Fico said that his trip, a rare visit to the Kremlin by a European Union leader since Moscow’s all-out invasion of Ukraine began on Feb. 24, 2022, was a reaction to Ukraine’s move to halt Russian gas supplies to European customers through its pipeline network after a prewar transit deal expired at the end of 2024.
Thousands rally across Slovakia to protest prime minister's pro-Russia policies Thousands of Slovaks took to the streets on Friday as protests against the pro-Russia policies of populist Prime Minister Robert Fico spread from Slovakia's capital to towns and cities across the country and abroad.
He threatened to end sending electricity supplies to Ukraine, reduce support for Ukrainian refugees, halt humanitarian aid and block EU financial aid to Ukraine in retaliation.
Štasselová said that Fico went to Moscow “at a time when our neighbors face a huge military aggression, at a time when the whole civilized and democratic world condemns this aggression.”.
Fico’s meeting with Putin is “unacceptable,” protest organizer Lucia Štasselová from the Peace to Ukraine’s nongovernmental organization told the crowd in Bratislava.