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2009 ban of Hungarian President from Slovakia

Hungarian president László Sólyom was not allowed[1] to step on Slovak soil on August 21, 2009, as he was about to attend the unveiling of a statue of St. Stephen, the first king of Hungary (1000–1038), in Komárno, Slovakia (Hungarian: Révkomárom), a town near the Hungarian border, where ethnic Hungarians form the majority of the population.

László Sólyom is seen at right during a 2006 joint press conference with Russian Federation president Vladimir Putin.

The only official reason given for the denial was that the Hungarian president's visit might have constituted a security risk. Slovak prime minister Robert Fico had claimed that police would be unable to prevent Slovak extremist groups from disturbing the ceremony.

In the two days preceding the visit, Slovakia had raised four other objections to the planned trip:

The square in Komárno where the life-size bronze statue of St. Stephen on horseback has since been erected, photographed in 2007.

Declaring the Hungarian head of state an unwelcome person (essentially persona non grata, although this term was not used) created additional diplomatic conflict in already tense Hungary–Slovakia relations.

Purpose of the planned visit edit

László Sólyom was invited[2] by a civic association, Szent István Szobor Bizottság ("St. Stephen Statue Committee"), to a statue unveiling ceremony in Komárno, Slovakia (Hungarian: Révkomárom).

Both the Catholic and the Orthodox churches regard King Stephen as a saint for his role in converting the peoples of his kingdom to Christianity. Pope Gregory VII canonized him, his son and a bishop; August 20, 1083, the day of the canonization, is a public holiday in Hungary, regarded as the foundation of Hungarian statehood. In his Admonitions to his son, he declared, as cited in the planned speech of Sólyom for the unveiling:

[A] kingdom with only one language and having only one custom is weak and frail.

— Stephen of Hungary.

The Komárno statue was due to be unveiled on the day after this anniversary, that is, on August 21, 2009.

The erection of the statue itself was criticized in February 2009 by the extremist and nationalist Slovak National Party (SNS),[2] one of the parties in Slovakia's governing coalition, because the town had not erected statues of Saints Cyril and Methodius, two Byzantine Greek missionaries among the Slavic peoples of Great Moravia and Pannonia. The statue was consequently placed only on the balcony of the Matica Slovenská, a cultural and scientific institution focusing on Slovakia-related topics.[3]

Objections of Slovakia against the visit edit

Security risk edit

 
Robert Fico, Prime Minister of Slovakia.

Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico said on August 19 that he could not prevent Sólyom from entering the country and sent a letter to the Hungarian embassy warning of potential security risks, saying that his Direction – Social Democracy party government would not prevent extremists of the nationalist Slovenská pospolitosť (Slovak Brotherhood) from going there to demonstrate.[4]

“We will not check the Slovak Republic and we cannot know whether someone will try to use the visit of the president in Komárno in some sensitive questions.”

— Robert Fico

According to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Hungary, there were no real security risks involved around the ceremony:[5]

[T]here was only a small number of protesters at the location of the ceremony, which the Slovak police were - by the usual means of the police - able to keep under control.

— Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Hungary

Date edit

 
Hungarian Prime Minister Gordon Bajnai stated that the planned visit had nothing to do with the 1968 events.

Two days before the planned visit, the Slovak parliamentary foreign affairs committee called the trip "a diplomatic provocation" because of the August 21 date, although the date was chosen by the mayor of Komárno, not by Sólyom. August 21 is the anniversary of the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia led by the Soviet Union after the 1968 Prague Spring. Being a Warsaw Pact state, the People's Republic of Hungary also sent troops into Slovakia; Poland and Bulgaria also took part in the Soviet putsch.

Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico compared László Sólyom to the soldiers invading Czechoslovakia: "In 1968 Hungarian tanks were coming to Slovakia. Now it's someone in a fancy limousine."[6]

Hungarian prime minister Bajnai telephoned his Slovak counterpart on the phone to reassure him that the visit was unconnected with the 1968 events and reminding him that in 2008, the 40th anniversary of the Prague Spring, Sólyom had made a speech officially expressing his regret at the 1968 invasion.[7]

"I feel necessary - as the head of state of the free and democratic Republic of Hungary - to express my deep regret for the peoples of then-Czechoslovakia, that the Hungarian troops took part in the oppression in 1968. Can we even conceive what happened, twelve years after the Soviet Army attacked Hungary to crush its revolution in a war of bloodshed? The Kádár-system ["the communist era in Hungary"] had driven Hungary into a situation where we attacked a country that wanted greater freedom.”

