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Slovakia's PM slams judge over conviction of central bank boss
Slovakia's PM slams judge over conviction of central bank boss

Al Jazeera

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • Al Jazeera

Slovakia's PM slams judge over conviction of central bank boss

Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico has criticised a judge who convicted the governor of the country's central bank in a corruption case. Reacting to the conviction of Petr Kazimir, his former finance minister, the combative premier suggested on Friday that the verdict was politically motivated, and that Specialised Criminal Court judge Milan Cisarik should be investigated for criminal acts. Since returning to power in 2023, Fico has torn down police and prosecutor units set up to investigate corruption during his previous years in power between 2012 – 2020. Kazimir was found guilty and fined 200,000 euros ($226,500) on Thursday for bribing a tax official during his tenure as finance minister in Fico's previous government. Claiming that the longstanding charges were fabricated, he denied any wrongdoing and said that he plans to appeal. 'The judge's decision raises the question whether it should have served political aims of the opposition to damage the ruling parties, because even a law faculty student must see fatal nonsense in the verdict,' the Slovak leader said on Thursday. 'I cannot shake off the feeling that it is justified to look at potential suspicion that the judge committed multiple criminal acts and at what the ruling was supposed to serve.' The court did not respond to Fico's remarks. The For Open Justice (ZOJ) NGO warned: 'Questioning a specific judgment through public statements by members of the government can also be perceived as indirect political pressure on the judiciary.' Fico fell from power in 2020 amid the scandal over the 2018 assassination of investigative journalist Jan Kuciak. The new government set up special units to investigate a suspected network of corruption around the former PM and his inner circle. Fico routinely complained that the measures were politically motivated. On returning to power in late 2023, he immediately began tearing up the units and amended the criminal code to lower punishments for corruption. Critics have accused him of becoming obsessed with exacting revenge on those involved in probes against his circle. Kazimir, was the first of Fico's former ministers to stand trial when he first faced the court in April 2023 accused of paying a bribe of 48,000 euros ($54,360) in 2017-18 to the chief of the country's tax office, in connection with an audit of a number of private companies. His term at the head of the National Bank of Slovakia ends on June 1, but he will stay on until a replacement is appointed.

Slovakia's Fico excoriates judge over central banker bribery conviction
Slovakia's Fico excoriates judge over central banker bribery conviction

Reuters

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • Reuters

Slovakia's Fico excoriates judge over central banker bribery conviction

May 30 (Reuters) - Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico lambasted a judge who fined central bank Governor Petr Kazimir for corruption on Thursday, saying the judge might be politically motivated and should be probed for criminal behaviour. Specialised Criminal Court judge Milan Cisarik imposed a 200,000 euro ($227,680) fine on Kazimir for bribing a tax authority chief when he was finance minister in Fico's previous government, before he took on the central bank job and a seat on the European Central Bank's policymaking council in 2019. Kazimir denied any wrongdoing. "The judge's decision raises the question whether it should have served political aims of the opposition to damage the ruling parties, because even a law faculty student must see fatal nonsense in the verdict," Fico said late Thursday. "I cannot shake off the feeling that it is justified to look at potential suspicion that the judge committed multiple criminal acts and at what the ruling was supposed to serve." The court declined to comment. Fico regularly accused prosecutors and judges of improperly targeting him and his allies when he was in opposition in 2020-2023. The ruling is not final, as Kazimir flagged he would appeal to a higher court, and so it does not force him to stand down from the central bank. His term ends on June 1, but he will stay on until a replacement is appointed. There has been no political agreement for a process involving the government, parliament and president. Nationalist European leaders like Fico and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban have often attacked the judiciary and clashed with the European Union over the rule of law. In February, thousands of Hungarian judges, court staff and supporters marched to the ministry of justice to demand judicial independence, freedom of expression and better pay. ($1 = 0.8823 euros)

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