Nice but also aggressive. Immigration experience in Slovakia often depends on the officers handling it

Ombudswoman looks at the Foreigners' Police. She sees room for improvement in personal capacities, general information in foreign languages, language skills of officers and use of the electronic system.

In front of the Foreigners' Police in BratislavaIn front of the Foreigners' Police in Bratislava (Source: SITA)

Visiting a branch of the Foreigners’ Police in Slovakia turned out to be an unpleasant experience for many new arrivals to Slovakia, and even foreigners living in Slovakia who just have a minor agenda to settle.

SkryťTurn off ads
Article continues after video advertisement
SkryťTurn off ads
Article continues after video advertisement

The Foreigners' Police, which is the immigration authority in Slovakia, has put in place many improvements over the past few years, following some harsh criticism of clients and human rights watchdogs. In 2020, clients can take advantage of their electronic ordering system, which improved the notoriously criticised queues. Nowadays, much like before, the experience of clients often depends on their specific case, the department and the individual police officer they are dealing with.

SkryťTurn off ads

That stems from the 42-page-long report conducted by the Public Defender of Rights’ office published in early July. The ombudswoman's staff conducted their own research. In October and November 2019, they paid visits to Foreigners’ Police departments in Bratislava, Trnava, Dunajská Streda, Nové Zámky, Nitra, Trenčín, Žilina, Banská Bystrica, Rimavská Sobota, Prešov, Košice and Michalovce.

Office of the Public Defender of Rights focused on interviews with foreigners as well as employees of the branches without notifying them in advance. They also ask foreigners about their experience in an online questionnaire, which returned over 500 answers.

Not enough police officials

“The Foreigners’ Police faces insufficient personal capacities,” Martina Tymková, a guarantor of the research from Public Defender of Rights’ office, told The Slovak Spectator. She said that other problems arise from this issue.

SkryťTurn off ads

The report said that the only fully personally occupied branch of the Foreigners’ Police is the one in Prešov. The others do not have enough workers, the most significant lack of employees was in Dunajská Streda.

Most vacant positions are in those branches of the Foreigners’ Police that face the biggest strain of clients in the long term, due to the presence of foreign companies and significant foreign investors in the territory they cover, the report reads. The shortage of human resources is then mirrored in the length of the proceeding in each individual case.

“Currently, there is also no vast interest in working at the branches of the Foreigners’ Police,” Tymková noted.

All the staff at the departments are police officers, which means that police officers also fulfil such tasks as sorting out mail and issuing IDs.

The client centres running under the Interior Ministry that issue IDs and other official documents to Slovak citizens, in contrast, employ civil servants who are not police officers.

Some are nice, others aggressive

Foreigners have various experiences at the branches of the Foreigners’ Police – ranging from positive to very negative. Several foreigners evaluated the approach of a police corps member as arrogant, impudent, unwilling to help, aloof, the report noted.

The rest of this article is premium content at Spectator.sk
Subscribe now for full access

I already have subscription - Sign in

Subscription provides you with:
  • Immediate access to all locked articles (premium content) on Spectator.sk
  • Special weekly news summary + an audio recording with a weekly news summary to listen to at your convenience (received on a weekly basis directly to your e-mail)
  • PDF version of the latest issue of our newspaper, The Slovak Spectator, emailed directly to you
  • Access to all premium content on Sme.sk and Korzar.sk

Top stories

News digest: Ukrainians in control of four Slovak fighter jets now

An Italian recipe, three free things to do in Bratislava, and a Slovak MP's fiasco in Brussels.


13 h
Filip Toška holding chard in the hydroponic Hausnatura farm.

How a Mayan doomsday prophecy took a Slovak to hi-tech agriculture

Hydroponic farm run out of former telephone exchange.


9. mar
Lívia Vašáková heads the Recovery Plan Department at the Government Office.

Reform delays put recovery plan payments in doubt

Slovakia gets second tranche of EU cash, more due later this year.


22. mar
Friends drinking a kapurková shot.

Slovak Matters: Departures, even when drinking

The last column was dedicated to saying hello; now we go over the last word, whether saying goodbye or taking the customary last shot.


21. mar
SkryťClose ad