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The ministry also holds responsibility for matters related to international trade, the rights of its expatriates, monitoring human rights and crisis situations abroad, and the spread of information about Slovakia internationally. [4] The ministry is also involved in the affairs of the Visegrád Group (V4), a grouping of Central European states ...
The Government of the Slovak Republic (Slovak: Vláda Slovenskej republiky) exercises executive authority in Slovakia. It is led by the Prime Minister of Slovakia , who is nominated by the President of Slovakia and is usually the leader of the majority party or a majority coalition after an election to the National Council of the Slovak Republic .
The ministry was founded in 1990 as the "Ministry of International Relations of Slovak Republic". Since 1992, it has been known by the name "Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Slovak Republic". [1] "European Affairs" was added to its name in 2012. [2]
Thousands of people took to the streets of Slovakia's capital Bratislava on Tuesday to show support for Ukraine and protest against the Slovak government, which critics say has veered too close to ...
Slovakia’s new government, led by populist Prime Minister Robert Fico who ended the country’s military aid for Ukraine, won a mandatory confidence vote in Parliament on Tuesday. Of the 143 ...
Greek Foreign Affairs Ministry about relations with Slovakia Archived 14 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine; Slovak Foreign Affairs Ministry about relations with Greece Hungary: 1993: See Hungary–Slovakia relations. Hungary has an embassy in Bratislava. [41] Slovak Republic has an embassy Budapest and a general consulate in Békéscsaba. [42]
Fico, a three-time prime minister last in power in 2018, won an election on Sept. 30 with pledges to halt military aid to Ukraine, while taking a hard line on rising illegal migration and a surge ...
He is currently the minister of Foreign and European Affairs of Slovakia. He served as a member of the National Council from 2002 to 2006 and again from 2010 to 2023. Blanár was a Deputy Speaker of the National Council from 2020 until 2023. [1] Between 2005 and 2017 he served as the governor of the Žilina Region. [2]