Three more former Guantanamo Bay prisoners moved to Slovakia

Slovakia is set to accept three more men formerly imprisoned at the US military base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, public-service broadcaster RTVS has reported. The Interior Ministry in a December 31 statement said that none of the three detainees - all Chinese citizens and members of the Uighur ethnic group - have ever been suspected or convicted of terrorism. According to further information acquired by the TASR newswire, the former inmates have already been transported to Slovakia. This is the second time that Slovakia has accepted former prisoners from the Guantanamo base. Another three men of Egyptian, Tunisian and Azerbaijani origin were brought to the country in 2010. All of them had spent eight years imprisoned at Guantanamo as the American authorities suspected them of co-operating with terrorist organisations. According to the available information, at least two of them have already left Slovakia, where they had been under a form of protective watch. “The Slovak Republic in 2009 welcomed the decision of US President Barack Obama to close down the controversial prison in Guantanamo,” reads the ministry's statement. “Back then, we joined an initiative of a number of NATO-member countries, EU-member and other states, accepting three people formerly imprisoned at this jail and providing them with all the conditions to start a new life in Europe in 2010.” The ministry declined to provide any further details regarding the identities of the latest prisoners or the decision to accept them.

2. jan 2014

Investigators: New lead in Valko murder case

Police have a new lead in the murder of Ernest Valko, a lawyer and former deputy speaker of the lower house of the Czechoslovak Federal Parliament (in 1990-1991), who in 1992 was chosen as the top official of the Czechoslovak Constitutional Court.

2. jan 2014

E.ON sells 40 percent stake in Slovak Nafta to EPH

The Czech company Energetický a Průmyslový Holding (EPH) bought a 40 percent stake in the Slovak energy company Nafta from E.ON Ruhrgas International, the TASR newswire reported December 31, citing EPH spokesman Daniel Častvaj.

2. jan 2014

Hospitals treat Bratislava New Year’s casualties

As many as 170 people sought the help of the various facilities of the University Hospital in Bratislava (UNB) overnight New Year’s Eve. Paramedics mainly attended to intoxicated people and those that had sustained injuries in fights, UNB spokeswoman Petra Stano-Maťašovská told the TASR newswire. One man suffered a stab wound to his stomach and needed to undergo surgery. Stano-Maťašovská noted that the patient was in critical condition and has been in the care of the UNB’s branch in Kramáre. In addition, nine people had to be treated after suffering injuries from fireworks. Two had to undergo plastic surgery, with doctors forced to amputate one finger.

2. jan 2014
SkryťClose ad