World
Slovakia makes slow progress in tackling corruption
The person as soon as tasked with tackling corruption in Slovakia is going through as much as eight years in jail after he was discovered responsible of corrupt actions himself.
Final week, Slovakia’s Supreme Court docket upheld a conviction towards Dušan Kováčik, the previous head of the elite prosecutor’s workplace, for accepting bribes to launch the boss of a prison group from jail and leaking categorised data from the prosecutor’s workplace.
The court docket did cut back Kováčik’s his sentence from 14 years to eight, and acquitted him of the extra cost of supporting a prison group, overturning rulings made by a decrease court docket final yr.
However, analysts have known as it a “groundbreaking” resolution. “By no means earlier than was such a high-ranking public official, from an establishment accountable itself for investigating and prosecuting prison proceedings, despatched to jail,” mentioned Katarína Klingová, a senior analysis fellow at Bratislava-based assume tank the GLOBSEC Coverage Institute.
The sentencing she added, was an essential step in “cleansing out the home”: the Slovakian authorities’s ongoing marketing campaign to eradicate corruption, state seize, and inequality earlier than the regulation.
Since 2020 the Slovakian authorities have introduced dozens of high-ranking officers to justice, together with the previous legal professional basic, and ex-chiefs of police and tax administration.
Slovakia struggled with corruption after the autumn of communism in 1989 and its breakaway from Czechslovakia 4 years later. By 2018, it was ranked one of the corrupt international locations within the EU.
Andrej Kiska, the nation’s president on the time, known as Slovakia a “mafia state”.
The issue exploded into public consciousness the identical yr, after a younger investigative journalist, Jan Kuciak, and his finance had been murdered exterior their dwelling. Kuciak had been investigating hyperlinks between organised crime and political elites.
For a lot of, it was harking back to the homicide in 1996 of Róbert Remiáš, a police officer, which many imagine was dedicated by the Slovak mafia on the orders of the then-prime minister, Vladimír Mečiar. Throughout Mečiar’s tenure, Slovakia was known as the “black gap on the map of Europe” by the then-US Secretary of State, Madeleine Albright.
Nationwide protests following Kuciak’s homicide introduced down the federal government of Robert Fico, the top of the dominant Route-Social Democracy (Směr-SD) social gathering.
After subsequent investigations, prosecutors alleged that the tycoon Marian Kočner had allegedly tasked Alena Zsuzsová, an affiliate, with arranging Kuciak’s homicide. A number of people had been prosecuted for involvement, with most of them confessing.
In 2020, Kočner was sentenced to 19 years in jail for forging promissory notes however was acquitted in a separate trial for involvement within the homicide of Kuciak.
Final June, nevertheless, the Supreme Court docket overturned that ruling over the proof offered through the trial and ordered a retrial by the Specialised Felony Court docket, which started earlier this yr.
Gradual progress on anti-corruption challenge
With public anger rising about systematic corruption, Slovak voters delivered a powerful message to the nation’s conventional political elite on the 2020 basic elections that this must change.
OĽaNO, a small populist social gathering, received the poll with 1 / 4 of the favored vote. Igor Matovič, its chief, campaigned on the one promise to get robust on corruption. He shaped a coalition authorities with three events that spun the political spectrum.
Michal Piško, director of Transparency Worldwide Slovakia, says the federal government’s response to corruption since 2020 ought to be damaged down into two classes.
The primary is establishing new anti-corruption laws and instruments. The second is guaranteeing the independence of justice and regulation enforcement authorities, preventing towards what is named “state seize”.
On the previous, the federal government has “lagged behind its guarantees in lots of points,” Piško mentioned, regardless that final yr the federal government created a brand new Workplace for the Safety of Whistleblowers and a Supreme Administrative Court docket, in addition to a number of different our bodies.
In its 2021 report, the Council of Europe’s Group of States Towards Corruption additionally noticed gradual progress within the nation’s implementing anti-corruption measures. Eight out of 16 advisable measures weren’t absolutely in place 5 years after the publication of the earlier report.
On tackling state seize, nevertheless, there was better success, and “the sentencing and imprisonment of Dušan Kováčik is an integral a part of that,” Piško mentioned.
“There has not been any such high-ranking official imprisoned for corruption in Slovakia to this point.”
Partly because of this, Slovakia moved up three factors in Transparency Worldwide’s Corruption Perceptions Index for 2021, placing it above Armenia and Greece, though it’s nonetheless among the many backside performers inside the EU.
‘Good monitor however nonetheless a protracted strategy to go’
A lot activates politics, nevertheless. Matovic, the prime minister elected in 2020, resigned final yr due to his authorities’s dealing with of the COVID-19 pandemic. At one level Slovakia had the world’s highest fee of infections per capita. He’s presently the finance minister.
The governing coalition, a hodgepodge of events from throughout the spectrum, has additionally struggled to seek out settlement. Boris Kollár, chief of the Sme Rodina (We Are Household) social gathering and speaker of parliament, has regularly clashed with OĽaNO, the most important coalition associate.