— László Sólyom on 21 August 2008 in front of a Budapest museum

However some in the Slovak press questioned if Fico were truly troubled by the date; the Slovak paper SME wrote:

[8]

“Can anyone take it seriously that our successors of communism [i.e., the governing coalition]) led by the one [Fico] who didn't notice November 17 [date of the 1989 Velvet revolution], are troubled by the date marking the beginning of "normalization", which jump-started their career?"

Late notification edit

On June 19, 2009, Sólyom had notified Peter Weiss, Slovakia's ambassador to Hungary, of the planned visit, regarded as the "highest level of official notification" in diplomacy.[9] Sólyom's office stated that Slovakia had mentioned no objections to the trip until the week of the planned visit.:[10]

“There were no indications of any objections against the ceremony, its date or any other circumstance around the presence of László Sólyom until the press releases of August 19.”

— Message of the Office of the President of the Republic of Hungary

Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico called this statement a lie, claiming that Hungary only informed Slovakia on August 13.[11] Foreign Minister of Hungary, Péter Balázs retorted that the named date, August 13, was the start of the technical preparations and not the notification, which had happened on June 19.

Stressing Hungarian statehood in inappropriate circumstances edit

 
Ivan Gašparovič, President of the Slovak Republic, said Sólyom "likes to prowl around" in areas of the Hungarian Kingdom that do not belong to present-day Hungary.

The three main leaders of Slovakia Ivan Gašparovič (President of the Republic), Robert Fico (Prime Minister) and Pavol Paska (Chairman of the Parliament) stated in a common declaration that the visit is a "deliberate provocation against Slovakia".

“The president, the chairman of parliament and the prime minister of Slovakia have condemned the circumstances in which the Hungarian president chose to stress Hungarian statehood on sovereign Slovak soil.”

— Robert Fico, Slovak Prime Minister

“He will want to show: it is an area where 'we' [meaning the Hungarians] are the lords and 'we' will decide about our things. What Hungary - especially through their president - does in the recent days and months is very dangerous.”

— Robert Fico

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Hungary noted:[5]

Hungary respects the sovereignty and territorial integrity of other countries. It considers important to have an unobstructed contact with each other's minorities. Hungary sees: with the Slovak step, the freedom of speech, one of the fundamental political rights, has also been violated.

— Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Hungary on August 24, 2009

No plans of meeting Slovak leaders edit

Slovaks have criticised Sólyom for not inviting Slovak leaders to the ceremony or meeting them somewhere else, even though Sólyom was not the organizer of the ceremony, as it was organized by the town of Komárno. Previously, the Slovak diplomatic establishment informed the Hungarian diplomatic establishment that Ivan Gašparovič, the head of state of Slovakia would be on vacation on the day of the visit. Gašparovič declared earlier that he would only accept any invitations if the town also erects statues of Saints Cyril and Methodius.[12] Neither Gašparovič nor Fico distanced themselves from government party leader Ján Slota for his earlier comments disparaging Saint Stephen, the king portrayed by the Komárno statue, as a "clown on a horse". Fico made further attacks[citation needed] on Saint Stephen and also said Slovaks should not consider him as their king.

Timeline of events edit

June 19 edit

On June 19, László Sólyom met the new ambassador of Slovakia to Hungary, Peter Weiss. On this meeting Sólyom informed Weiss about the planned ceremony he was invited to, and that he intends to go there.

August 13 edit

On August 13, the bilateral technical preparations to the ceremony began.

August 19 edit

Two days before the planned visit, on August 19, the committee of foreign affairs of the Slovak Parliament called the trip a diplomatic provocation because of the date August 21, anniversary of the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia.

Ivan Gašparovič, President of the Slovak Republic called the visit an "inconsiderate decision", stating to the press that he is not surprised because he knows Sólyom "likes to prowl around" in the countries that are in the area of the pre-1920 Kingdom of Hungary.

Back then, Fico said they can not and will not[13] prevent Sólyom from entering the country.

August 20 edit

 
Miroslav Lajčák, Slovak Minister of Foreign Affairs said Slovak-Hungarian relations have already been harmed by the issue.

On August 20, Miroslav Lajčák, Minister of Foreign Affairs of Slovakia officially informed Antal Heizer, ambassador of Hungary in Bratislava that László Sólyom is not recommended to cross the border on the next day. He also called Péter Balázs, Hungarian Minister of Foreign Affairs on the phone about the issue.

“We have reasons to think that this visit will harm the Slovak-Hungarian relations. If László Sólyom would not like this to happen, then the visit will not take place.”

— Miroslav Lajcák, Slovak Minister of Foreign Affairs

August 21 edit

 
The Elizabeth Bridge connecting Komárom, Hungary with Komárno, Slovakia. The bridge where President Sólyom planned to cross the border.

On Friday, August 21, Ivan Gašparovič, President of the Slovak Republic asked László Sólyom to think over the visit.

“I'd be glad if he [Sólyom] took this message very seriously.”

— Ivan Gašparovič, President of the Slovak Republic

He said if despite the message, Sólyom decides to visit the unveiling, Slovak authorities must do everything to protect him.

László Sólyom sent a message to Gašparovič in which he indicated that he maintains his intentions about unveiling the statue. He wrote in the message that he informed Slovakia in time and no objections have been raised earlier about the date. He also made clear that he already expressed his regret about the aggression against Czechoslovakia in a public speech on the 40th anniversary in 2008.

Denial of entry edit

Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico announced in the afternoon, hours before the unveiling that Sólyom will be not allowed to enter the territory of Slovakia. The document stating this was sent to the Hungarian embassy in Bratislava.

“The private trip, with a planned public speech, is considered a provocation, and, in such circumstances, the Hungarian president is an unwelcome person in Slovakia on August 21.”[14]

— Robert Fico

Fico also told the press that Slovak authorities would not prevent the president from crossing the border by physical force, but they will consider it as a serious provocation if he still enters Slovakia. Miroslav Lajčák, Slovak Minister of Foreign Affairs said the relations of Hungary and Slovakia have already been harmed by this issue.

On the border Ján Packa, executive of the police of Slovakia and a great number of policemen were waiting.[15]

President Sólyom did not enter Slovakia, after the embassy received a document[16] stating that Sólyom is refused entry into Slovakia:

“[...] in consideration of the risk to security, the responsible bodies of the Slovak Republic, under Directive 2004/38/EC dated 29 April of the European Parliament and the European Council[17] as well as Act 48/2002 Z.z. of the National Council of the Slovak Republic on the presence of foreigners and its further specifications, and under Act 171/1993 of the National Council of the Slovak Republic on the Police Force and its further specifications, it deny admission to the territory of the Slovak Republic to the president of the Republic of Hungary, Mr. László Sólyom on 21 August”

He walked to the middle of the bridge over the Danube leading from Hungarian Komárom to Slovak Komárno and held a press conference about the events on the Hungarian side of the border. He stated:[18]

“I turn back because they can not rouse me into a deliberate law infringement as I am a lawyer and a head of state. However, I hope the people of Komárom will remember this visit in their hearts, and that I will come back.”
“In a relation of two allied states, this step is unexplainable and inexplicable, with particular attention to the given reason of the ban stating that my presence constitutes a security risk.”[19]
“I hope the hysteria of the highest state levels in the last days does not reflect the feelings of the Slovak nation.” [20]

— László Sólyom

Ceremony in absence of Sólyom edit

The news stating that Sólyom is not allowed to enter Slovakia, was received with loud whistling among the gathered 2000-3000 people on the square where the statue was about to be unveiled.

The speeches before the unveiling were about the needed cooperation, and encouraged peace between the two countries, which was received with applause by the mainly Hungarian celebrators.

A few Slovak protesters attended the ceremony, with signs saying among others "Sólyom, go home".

Antal Heizer, ambassador of Hungary in Bratislava read the planned ceremonial speech of László Sólyom to the crowd.

Hungarian politicians of Slovakia took part in the ceremony, among others the mayor of the town, Tibor Bastrnák.

Reactions of Hungarian diplomatic establishment edit

The government of Hungary called the ban "unexpected", "unfounded" and its justification "deplorable" and "unacceptable".[21]

Péter Balázs Hungarian Minister of Foreign Affairs - cutting his vacation short - called in the Slovak ambassador Peter Weiss and protested the unprecedented act coming from an EU and NATO member state.[5][22] Péter Balázs asked for explanation.

We see it as unprecedented and unacceptable that an EU and NATO member state bars the Head of State of the Republic of Hungary from their territory.

— Péter Balázs

The chairman of the Committee of Foreign Affairs of the Parliament of Hungary, Zsolt Németh declared:[23]

“This is the result of a long process, that raised anti-Hungarianism to a government level in the last three years, the main reason of which is that Prime Minister Robert Fico has put an extremist party into the government.″

— Zsolt Németh

He also claimed that it is the duty of the international community to find a way of driving Slovakia back to the road of respecting human rights and minority rights.

The political parties of Hungary have also protested against the Slovak decision. The governing Hungarian Socialist Party (MSZP) said, it is definitely Slovakia who is responsible for the worsened relations, who as a young nation state seek their identity, which sometimes turns into fierce nationalism.[24]

Legal disputes edit

According to Péter Balázs, the ban was not lawful, because the already given international permissions haven't been withdrawn and so the embassy just got an "unfriendly" document, which would in theory have allowed Sólyom to enter Slovakia. He also said the Slovak diplomacy has turned international law "upside down" by leaving the international permissions while banning Sólyom personally, as a civilian.[25] He stated that Hungary plans to inform the EU and a broader international public about this "rude" political action.

Legality confirmed edit

On 6 March 2012 Advocate General at the European Court of Justice Yves Bot gave an opinion on the legality of the ban. He concluded that the visit was not a private but an official one and as such was not covered by the free movement provisions of the EU law. Diplomatic relations are governed exclusively by the member states and follow the international law under which visits by the heads of states depend on the consent of the host state.[26] The court, dismissing the action brought by Hungary, followed the general line of reasoning of the Advocate General.[27]

Media coverage edit

Slovakia edit

In the Slovak press, the opinions were divided about the move of the Slovak government. Those sympathizing with the government have generally agreed with the move. Dag Daniš of Pravda wrote:[28]

“The trip of Hungarian president to Komárno has failed miserably. For Hungary and Slovakia as well. The only one responsible for it, however is Sólyom. He could've missed out on this diplomatic mess-up. Provided he hadn't been stubborn and arrogant.”

— Dag Daniš, journalist, Pravda

More liberal and less pro-government papers have also condemned the Slovak reaction, not only Sólyom. As Peter Morvay of SME wrote:[8]

“Insinuations about deliberate provocation from beyond Danube [i.e. Hungary] is just plain nonsense. Even Hungarian infatuation doesn't justify such an excessive reaction from Fico & Co. unheard of in civilized parts of Europe. Can anyone take it seriously that our successors of communism [i.e. the governing coalition]) led by the one [Fico] who didn't notice November 17 [day of the Velvet revolution in 1989], are troubled by the date marking the beginning of "normalization", which jump-started their career?”

Most of these media empires are regularly accused of being the sole advocates of the opposition (fueled mostly by the prime minister's attacks on the media). Yet numerous members of the opposition have agreed with the ban. Mikuláš Dzurinda, president of the leading opposition party SDKÚ has been quoted to say that Sólyom is instigating conflicts.[29] Pavol Abrhán, member of the opposite KDH has suggested that a diplomatic note should be sent to Hungary.[30]

Czech Republic edit

The Czech media was amongst the first comment on the topic blaming both sides for the situation that arose. Mladá Fronta Dnes columnist Magdalena Sodomková wrote:[31]

“ It was not only the provocateur Solyom [...] who acted tragicomically. The actions of the Slovak politicians are embarrassing as well. With all heart, connecting the celebrations of (a foreign, but still holy) King Stephen I with the anniversary of the occupation (of the Warsaw Pact) is a bit far-fetched.[...]”

