Slovakian political class blaming one another the rising tide of hatred, it is hoping the pot will finally boil over.

Regime change blueprint honed in Slovakia
The NED-organized overthrow of Slobodan Milosevic in Yugoslavia in 2000 established an insurrectionary blueprint which was subsequently exported in the form of color revolutions. But throughout the 1990s, Slovakian activists honed the tactics which would eventually be deployed by US regime change operatives across the Soviet sphere.

At the time, Bratislava was one of the only post-Communist countries that neither adopted ruinous neoliberal political and economic reforms, nor pursued EU or NATO membership. Slovakia’s then-Prime Minister Vladimir Meciar paid a harsh price for his independent stance. Relentlessly slandered by US and European leaders as a Russian pawn, he quickly became a target for regime change.

In 1997, then-Secretary of State Madeleine Albright publicly described Slovakia as “a black hole in the heart of Europe,” formally marking him for removal. So it was that NED funded the creation of Civic Campaign 98 (OK’98), a coalition of 11 anti-government NGOs.

Explicitly modeled on an earlier NED-funded effort in Bulgaria, concerned with “creating chaos” after the Socialist Party won the 1990 election, many of the individuals involved had been part of Cold War-era Czechoslovak anti-Communist dissident groups. OK’98 was publicly framed as a non-partisan get-out-the-vote campaign, but its vast resources were explicitly deployed for anti-government purposes. Its activities included rock concerts, short films, and TV infomercials in which Slovak celebrities urged young people to vote.

Meciar emerged with the most votes in the 1998 election, but the opposition gained enough seats to form a government. The NED assets who powered them to victory went on to give practical training to NED-supported pro-Western agitators like Pora, which ignited Kiev’s 2004 “Orange Revolution.” The insurrectionist youth group successfully overturned the re-election of President Viktor Yanukovych that year, installing the US-backed neoliberal Viktor Yushchenko in his place.

The return of Robert Fico represented a significant broadside against ongoing US “democratization” of the former Soviet sphere. It opened up the prospect of further anti-NATO candidates and governments gaining office elsewhere in Europe, at the most inconvenient juncture imaginable for Brussels and Washington.

Not coincidentally, it was at this time polling for Germany’s upstart Alternative für Deutschland became turbocharged. The Euroskeptic party’s standing has soared in recent months, eliciting mainstream calls to ban it outright. And in North Macedonia just one week prior to Fico’s shooting, the anti-establishment VMRO-DPMNE party returned to power, overturning a NATO-fuelled color revolution that removed the party from office almost a decade earlier.

As the anti-Western backlash gained steam, a decision may have been made to draw a bloody red line in Slovakia.
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Re: Slovakian President Robert Fico Assassination Attempt

Postby stickdog99 » Thu Jun 06, 2024 3:45 pm

Slovakian Prime Minister Fico's First Speech After Surviving Assassination Attempt, Hints At Why It Happened

Fico rejects the idea that it was just an isolated act by a "lone madman" and sees the attack as an escalation of an aggressive Western powers mindset that rejects differing opinions.

A great returning speech from the Slovakian Prime Minister, Robert Fico, after the assassination attempt on 15 May 2024.

After less than a month in hospital with serious injuries and repeated surgeries, Fico calmly forgives his attacker whilst describing the circumstances under which the assassination attempt happened. Worryingly, he warns of more violence if things don’t change.

I recommend you read or watch the whole speech. A transcript and the video is provided below.

Some key points include:

He sees the attacker as a "messenger of evil and political hatred" from the opposition;

He expects the opposition and media to downplay the severity of the attack;

He rejects the idea that it was just an isolated act by a "lone madman";

For months, he had warned about the increasing probability of violence against government politicians in Slovakia;

He believes his pro-sovereignty stance on issues like the Ukraine war that goes against the "single correct opinion" promoted by major Western powers angered the opposition;

Fico criticised major democracies’ interference in other countries' affairs and forced export of democracy;

Historically, he has opposed the bombing of Belgrade, withdrawal from Iraq and mandatory migrant quotas. Now, he is advocating for peace over military aid in Ukraine and criticises the EU and NATO’s stance;

The previous opposition government (2020-2023) abused power to eliminate the opposition through the legal system. Opposition were illegally detained and there were suspicious deaths;

The West didn’t ask any questions because they wanted political forces that benefited foreign interests;

After regaining power in 2023, his party reaffirmed a sovereign foreign policy not fully aligned with Western interests;

The opposition has become increasingly hateful and aggressive, emboldened by a lack of consequences. There have been physical threats against high-ranking politicians and the opposition sends paid provocateurs;

He sees the attack as an escalation of this aggressive opposition mindset that rejects differing opinions;

Despite the trauma, he wants the tragedy to serve as a lesson about the dangers of such hatred and political violence;

He calls for a return to democratic competition of differing views instead of trying to imprison or kill opponents.

Translation transcript and video provided here.
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