“Inconclusive coping with the pandemic and common disagreements within the coalition have undermined the federal government’s capability for motion in anti-corruption,” mentioned Piško of Transparency Worldwide Slovakia.
One other drawback is that the alleged masterminds of corruption networks stay in politics.
A lot reportedly leads again to Fico, the previous three-term prime minister. Kováčik, the jailed former prosecutor, is the primary individual regarded as near Fico who has been imprisoned, famous Klingová, a senior analysis fellow on the GLOBSEC Coverage Institute.
Members of the present coalition authorities say Kováčik’s imprisonment is punishment for the alleged breakdown of rule of regulation throughout Směr-SD’s yr in workplace.
“The betrayal of those beliefs of democratic Slovakia has caught up with him in the present day,” Alojz Baránik, an MP for the Freedom and Solidarity social gathering (SaS), a member of the coalition authorities, advised native media.
In April, Fico and his former inside minister, Robert Kaliňák, had been charged with organised crime offences, together with abuse of energy and the institution and assist of a prison group. They’re additionally accused of utilizing categorised tax information to wage smear campaigns towards political rivals.
Fico denies wrongdoing and has claimed it is a political conspiracy towards him and his social gathering.
As a result of Fico continues to be an MP, and chief of Směr-SD, he has immunity. The Slovakian parliament voted in Might to not revoke this immunity after a number of abstentions from MPs from the coalition authorities.
“Justice has misplaced a battle,” Igor Matovič, the previous prime minister, commented after the vote. The case towards Fico will proceed however with out the potential of a custodial verdict.
Kalinak, the previous inside minister, is now not an MP and was arrested in April. If discovered responsible, he faces a doable 12 years in jail.
Earlier this yr, Fico appealed to European politicians to assist defend his case.
Věra Jourová, the EU justice commissioner and a Czech, reiterated that EU our bodies received’t intervene in home prison circumstances.
And Fico was roundly criticised as he referred to Slovakia’s present president Zuzana Čaputová as “an American missus.” There are additionally requires the European Parliament’s Socialists & Democrats Group to kick out Směr-SD.
“All these investigations and scandals have proven that Slovakia has a extreme drawback with state seize, with corruption on the highest ranges of public administration, together with police and judiciary,” mentioned Klingová.
“Slovakia appears to be on an excellent monitor, however there may be nonetheless a protracted strategy to go.”
World
Zelenskiy, NATO boss and European leaders discuss Ukraine security guarantees
World
Hamas' Gaza death toll questioned as new report says its led to 'widespread inaccuracies and distortion'
A new report cites a laundry list of alleged errors in the casualty tallies that the Hamas-run Gaza Ministry of Health has issued during the conflict in Gaza, and found that worldwide media widely report the inflated numbers with little or no scrutiny.
The Henry Jackson Society (HJS), a U.K. based think tank, found “widespread inaccuracies and distortion in the data collection process” for the Hamas-run Gaza Ministry of Health (MoH) which has resulted in a “misleading picture of the conflict.” The study also analyzed how journalists worldwide have spread misleading MoH data without noting its shortcomings or offering alternative information from Israeli sources.
The report’s author, Andrew Fox, a fellow at HJS said his team’s research is based on lists of casualty figures that the MoH has released through Telegram as well as lists released by the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Fox said he and his team have been able to examine segments of the reporting, despite changeable MoH data being “really hard to interrogate.”
On Tuesday, Gaza health authorities updated its number of dead to what it said was more than 45,000.
ISRAEL TO CLOSE EMBASSY IN IRELAND OVER ‘ANTI-ISRAEL POLICIES’
The report said the ministry’s reporting long indicated that women and children made up more than half of the war dead, leading to accusations that Israel intentionally kills civilians in Gaza.
“If Israel was killing indiscriminately, you would expect deaths to roughly match the demographic proportions pre-war,” Fox said. At the time, adult men made up around 26% of the Gazan population. “The number of adult males that have died is vastly in excess of 26%,” he said.
Within accessible reporting, Fox and his team also found instances of casualty entries being recorded improperly, “artificially increas[ing] the numbers of women and children who are reported as killed.” This has included people with male names being listed as females, and grown adults being recorded as young children.
Analyzing data by category has further highlighted biases within reporting. There are three kinds of entries within MoH’s casualty figures: entries collected by hospitals prior to the breakdown of networks in November 2023, entries submitted by family members of the deceased, and entries collected through “media sources,” whose veracity researchers like Dr. David Adesnik, vice president of research at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, has previously questioned.
Analysis of gender breakdowns among these groupings shows that hospital records “are distorted,” with a higher percentage of women and children among hospital-reported casualties than in those reported by family members.
