Slovak Prime Minister Underwent Another Operation, Remains in Serious Condition

Slovak Prime Minister Underwent Another Operation, Remains in Serious Condition
Slovakia's Prime Minister Robert Fico speaks during a press conference with Hungary's Prime Minister Viktor Orban at the Carmelite Monastery in Budapest, Hungary, on Jan. 16, 2024. Denes Erdos/AP Photo
The Associated Press
Updated:

BRATISLAVA, Slovakia—Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico has undergone another operation two days after being shot multiple times and remains in serious condition, officials said Friday.

Mr. Fico, 59, was attacked as he was greeting supporters after a government meeting in the former coal mining town of Handlova. A suspected assailant has been arrested.

Miriam Lapunikova, director of the University F. D. Roosevelt hospital in Banska Bystrica, where Mr. Fico was taken by helicopter after he was shot, said Mr. Fico underwent a CT scan and is currently awake and stable in an intensive care unit. She described his condition as “very serious.”

She said the surgery removed dead tissues that had remained inside Mr. Fico’s body.

“I think it will take several more days until we will definitely know the direction of the further development,” Robert Kaliniak, the defense minister and deputy prime minister, told reporters at the hospital.

Still, Mr. Kaliniak stressed that the government continues to work.

“The ministries are working on all their duties, nothing is frozen or halted, the country goes on,“ he told reporters. “The state is stable and today the patient is stable as well.”

Earlier Friday the man charged with attempting to assassinate Mr. Fico was escorted by police to his home. Local media reported that it was part of a search for evidence.

Police escort a man (C) believed to be the suspect for Wednesday's assassination attempt on Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico from his home in Levice, Slovakia, on May 17, 2024. (TVNoviny via AP)
Police escort a man (C) believed to be the suspect for Wednesday's assassination attempt on Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico from his home in Levice, Slovakia, on May 17, 2024. TVNoviny via AP

Mr. Markiza, a Slovak television station, showed footage of the suspect being taken to his home in the town of Levice on Friday morning, and reported that police had seized a computer and some documents. Police did not comment.

Prosecutors have told police not to publicly identify the suspect or release other details about the case. The suspect’s detention will be reviewed at a hearing Saturday at Slovakia’s Specialized Criminal Court in Pezinok, outside the capital Bratislava.

Unconfirmed media reports suggested he was a 71-year-old retiree who was known as an amateur poet, and may have previously worked as a security guard at a mall in the country’s southwest.

Government authorities on Thursday gave details that matched that description. They said the suspect did not belong to any political groups, though the attack itself was politically motivated.

Slovakia’s presidential office said Friday that it was working to organize a meeting of leaders of all parliamentary parties for Tuesday. Outgoing President Zuzana Caputova announced the plan together with President-elect Peter Pellegrini, who succeeds her in mid June, in an attempt to reduce social tensions in the country.

At the start of Russia’s invasion, Slovakia was one of Ukraine’s staunchest supporters, but Mr. Fico halted arms deliveries to Ukraine when he returned to power, his fourth time serving as prime minister.

Mr. Fico’s government has also made efforts to overhaul public broadcasting—a move critics said would give the government full control of public television and radio. That, coupled with his plans to amend the penal code to eliminate a special anti-graft prosecutor, have led opponents to worry that Mr. Fico will lead Slovakia down a more autocratic path.

Thousands of demonstrators have repeatedly rallied in the capital and around the country of 5.4 million to protest his policies.

Mr. Fico said last month on Facebook that he believed rising tensions in the country could lead to the murder of politicians, and he blamed the media for fueling tensions.

Before Mr. Fico returned to power last year, many of his political and business associates were the focus of police investigations, and dozens have been charged.

His plan to overhaul of the penal system would eliminate the office of the special prosecutor that deals with organized crime, corruption and extremism.