Condition of Slovakia’s prime minister improves following assassination attempt
BRATISLAVA, Slovakia — Slovak populist Prime Minister Robert Fico’s condition is improving following an assassination attempt last week that shocked the European Union nation deeply polarized over his policies.
“After today’s consultation, the patient’s condition is stabilized,” the hospital treating the Slovak leader in the central city of Banská Bystrica said Monday.
A statement released by the clinic said Fico is “clinically improving, communicating, inflammatory parameters are slowly decreasing.”
It said Fico remains hospitalized in the clinic for the time being.
On Sunday, the clinic said that Fico, 59, was no longer in life-threatening condition after he was shot in the abdomen as he greeted supporters Wednesday outside a cultural center in the town of Handlova, nearly 85 miles northeast of the capital, Bratislava.
Slovakia’s populist prime minister, Robert Fico, was shot multiple times in an assassination attempt, shocking Europe before elections.
Video showed the Slovak premier approach people gathered at barricades and reach out to shake hands as a man stepped forward, extended his arm and fired five rounds before being tackled and arrested.
Fico immediately underwent a five-hour surgery to treat multiple wounds he suffered in the shooting followed by another two-hour surgery Friday to remove dead tissue from his gunshot wounds.
The country’s Specialized Criminal Court in the town of Pezinok on Saturday ordered the suspected assailant, who is charged with attempted murder, to remain behind bars. The suspect can appeal the order.
Little information about the would-be assassin has been disclosed after prosecutors told police not to publicly identify him or release details about the case.
Prime Minister Robert Fico was in serious but stable condition a day after being shot multiple times, a hospital official said.
The government officials originally said they believed it was a politically motivated attack committed by a “lone wolf,” but announced on Sunday that a “third party” might have been involved in “acting for the benefit of the perpetrator.”
Fico’s government has made efforts to overhaul public broadcasting — a move critics said would give the government full control of public television and radio. That, along with his plans to amend the penal code to eliminate a special anti-graft prosecutor, have led opponents to worry that Fico will lead Slovakia down a more autocratic path.
The government’s smallest coalition partner, the ultranationalist Slovak National Party, was expecting a government meeting early this week to discuss the new media law, which the parliament started to debate last week.
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