EU state arrests Ukrainian over alleged coup plot

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EU state arrests Ukrainian over alleged coup plot

Slovakian authorities will expel the individual, according to a police statement cited by media

Slovakia will deport a Ukrainian national detained in connection with an alleged coup threat, local media outlets reported on Thursday, citing a police statement. Bratislava has linked recent anti-government protests to alleged instigators from Ukraine.

While Slovakia is a member of both NATO and the European Union, Prime Minister Robert Fico has repeatedly refused to echo the EU policy on the Ukraine conflict. He reversed the previous government’s decision to supply weapons to Kiev, and criticized sanctions against Russia.

“Currently, one person is at the border aliens police office, where administrative expulsion is being carried out,” police chief Jana Maskarova told Dennik N newspaper. She added that the unnamed Ukrainian national would be placed on the country’s blacklist, according to the media outlet.

On Wednesday, Erik Kalinak, head of the advisory council to Prime Minister Fico, alleged that there was a link between recent anti-government protests in Slovakia and the Georgian Legion. The latter is a unit made up of foreign nationals who are fighting on Ukraine’s side against Russia.

In a post on X on Thursday, the Legion rejected the “baseless and absurd accusations made by the Slovak authorities.”

Last week, up to 100,000 people took to the streets of Bratislava and several other cities across Slovakia. The protesters denounced Fico’s perceived alignment with Russia, with placards reading: “No collaboration with Russia” and “We are Europe and not Russia.”

Last Tuesday the prime minister, citing a report by the Slovak Information Service (SIS) intelligence agency, claimed that the opposition was preparing a coup in the country – akin to the one that took place in Kiev back in 2014. He also alleged that “there is a group of experts on the territory of the Slovak Republic that had actively operated in Georgia and during the Maidan in Ukraine.” Several days later, the official stated that Bratislava would expel these “foreign instructors.”

At the start of 2025, Ukraine stopped the transit of Russian gas through its territory, severely impacting Slovakia, which had been heavily dependent on that energy source. This has worsened relations between Bratislava and Kiev.

Speaking on Tuesday, Fico proclaimed: “Our enemy is Zelensky. Zelensky caused the problems we have. I don’t like him because he harms Slovakia.” The official threatened to veto future EU aid to Ukraine, unless Kiev resumed the transit of Russian gas.

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