UN ACCUSED OF DOWNPLAYING HAMAS TERRORISTS’ USE OF GAZA HOSPITALS AS NEW REPORT IGNORES IMPORTANT DETAILS
Though around 5,000 natural deaths typically occur in Gaza each year, the study found that MoH casualty figures do not account for natural deaths. It claims that it also fails to exclude deaths unassociated with Israeli military action from its count. This includes individuals believed to have been killed by Hamas, like 13-year-old Ahmed Shaddad Halmy Brikeh, who appears on a casualty list from August despite reports indicating he had “been shot dead by Hamas” while trying to get food from an aid shipment in December 2023. The list also excludes individuals killed by Hamas’ rockets, about 1,750 of which “fell short within the Gaza strip” between October 2023 and July 2024.
Fox and his team also found individuals who died before the conflict began had been added to MoH casualty counts. In addition, at least three cancer patients whose names were included in lists to leave the Gaza Strip for treatment in April had been listed as dead during the month of March.
RETURN OF TRUMP GIVES FAMILIES OF GAZA HOSTAGES NEW HOPE
The ministry does not separate combatants and civilians in its casualty figures. Though the study states that Israeli forces have killed around 17,000 Hamas terrorists, Fox said that his research indicated the death toll may include as many as 22,000 members of Hamas. He said his research supports the fact that around 15,000 of the dead in Gaza are women and children, and 7,500 are non-combatant adult males.
“Collecting these sorts of lists in a war zone is a hugely challenging thing,” Fox admitted, but he stated that the MoH’s mistakes, whether innocent or deliberate, show that the institution is “really unreliable.”
Despite this unreliability, the Henry Jackson Society’s survey of reporting of the conflict found that 98% of media organizations it looked at utilized fatality data from MoH versus 5% who cited Israeli figures. Fox found that “fewer than one in every 50 articles [about the conflict] mentioned that the figures provided by the MoH were unverifiable or controversial,” though “Israeli statistics had their credibility questioned in half of the few articles that incorporated them.”
As an illustration of the phenomenon witnessed in the survey, Fox pointed out what he called an “incredibly biased” article from a British broadcaster that recently emerged citing MoH data claiming that there have been more than 45,000 deaths in Gaza. Though its report mentions MoH data, it does not break down the numbers of combatants and civilians, and does not mention the questionable veracity of MoH reporting. Instead, it parrots MoH claims, reporting that women and children make up for over half of the fatalities.
“It’s just a great example of everything we’ve written in the report,” Fox said.
World
Arson at karaoke bar in Vietnam’s Hanoi kills 11, police say
Vietnam’s Ministry of Public Security says suspected perpetrator confessed to starting blaze after dispute with staff.
A suspected arson attack at a cafe and karaoke bar in Vietnam’s Hanoi has killed 11 people and injured two others, police have said.
Vietnam’s Ministry of Public Security said on Thursday that it had arrested a man who confessed to starting the blaze on the ground floor of the building following a dispute with staff.
Rescue workers who rushed to the scene brought seven people out of the building alive, two of whom were rushed to hospital, police said.
Footage that circulated on social media showed a multistorey building engulfed in flames as firefighters worked at the scene while surrounded by a crowd of onlookers.
“At that time, we saw many people screaming for help but could not approach because the fire spread very quickly, and even with a ladder, we could not climb up,” the Lao Dong newspaper quoted a witness as saying.
The Tien Phong newspaper quoted a witness as saying there was a strong smell of petrol at the scene.
“Everyone shouted for those inside to run outside, but no one called for help,” the witness said.
CCTV footage published by the VnExpress news site appeared to show a man carrying a bucket towards the cafe seconds before the blaze began shortly after 11pm (16:00 GMT) on Wednesday.
Fires are a common hazard in Vietnam’s tightly packed urban centres.
Between 2017 and 2022, 433 people were killed in some 17,000 house fires in the country, most of them in urban areas, according to the Ministry of Public Security.
In September last year, 56 people, including four children, were killed and dozens injured in a fire at an apartment block in Hanoi.
This October, a court in southern Binh Duong province jailed six people, including four police officers, over safety lapses related to a fire at a karaoke complex that killed 32 people in 2022.
-
Business1 week ago
OpenAI's controversial Sora is finally launching today. Will it truly disrupt Hollywood?
-
Politics6 days ago
Canadian premier threatens to cut off energy imports to US if Trump imposes tariff on country
-
Technology7 days ago
Inside the launch — and future — of ChatGPT
-
Technology5 days ago
OpenAI cofounder Ilya Sutskever says the way AI is built is about to change
-
Politics5 days ago
U.S. Supreme Court will decide if oil industry may sue to block California's zero-emissions goal
-
Technology5 days ago
Meta asks the US government to block OpenAI’s switch to a for-profit
-
Politics7 days ago
Conservative group debuts major ad buy in key senators' states as 'soft appeal' for Hegseth, Gabbard, Patel
-
Business3 days ago
Freddie Freeman's World Series walk-off grand slam baseball sells at auction for $1.56 million