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07 Nov 2019, 11:05 AM

STA, 6 November 2019 - The opposition Left (Levica) declared on Wednesday that its partnership with the minority government was over after the ruling coalition made its support for a key Left-sponsored bill conditional on adoption of their amendments. Despite the turn, PM Marjan Šarec and the coalition are adamant to serve out their term.

"The final domino has fallen, we find the government has unequivocally broken off cooperation and pulled out from the agreement with us," the Left's leader Luka Mesec said after debate on the party's bill to scrap top-up health insurance was suspended with the coalition announcing several amendments.

The coalition "ran over" the Left-sponsored bill through its amendments, said Mesec, adding that as of this point the agreement with the government was no longer binding on the Left, which from now on was fully in opposition.

However, Prime Minister Marjan Šarec said it was not the government, but rather the Left which was quitting the partnership. He was determined to complete his term in office, but said this would not be possible without compromising.

The Left would like to abolish top-up health insurance collected by private insurance companies and needed for virtually all health services by folding it into mandatory health contributions, at different rates, depending on the individual's income.

The coalition meanwhile proposes lump sum payments for the time being, which would be set at EUR 29 a month at first, and could be adjusted once a year. It would be paid by those who currently pay for mandatory health insurance.

The parliamentary Health Committee suspended debate on the Left-sponsored bill, after coalition parties tabled several relevant amendments the adoption of which they made conditional on their support for the bill.

The session was suspended so that other parties and the parliamentary legal service could take their position on the amendments, but the Left said that it had been urging the government for a month already to table amendments. The legal service also raised the question of the admissibility of such amendments.

The amendments are doing nothing to do away with top-up insurance, but "merely fold it into a new gift wrap, and the coalition are only washing their hands", Mesec told reporters.

He said the point of scrapping top-up insurance was to introduce solidarity-based contributions, while the coalition's amendments "preserve the same contribution for everyone regardless of their income".

"They had more than two months to reach an agreement with us, but instead they bring today, at the start of the bill's reading ... amendments that we haven't heard of before. Even the legal service finds the bill is being changed to a point it is in fact a new bill," said Mesec.

Apart from the latest bill, Mesec also listed his party's grievances about the reform of the personal income tax which the party says favours the rich, end of bonuses for social benefit recipients who work and the budget, which he described as neither social nor development-oriented.

He said the Left was not trying to bring down the Marjan Šarec government. "We've merely ascertained that the government has resigned from the agreement it struck with the Left, which is clear in all the mentioned cases."

The Left would like to continue to cooperate with the government, but "the problem is that we've been ignored for several months". Mesec would not answer concretely when asked whether the party might now bring a motion of no confidence.

Šarec, who was commenting on the row on before Mesec made his comments, repeated that he did not want to break off cooperation with the Left, but he regretted "ultimatum politics".

"I'd expect some more patience on the part of the Left because we have implemented many projects together ... However, not all their projects are feasible in the way they imagine them to be.

"Politics is a matter of compromise, in particular in a minority government," Šarec said, noting that several majority governments before had attempted to end top-up insurance but failed. He said such legislation could be passed only if everyone made an effort for a compromise.

Without formal support from the Left, Šarec said the government had to seek support for each project and law outside the coalition anyway, and he expects other parties to support the government proposals they agree with, so he "I don't see need to sign agreements" with some other opposition party.

The opposition National Party (SNS) announced before it would provide the needed support to pass the budget, but Šarec would not say his government depended on the party's votes, "we depend on all MPs' votes".

Šarec said asking him whether he would serve out his term, was "like asking me whether I'll be run over by a car ... my plan is for the government to complete its term, I see no reason why it shouldn't ... It depends on those who are fond of calling press conferences and shaking the boat one way or the other."

Šarec's LMŠ party regretted the Left's decision to end partnership, and so did the coalition Pensioners' Party (DeSUS), while the Modern Centre Party (SMC) and the Alenka Bratušek Party (SAB) maintained that the Left had not shown genuine willingness to cooperate anyway.

LMŠ deputy group leader Brane Golubović does not think the decision would change much. "The government will still be stable and the coalition would continue stable," he said, expecting cooperation on some projects to continue with the Left, including to abolish top-up insurance.

Dejan Židan, the head of the coalition Social Democrats (SD), said that had the Left had sincere intentions, it would have accepted the coalition's proposal "with open arms". "We have witnessed the realisation of a scenario which was apparently made a week ago," he added.

Židan believes that the party had already decided that it would be easier for it to increase ratings "if they get fully radicalised in the opposition," and that this was a tactic for short-distance runs, not long-term cooperation.

07 Nov 2019, 09:32 AM

STA, 6 November 2019 - The Labour Ministry is not planning in the short term to sign any new agreements on employing foreign workers, as there are enough recruitment opportunities in the country's neighbourhood for now. It also said on Wednesday it was keeping an eye on labour market dynamics prompted by warnings of a higher economic slowdown risk.

Responding to the recent media reports of Slovenia being interested in employing 2,000-5,000 Philippine workers, the ministry said the country was not preparing to enter into a bilateral agreement with the Philippines on issuing such work permits.

As for importing foreign workers, the ministry follows a migration strategy adopted this year which aims to curb the trend of Slovenian workers leaving the country, promote labour circulation and encourage Slovenians who have been away for a longer period to return home, State Secretary Tilen Božič told the press.

When looking for foreign workers, the ministry focusses on the areas which are geographically and culturally close to Slovenia. The country has so far signed two such treaties - with Bosnia-Herzegovina and Serbia, with another agreement being drawn up with Ukraine.

"Currently, the wider region provides enough opportunities," said Božič, highlighting that in any case negotiations to conclude such an agreement entailed a number of steps and usually took several years.

Asked whether businesses had been calling on the ministry to sign new work permit agreements, Božič said that businesses were more interested in a decree that would enable faster procedures to employ a foreign worker.

He also pointed out that out of some 900,000 working in Slovenia in August, almost 100,000 were foreigners, while in the same month in 2013, there were over 50,000 foreign workers out of 760,000 workers, adding that these figures indicated distinct shifts, including in Slovenia's economy and the labour market, which demanded swift adjustment tactics.

Slovenian media reported in late October that a delegation led by Economy Ministry State Secretary Aleš Cantarutti visited the Philippines to strengthen bilateral economic relations and met a Labour Ministry state secretary.

The delegation was accompanied by representatives of Slovenian businesses and the Chamber of Commerce and Industry (GZS), who were the ones calling for importing Philippine workers, the Economy Ministry said last month, distancing itself from this possible strategy.

The ministry also added at the time that bilateral trade with the Philippines was modest; however, the Philippines' economic growth projections were opening up a huge potential for Slovenia, according to the MMC web portal of the public broadcaster RTV Slovenija.

The GZS told the STA today that it was currently not considering any new work permit agreements and that the October meeting, which was attended by Slovenian Honorary Consul to the Philippines Srečko Debelak as well, was an isolated case among such organised events.

According to the chamber, Slovenia's industry is looking for workforce outside the EU in the Western Balkans countries and Ukraine, focussing in particular on skills from the occupation shortage list.

Businesses can employ foreign workers from countries with which Slovenia does not have such an agreement; however, employment procedures are more complex in this case, the Labour Ministry told the STA today.

Regardless of the agreement status, the key issue in these procedures is a lack of Slovenian language skills. The existent agreements with Bosnia-Herzegovina and Serbia envisage pre-integration measures which tackle this issue and are funded by the EU, the ministry explained.

07 Nov 2019, 04:32 AM

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A schedule of all the main events involving Slovenia this week can be found here

This summary is provided by the STA:

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06 Nov 2019, 18:51 PM

Kris Zudich, the 20-month-old boy with spinal muscular atrophy who brought Slovenia together in a charity campaign last month, departed to the United States today. At about noon, a private jet took off from Brnik Airport, the trip also being paid for from the donations raised for the treatment, considered the most expensive single drug in the history of pharmaceuticals.

In early October Palčica Pomagalčica Society posted its fundraising invitation on Facebook, eventually raising almost €4 million in three weeks, well over the desired sum of €2.3 million. The Society announced that the excess money would be distributed among other children facing similar problems.

Since Palčica Pomagalčica Society had not yet been being granted the status of a humanitarian organisation, it saved the funds from heavy taxation by entrusting them to the Slovenian Association of Friends of Youth.

Meanwhile, Novartis announced that the use of the medicine Kris needs has been temporarily stopped in children aged between two and five. This however will not affect Kris, who will thanks to the successful crowdfunding action receive the medicine (Zolgensma) before the age of two.

The family left for Los Angeles, where the clinic that will take Kris is located, and will stay there for two months, when Kris will be under constant medical supervision. The purpose of the treatment is to stop the development of the disease.

06 Nov 2019, 18:26 PM

In 1676 the Knafelj Bequest was founded on the basis of a will written by a wealthy pastor, Luka Knafelj. In his will Luka Knafelj left all of his property to the Carniolan students, who could from now on compete for scholarships in order to pursue their studies in Vienna.

Luka Knafelj was a bright boy from Ribnica, who was first taken as a student by the Cisterian monastery in Stična, the most influential monastery in Carniola at the time, where he received a strict upbringing and superior education. Being a good student, Luka then earned the privilege of being sent to the Jesuit grammar school in Ljubljana.

Luka Knafelj is mentioned in the school document of February 1640, when he is believed to have finished the six-year grammar school and had enrolled in a two-year lyceum. It is further known that he got enrolled at the University of Graz in 1643 to study philosophy, while he began his studies of theology around 1644, probably in Vienna. He was ordained a priest there in June 1648 when he was 27 years old.

It is not known what the young priest was doing after the completion of his studies, but he reappears in historic records in 1651, when he became a pastor at the Vienna Court Hospital. This is what probably allowed him to get closer to the court and make friends with Jurij Bohinc (Georg Wohinz), a renowned law professor and later also a rector of the University of Vienna.

In 1658 Knafelj became pastor of Groβ Ruβbach in Lower Austria, a parish under imperial protection that lies in the middle of the Weinvierterl wine-growing region, about 50 km north of Vienna. The estate comprised of a mansion and quite a lot of land, and the historic documents suggest Knafelj was as skilful entrepreneur as he was in administrative affairs.

The parish estate was the main source of Knafelj’s income, which eventually allowed him to purchase a nice home in Vienna in 1667, where he lived when visiting the capital. The house, consisting of two interconnected buildings, stands close to the old building of the University of Vienna and the Church of St. Jacob.

Luka Knafelj died from tuberculosis on June 29, 1671 in Vienna. Two weeks prior to his death he put together the will which would, until the fall of the Empire, in 1918, provide about 1,200 Slovenian students with scholarships for the pursuit of their studies in Vienna, among them Jernej Kopitar, France Prešeren, Simon Jenko, Ivan Tavčar, Oton Župančič and others.

Knafelj’s house in Vienna was the main source of funds, which came under the management of the University of Ljubljana in 1961.

The Knafelj Bequest scholarship continues to exist, although it is much more modest today than in the last decades of the Austrian Empire, when it was high enough to cover the entire studying and living expenses of a student who didn’t party much. Today’s stipend consists of one-year free accommodation at Knafelj Home or Korotan Home in Vienna for graduates of the University of Ljubljana who decide to continue their graduate studies at one of the city’s universities.

06 Nov 2019, 17:07 PM

STA, 6 November 2019 - The 30th furniture and interior design fair Ambient Ljubljana and the home construction fair Dom Plus got under way at Ljubljana's Gospodarsko Razstavišče fairgrounds in Ljubljana on Wednesday. The fairs will feature 222 exhibitors from 21 countries until Sunday.

Lifting the curtain on Ambient Ljubljana, Prime Minister Marjan Šarec said Slovenia had many excellent designers, "but we are not always capable of joining forces so as to market these products appropriately".

He added Slovenia had already missed opportunities to sell such products for serious money in the past, but he argued a new chance had come now.

The opening ceremony was also addressed by Gospodarsko Razstavišče director Iztok Bricl, who portrayed what used to be called the Ljubljana Furniture Fair as a phenomenon that had weathered all the drastic political and economic changes in the country, including the extinction of the wood-preprocessing and furniture industries in the country.

A number of side events are to be organised at the fairgrounds during the two fairs and scores of awards will be conferred, including for top products and ideas and for up-and-coming designers and architects.

The fair's website can be found here

06 Nov 2019, 14:39 PM

Ljubljana may be the capital of Slovenia, but when it comes to St Martin’s Day celebrations (Martinovanje) the first city is Maribor. This claims to have “the biggest public one-day celebration” of the hour when the year’s new wine if officially launched. It also comes a short time after the weeks-long Old Vine Festival in Maribor, nominally focused on the oldest vine in the world that still produces grapes, but in reality a celebration of all things food, wine and Slovene.

As the video above shows, the city it thus ready, willing and able to get into the festive spirit, with some 20,000 people expected to take part in a day that brings the producers and consumers of wine together, and much more to do than just drink a glass or two. There will be a “celebration of autumn” procession, with wine queens and others, wending its way around the city centre. There will be a ceremony when must – the immature wine – is blessed and becomes the focal drink. There will be food to sample along with the wine, from local farms and restaurants. And there will, of course, be music and dancing.

The whole thing kicks off at 11:11 (not a typo, for once) on Monday 11 November, with the organised events set to run until 21:00. All the events are centred at Trg Leona Štuklja, while the Old Vine House (Stara trta) should also see some action, and that can be found not far away, at Vojašniška ulica 8. If going to a wine event on a Monday is not possible, then consider a visit to the smaller – but still very grand – Ljubljana Wine Route, which takes place this Saturday, 9 November (2019), as detailed here.

06 Nov 2019, 13:16 PM

Updated at 17:00, 06/11/19

STA, 6 November 2019 - Slovenia's top court has annulled provisions of a law under which commercial radio stations were required to dedicate a portion of their airtime to Slovenian music, reasoning that the requirements were too vague and incompatible with the rule of law.

In a unanimous decision released on Wednesday, the Constitutional Court holds that if laws and regulations are not clear, there is a risk that state bodies may take arbitrary decisions when weighing the rights of individuals.

Such regulatory vagueness is "constitutionally untenable and unacceptable," the court said in today's release after it took the decision on 24 October.

The decision affects provisions of the media act that required commercial radio stations to dedicate 20% of their musical airtime to Slovenian music, and related provisions that determined in detail what constitutes Slovenian music.

The judges held that the rules made it impossible to determine exactly what constitutes Slovenian music or what airtime actually means.

The music quotas were originally put in place in 2015 in an effort to increase the share of Slovenian music played on radio.

At the insistence of lobby groups representing musicians, the provisions were subsequently amended twice in 2016 to prioritise newer music.

Radio stations have been opposed to the music quotas from the start, arguing that they have practically lost editorial independence due to the rigid rules.

The Constitutional Court challenge was brought by the upper chamber of parliament and several private radio stations.

The ruling does not affect the 40% Slovenian music quota for public radio stations.

Media expert Marko Milosavljević told the STA that the top court's ruling validated the warnings voiced by pundits before the quotas had been introduced.

"We were warning that any definitions here need to be very precise ... that talk about protecting Slovenian music and musicians sounded nice on paper, but that problems arose as soon as one needed to define what constitutes Slovenian music," he said.

While basing the definition on nationality would "eliminate a significant number of Slovenian musicians who may perhaps not be purely Slovenian", basing it on language would disqualify instrumental music, Milosavljević argued, while also pointing to privacy issues.

Radio mogul Leo Oblak on the other hand sees the ruling as confirming the distinction between public and private media, with the latter having to survive in line with market principles without any aid from the state.

"The quotas meant fewer listeners above all for radio stations playing modern music, since there is less Slovenian production in this field, unlike for instance in pop folk," Oblak said.

He argued one could not expect a commercial station to operate in a non-commercial fashion, adding that it was on the other hand fair that "the sate supports culture, since culture is not commercial and cannot survive on the market".

06 Nov 2019, 12:00 PM

STA, 5 November 2019 - A summit of the Friends of Cohesion, an informal group of EU members opposing cuts to cohesion funds, urged the EU to adopt a 2021-2027 budget with a sufficient amount of cohesion funds. Slovenian PM Marjan Šarec said that "a strong EU needs a sufficient and future-oriented budget" which will address the bloc's key challenges.

The EU will not be able to achieve this if cohesion funds are cut, so a strong cohesion policy should be preserved, Šarec said at the summit of 17 net recipients of development funds from the EU budget in Prague on Tuesday.

Friends of Cohesion leaders, coming from central, east and south Europe, adopted a declaration which highlights the importance of cohesion policy for reaching some of the EU's key goals, such as economic and social convergence, a functioning internal market and the fight against climate change.

The summit comes before the December EU summit at which key stage in the talks on the next seven-year budget is to be launched, and after the European Commission proposed a cut in cohesion funds.

"If we want to protect cohesion policy, the volume of the multi-year financial framework should stay close to the Commission's proposal of 1.11% of the EU-27's GNP," said Šarec.

It is several net contributors - unofficially the Netherlands, Sweden, Denmark, Austria and Germany - that would like the budget to amount to only 1% of GNP, but Šarec said this would not be acceptable for Slovenia. He added the Friends of Cohesion did not want the funds for cohesion and agriculture to drop.

"For us, cohesion funds are of exceptional importance, they have enabled Slovenia and other countries to develop," he told reporters after the summit.

Last May the Commission proposed the 2021-2027 budget of EUR 1,135 billion, of which cohesion funds - a major source of development funds for Central and East European as well as poorer Mediterranean EU members - would amount to EUR 331 billion.

Under this proposal, which is based on per capita GDP statistics for 2014-2016, Slovenia would be entitled to EUR 3.073 billion in cohesion funds. However, it was later agreed data for 2015-2017 would be used, as a result of which Slovenia would lose some funds.

Šarec said Slovenia was pushing for the latest statistics not to be used because they placed it among developed countries, "but we know that our two cohesion regions are not as developed as we would wish".

"Member states cannot lose a significant share of cohesion funds simply because of updated statistics. It is also unacceptable for any EU region, especially if it has half of a country's population, to lose the majority of money from structural funds overnight," said Šarec.

This referred to Slovenia's western cohesion region, for which a budget of 1% of GNP would according to Šarec entail "a drastic cut in funds".

The talks on the EU's next budget were launched in July 2018 and are expected to be completed in spring 2020. Šarec said it was hard to say whether a deal would actually be reached in spring, and expects the talks to be "long and tough".

The Prague summit was hosted by Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babiš. It featured prime ministers and representatives of Slovenia, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Estonia, Greece, Hungary, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Slovakia and Spain, and European Budget Commissioner Günther Oettinger.

06 Nov 2019, 10:30 AM

STA, 5 November 2019 - Karel Holec has been elected the new president of one of the two Slovenian minority umbrella organisations in Hungary, taking over from Martin Ropoša, who has led the State Slovenian Self-Government organisation since its establishment in 1995, public broadcaster TV Slovenija reported on Tuesday.

Holec, 50, is a journalist and photographer for the Porabje weekly, the only Slovenian-language paper in Hungary, which was launched in 1991. From 1994 to 2006, he was mayor of Orfalu, or Andovci in Slovenian.

The new leader said he would continue with the minority's main project - efforts to develop the Raba Valley (Porabje) to enable young people to stay in the region.

The minority organisation is seated in the town of Felsoszolnok (Gornji Senik) and has a unit in Budapest. Ropoša will from now on serve as its vice president.

Earlier this year, the other umbrella minority organisations in Hungary also got a new leader.

In May, Andrea Kovač replaced Jože Hirnök at the helm of the Association of Slovenians in Hungary after he led the organisation from its establishment in 1990.

The association is based in the town of Szentgotthard (Monošter).

There are some 5,000 Slovenians living in Hungary, of whom some 3,000 in the Raba Valley area along the border with Slovenia.

06 Nov 2019, 09:30 AM

Please note that a forum on white collar crime was organised by the Centre for Education in Judiciary, which operates under the wing of the Justice Ministry, not by the Association of State Prosecutors, as stated in Tuesday's copy in para 2.

STA, 5 November 2019 - White-collar crime in the usual sense is on decline in Slovenia, while corruption is on the rise, State Prosecutor General Drago Šketa said on Tuesday. Prosecutor Boštjan Valenčič believes this is so because "corruption is still socially acceptable".

Addressing a two-day forum on white collar crime hosted by the Centre for Education in Judiciary, Šketa called corruption a "systemic anomaly", which should be prevented by state mechanisms.

He gave corruption in healthcare as an example, saying that criminal proceedings were being launched for acts committed ten years ago. "Supervisory mechanisms should have detected those anomalies right at the start."

Valenčič, a prosecutor at the Specialised State Prosecution, said that case law was gradually being created for white collar crime.

Responding to public criticism that "the big fish always get away with it", he said that certain "big fish" were serving their sentences at the moment, while some had been found not guilty by courts.

He said a reason why the procedures in high-profile cases took so long was outdated legislation, which did not envisage cases of such complexity and so many suspects.

Another reason is that Slovenia did not have a specialised court for dealing with white-collar crime cases, Valenčič said.

This was echoed by former State Prosecutor General Zvonko Fišer, who was critical of the changes to the penal code and the criminal procedure act made in recent years. "These are complex laws, which need to be consistent. Our current approach, changing the law over individual cases, does not lead to good solutions," he said.

The prosecutors also touched on the confiscation of assets of illicit origin act, which was watered down by a Constitutional Court decision that the law cannot apply for assets gained before the passage of the law.

They agreed Slovenia should follow the example of Italy, which has an instrument called preventive confiscation, which is not bound to a concrete criminal act. This mechanism has also received a green light from the European Court of Human Rights.

Fišer was also very critical of the recently launched inquiry into the prosecution of Franc Kangler, the former Maribor mayor.

"The fact that parliament ordered an inquiry to establish political responsibility of judges and state prosecutors in concrete criminal cases is a first-class scandal," he said.

He was also critical of the fact that neither the president, prime minister nor justice minister reacted to this. "I don't expect them to defend any individual decisions of the judiciary, but they should say that in a democratic country investigating the political responsibility of judges and prosecutors is a no-go," he said.

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