NewsSlovak PM defies EU envoy, to attend Victory Day in Moscow

Slovak PM defies EU envoy, to attend Victory Day in Moscow

The Slovak Prime Minister announced his participation in the Victory Day celebrations in Moscow, despite warnings from EU diplomat Kaja Kallas. In an emotional statement, he accused her of disrespect and attempting to impose political decisions on a sovereign nation.

Putin's meeting with Fico in Moscow
Putin's meeting with Fico in Moscow
Images source: © East News | IMAGO/Gavriil Grigorov
Mateusz Czmiel

What do you need to know?

  • Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico announced his participation in the Victory Day celebrations in Moscow, despite warnings from EU diplomat Kaja Kallas.
  • Kaja Kallas opposed the participation of EU candidate countries in the celebrations in Moscow on May 9 and warned that participation would be taken seriously.
  • Fico, in response, accused Kallas of disrespect and attempting to impose political decisions on a sovereign nation.

We do not want EU candidate countries to participate in the Victory Day celebrations in Moscow on May 9 - said EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas on Monday after a meeting of EU foreign ministers. She warned that participation in the celebrations in Moscow on May 9 would be taken seriously.

Prime Minister Fico stands up to Brussels

His words were echoed by the pro-Russian Prime Minister Robert Fico, who sympathizes with the Russian leader, Vladimir Putin.

"I will go to Moscow on May 9th. Is Ms. Kallas's warning a form of blackmail or a signal that I will be punished upon my return from Moscow? I don’t know. But I do know that the year is 2025, not 1939. Ms. Kallas’s warning confirms that we need a discussion within the EU about the essence of democracy. About what happened in Romania and France in connection with presidential elections, about the "Maidans" organized by the West in Georgia and Serbia, and how the abuse of criminal law against the opposition in Slovakia has been ignored," Fico wrote on the X portal.

"Ms. Kallas, I would like to inform you that I am the legitimate Prime Minister of Slovakia – a sovereign country. No one can dictate to me where I can or cannot travel. I will go to Moscow to pay tribute to the thousands of Red Army soldiers who died liberating Slovakia, as well as to the millions of other victims of Nazi terror. Just as I have paid tribute to the victims of the Normandy landings, or those in the Pacific, or as I plan to honor the RAF pilots," he added.

Fico considers himself one of the "few in the EU who consistently speaks about the need for peace in Ukraine and does not support the continuation of this senseless war." "Ms. Kallas’s words are disrespectful and I strongly object to them," he concluded.

Military parade in Moscow

Russia organizes its celebration of the end of World War II on May 9. On this occasion, various events are organized throughout Russia. A military parade will be held in Moscow; among others, soldiers who fought in Ukraine will march in it.

Among those who announced their participation in the event are the Chinese leader Xi Jinping, the Belarusian dictator Alexander Lukashenko, and Aleksandar Vučić, the President of Serbia, one of the nine countries applying for EU membership.

In addition to Serbia, the countries with candidate status for the Union are Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Georgia, Moldova, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Turkey and Ukraine.


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