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Politics

Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico to resign

March 14, 2018

Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico says he is ready to step down to ease the political crisis engulfing the country. His coalition has come under mounting pressure following the murder of an investigative journalist.

Robert Fico
Image: Getty Images/AFP/V. Simicek

Slovakia's prime minister, Robert Fico, said Wednesday he was prepared to resign on the condition that his social democratic Smer-SD party gets to choose a successor.

"Today I have offered my resignation to the president of the republic," Fico said. "If the president accepts it, I am ready to resign tomorrow."

Read more: Mafia ties and journalist's murder threaten to bring down government

The shock announcement is seen as an attempt by the embattled prime minister to keep his three-party coalition in power and avoid snap polls.

"Early elections would be almost certainly accompanied by chaos and instability," Fico said. 

Slovak PM Fico offers resignation

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Brutal killing

Fico's government has been plunged into crisis following the murder of Slovak journalist Jan Kuciak and his fiancee in February. The 27-year-old reporter had been investigating high-level corruption and alleged Mafia links to politicians and businessmen in Slovakia.

Read moreOpinion: Warning signal for Europe from Slovakia

The killings reignited debate about corruption and press freedom in Slovakia, triggering mass anti-government demonstrations across the country. Protesters also demanded Fico's government step down and hold early elections. 

Police have interviewed more than 100 people as part of the investigation into the deaths, but no one has yet been charged.

Political crisis

Slovakia's opposition had called for a no-confidence vote to be held against Fico's government next Monday.

Earlier this week, a junior partner in the Fico-led coalition, the Most-Hid party, threatened to leave the alliance unless fresh elections were held. President Andrej Kiska has also called for sweeping changes, or early elections, to solve the crisis. But Fico has rejected the idea of polls, saying the country could "plunge into chaos if the current opposition takes power."

It was not immediately clear if Kiska would agree to the terms of Fico's resignation. 

nm/jm (AP, Reuters)

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