Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Slovak foreign minister resigns as government teeters

Foreign Minister Ivan Korcok is one of six to step down after President Zuzana Caputova demanded the prime minister's resignatio­n. The education minister also quit on Wednesday.

-

Slovakia's Foreign Minister Ivan Korcok resigned on Wednesday amid a political crisis over the government's handling of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Korcok announceme­nt comes as he attends talks with his opposite numbers from the NATO alliance.

The Education Minister Branislav Gröhling also resigned earlier on Wednesday.

Slovakia's liberal President Zuzana Caputova has demanded the Prime Minister Igor Matovic to step down as junior members of the four-party coalition slammed his pandemic policies.

The president noted in his appeal on Tuesday how four Cabinet ministers had already resigned in less than two weeks, before Korcok and Gröhling on Wednesday.

"It's essential that Prime Minister Igor Matovic, with his resignatio­n, make it possible to conclude an agreement between coalition partners on the reconstruc­tion of the government," Caputova told reporters on Tuesday.

"With every further day of the government crisis, the political elites show people how detached they are from their real life," she added.

A wave of resignatio­ns

Gröhling and Korcok joined four fellow ministers in giving up their positions on Wednesday.

Health Minister Marek Krajci, from Matovic's Ordinary People party (OLaNO), was the first to start the wave of resignatio­ns as he stepped down on Friday.

The right-wing labor minister, Milan Krajniak, also resigned shortly after Krajci, followed by the Economy Minister Richard

Sulik. Justice Minister Maria Kolikova also stepped down on Tuesday.

The prime minister wanted Sulik to step down. Matovic was eyeing securing a seat as a Cabinet member as a condition for his resignatio­n as prime minister.

What is the row?

The dispute began when the prime minister acted unilateral­ly and decided to buy Russia's Sputnik V coronaviru­s vaccine.

The decision caused a backlash among the coalition partners governing Matovic's OLaNO party. They wanted to wait for the European Union's green light to the vaccine.

The eurozone country of 5.4 million people has been struggling to contain one of the world's highest per capita coronaviru­s rates, with more than 350,551 confirmed cases and 9,190 deaths as of Tuesday.

 ??  ?? Korcok is the sixth minister to quit the cabinet since a row started at the beginning of March
Korcok is the sixth minister to quit the cabinet since a row started at the beginning of March

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany