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This summary is provided by the STA:
Ukraine crisis at forefront as Logar hosts Latvian counterpart
LJUBLJANA - Foreign Minister Anže Logar and his Latvian counterpart Edgars Rinkevičs called for a diplomatic solution to the Ukraine crisis and for the EU's unity on the issue as they met in Ljubljana. Asked at a news conference how Slovenia could help Ukraine in the event of an attack, Logar said the country was coordinating activities with the EU and NATO and was ready to assist to the best of its abilities. The ministers also discussed ways to boost trade where the opening of a Slovenian embassy in Riga would help. Rinkevičs also met President Borut Pahor, Speaker Igor Zorčič, PM Janez Janša and Defence Minister Matej Tonin.
Hojs opposes France's proposal on migrants
LILLE, France - Interior Minister Aleš Hojs expressed opposition to France's proposal under which EU countries which do not wish to accept migrants would need to contribute financially. "I will not support this proposal because I think we first need to comprehensively evaluate what solidarity is," he said in Lille where he attended a session of the EU's Justice and Home Affairs Council. Meanwhile, he expressed strong support for France's idea to create a Schengen Council to manage the passport-free zone.
Slovenian, Portuguese presidents mark diplomatic ties anniversary
LJUBLJANA - President Borut Pahor and his Portuguese counterpart Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa issued a joint statement on the 30th anniversary of diplomatic relations between the countries noting the good bilateral relations and "continuous development and strengthening of the bonds of brotherly friendship". The anniversary will be marked as Pahor visits Portugal on 14-15 February.
Police reportedly identify sender of death threats to politicians
LJUBLJANA - Police appear to have identified the person believed to have sent death threats to several politicians in mid-January, as media reports say the suspects is a man from Celje who is a member of the National Party (SNS), whose leader was among those who received the threats. Police would not disclose any information, but several media reported the suspect was Teodor Goznikar, who confirmed for the Večer newspaper being interrogated but denied he was the sender. SNS leader Zmago Jelinčič said Goznikar's party membership had been revoked.
Left initiates referendum on APCs, govt to challenge it in court
LJUBLJANA - A day after parliament endorsed an agreement with the Organisation for Joint Armament Cooperation that will allow the purchase of 45 Boxer armoured personnel vehicles, the opposition Left started collecting signatures in support of a referendum on the ratification act. The party is bothered by the cost of the deal, at EUR 412 million, but Defence Minister Matej Tonin said the price was not agreed yet. He said the government would challenge the referendum petition at the Constitutional Court.
No final decision yet on voting for voters in isolation
LJUBLJANA - The National Electoral Commission decided that voters quarantining on election day will be able to vote during regular hours when polling stations are open, but it deferred the final decision on those ordered to isolate because of infection, having previously considered after-hours voting for the infected. The final decision on voters in isolation will be made 25 days before polling day at the latest.
16,654 coronavirus cases, 19 deaths on Wednesday
LJUBLJANA - A total of 16,654 new coronavirus cases were confirmed in Slovenia on Wednesday from 8,702 PCR and 120,515 rapid antigen tests. The seven-day average of new daily cases increased by 374 to 15,111, while the 14-day case notification rate per 100,000 is up by 310 to 9,161. A total of 425 patients are hospitalised with Covid-19 as their main condition at regular wards, up by 18 on the day before, while the number of iCU patients dropped by five to 113. 19 Covid-19 patients died, government figures show.
Essential workers exempt from quarantine over Covid contacts
LJUBLJANA - Staff employed in critical infrastructure, police force and defence will not be required to quarantine after a high-risk contact with a person infected with coronavirus, but will have to test daily at work for seven days and wear a FFP2 face mask, under a decision taken by the government that comes into effect on Friday. The decision affects employees in energy, transport, food, water supply, healthcare, finance, environmental protection sector and ICT networks and systems.
