BRATISLAVA, Jan 25 — Slovakia’s parliament will fast-track debate on government plans to scrap a special prosecutor’s office fighting corruption and lower sentences for financial crimes after ruling lawmakers approved the move today despite objections.
Opposition parties had delayed the vote on whether to fast-track the criminal law reforms for weeks, looking to slow Prime Minister Robert Fico’s changes that they argue will afford impunity for politicians and business leaders linked to him.
Pushing the reforms on a faster track has also raised warnings from the European Union and United States.
Opposition parties have led near weekly protests drawing tens of thousands, with another string of rallies planned for this evening.
The leftist government led by four-time Prime Minister Fico says the changes are necessary to end what it calls excesses at the Special Prosecution Office (USP) which he has accused of bias against his party.
Fico has also argued that sentences are too harsh compared with many European countries.
Putting the bills in a fast-track procedure shortens the time between debates and the time legislation sits in committees for debate, making it possible to have a vote within days.
President Zuzana Caputova has said speeding through such changes is unprecedented.
The European Commission and the United States have also raised objections to hasty reforms, worried about their impact on the rule of law - an issue that has pitted central European neighbours Hungary and Poland against Brussels in recent years.
Slovakia’s special prosecutor’s office, around for two decades, has been in Fico’s sights since he won a September election and returned to power. Fico had resigned in 2018 amid mass street protests that followed the murder of a journalist investigating public corruption.
The USP opened a number of cases against business leaders, members of the judiciary and police following a 2020 election victory by parties promising to fight graft. While in opposition, Fico himself faced police charges, later dropped.
The proposed reforms would allow suspended sentences for many more financial crimes, and shorten the statute of limitations, which Caputova said would exonerate many suspects of crimes under investigation or on trial now. — Reuters
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