Jobless total up 2.8% in January, down 26% over year before
LJUBLJANA - Slovenia's jobless total rose by 2.6% in January when 67,834 persons were registered as unemployed, a seasonal increase that the Employment Service says is expected due to the expiry of fixed-term contracts. Compared to the year before, the figure declined by 25.9%. More than 8,600 persons were newly registered as unemployed in January, up by almost half compared to December but down nearly 18% on the year before. Almost 6,800 unregistered, of whom almost 4,600 got a job.
EUR 6.6 million subsidy for Lek expansion confirmed
LJUBLJANA - The government endorsed a EUR 6.6 million subsidy for the expansion of production that pharmaceutical company Lek is planning at its main site in Ljubljana. The entire project is valued at EUR 82.6 million. The Economy Ministry said the investment would create over 120 jobs and would include cutting-edge technology for aseptic processes of the kind that does not exist anywhere else in Slovenia. Government documents show a 14,000 m2 facility is planned to manufacture liquid vials and pre-filled syringes.
EIB ready to invest in green, digital projects in Slovenia
LJUBLJANA - EIB vice president Liljana Pavlova and Finance Minister Andrej Šircelj announced plans for the European Investment Bank (EIB) and Slovenia to intensify cooperation. The EIB, which is involved in many projects in Slovenia, participating in the modernisation of roads and railways and is supporting small and medium-sized companies, would like to see more projects promoting the green and digital transitions, Pavlova said, noting that this was no longer a choice but a necessity.
Telekom seeks nullity of contract with POP TV, Kanal A, refund
LJUBLJANA - Telekom Slovenije, the state-owned telecoms operator, has filed a lawsuit against the country's largest commercial TV channels, POP TV and Kanal A, in a bid to nullify an agreement under which it pays the broadcasters to include the programmes in its TV package. It is also seeking to recover EUR 12.4 million in payments it made to them since 2017. The lawsuit, filed late last year and first revealed by the portal Požareport, claims that Telekom has been paying the two broadcasters an excess price for their programming, which it says is the result of their abuse of dominant position on the wholesale TV programming market.
Report shows green recovery marred by inadequate investments
LJUBLJANA - A report by multiple European and Slovenian environmental organisations shows that Slovenia's recovery plan is among those marred by underinvestment in renewable energy and sustainable mobility, and by projects that could potentially damage the environment. The environmental NGOs Focus said Slovenia's recovery plan was marred by under-investment in renewable energy and sustainable mobility and by potentially environmentally damaging projects.
Gender equality in management with slight improvement in 2021
LJUBLJANA - The state of gender diversity, equality and balance in the managements of 56 state-owned and listed companies in Slovenia, monitored by the Slovenian Directors' Association and the company Deloitte Slovenija, has seen a slight improvement in 2021. The joint initiative, called 40/33/2026, aims for each of 56 participating companies to achieve two goals until 2026 - 40% representation of the under-represented gender (usually women) on supervisory boards, and 33% representation in supervisory boards and management boards combined. 18 out of 56 companies (32%) achieved the goals by the end of 2021, six more than a year ago.
Govt secures funding for Hungarian and Italian minorities
LJUBLJANA - The government issued a regulation to subsidise bilinguality and the exercise of constitutional rights of the Hungarian and Italian minorities in Slovenia in 2022, under which areas populated by the two communities will get almost EUR 2 million this year. The regulation is in line with the municipalities financing act.
Ryanair rules out Ljubljana flights
DUBLIN, Ireland - Irish low-cost carrier Ryanair, which opened a base at Zagreb airport last year and also flies to Trieste, has no plans to fly to and from Ljubljana in the near future, the EX-YU Aviation web portal reported. The company says that the two airports cover Slovenia well enough, and also sees high costs as a problem.
Plečnik's UNESCO landmarks on view at Ljubljana Castle
LJUBLJANA - An exhibition opened at the Ljubljana Castle gallery to display photographs of Jože Plečnik's landmarks in Ljubljana that are listed as UNESCO's World Heritage, the sites as they looked before they were developed by Plečnik, the construction of the buildings and their role in Ljubljana's urban space. Entitled Jože Plečnik (1872-1957) it features photographs from the collections of the Museum of Contemporary History, the Slovenian Ethnographic Museum and the Plečnik House.