— Magdalena Sodomková, journalist, Mladá Fronta Dnes

Another daily, Lidové noviny wrote an article in a similar tone:[32]

“If we (i.e. the Czechs) would interpret history the same way as today's rulers of Slovakia, then we'd have to rename Charles Bridge and also Rudolfinum, which bears the name of the successor to the oppressing Austrian throne.[...]Shocking is also the fact that the Slovaks are unsettled by the reason of the visit itself, that is the inauguration of the statue of King Saint Stephen (in Komárno).[...]”

— Luboš Palata, journalist, Lidové Noviny

See also edit

  • Hungary–Slovakia relations
  • An unofficial Hungarian translation of the diplomatic note sent to László Sólyom (by the Office of the President of Hungary)

References edit

  1. ^ "An unofficial Hungarian translation of the diplomatic note sent to the Hungarian embassy, denying the entry (by the Office of the President of Hungary)". from the original on 2009-08-26. Retrieved 2009-08-26.
  2. ^ a b "Szent István szobor és tér lesz Révkomáromban" (St. Stephen statue and square to be unveiled in Komárno), MTI Hungarian news agency, 12 August 2009. Retrieved 2010-03-15.
  3. ^ "SNS prekáža, že v Komárne dali prednosť soche kráľa Štefana". Pravda. from the original on 2009-06-17. Retrieved 2009-08-26.
  4. ^ "Fico: Sólyom lesz a felelős azért, ha Révkomáromban valami történik" ("Fico: Sólyom will be responsible if something happens in Komárno"), MTI, 19 August 2009. Retrieved 2010-03-15.
  5. ^ a b c "A külügyminiszter tiltakozott a szlovák nagykövetnél a köztársasági elnök látogatásának meghiúsulása miatt" 2009-08-30 at the Wayback Machine, 24 August 2009. Retrieved 2010-03-15.
  6. ^ VG.hu quotes in Hungarian: "Akkor a magyar tankok jöttek, most pedig valaki gyönyörű limuzinon.". Accessed 2009-08-26. 2009-09-08.
  7. ^ "Sólyom hivatalosan is sajnálkozott a '68-as bevonulás miatt" ("Sólyom officially regrets '68 invasion"), Index, 21 August 2008. Retrieved 2010-03-15.
  8. ^ a b "SME - Stĺpček Petra Morvaya: Zbytočná hystéria". Petit Press, a.s. 2009-08-21. from the original on 2009-08-26. Retrieved 2009-08-23.
  9. ^ "Köztársasági Elnöki Hivatal". from the original on 2009-08-26. Retrieved 2009-08-26.
  10. ^ "Index - Külföld - A külügy sem érti a szlovák reakciókat". 20 August 2009. from the original on 2009-08-26. Retrieved 2009-08-26.
  11. ^ http://mti.hu/cikk/413770/[dead link]
  12. ^ "Bumm.sk | Gašparovič: Sólyom kedveli a kalandozó portyázásokat - Sólyom végveszélyben". from the original on 2010-12-26. Retrieved 2009-08-26.
  13. ^ "Fico claims it's Sólyom's fault". from the original on 2011-07-21. Retrieved 2009-08-26.
  14. ^ The New York Times
  15. ^ "Fico kitiltotta Sólyom Lászlót Szlovákiából". 21 August 2009.
  16. ^ "Unofficial Hungarian translation on the website of the Office of the Republic of Hungary". from the original on 2009-08-26. Retrieved 2009-08-26.
  17. ^ Directive 2004/38/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 29 April 2004 on the right of citizens of the Union and their family members to move and reside freely within the territory of the Member States
  18. ^ Press release on the website of the Office of the Republic of Hungary
  19. ^ „Ez két szövetséges állam kapcsolatában megmagyarázhatatlan és kimenthetetlen lépés, különös tekintettel a kitiltás indokolására, vagyis arra, hogy biztonsági kockázatot jelent a jelenlétem”
  20. ^ „Remélem, hogy az utolsó napok hisztériája a legfelsőbb állami szinteken nem a szlovák nép érzelmeit tükrözi”
  21. ^ http://www.mti.hu/cikk/413770/[permanent dead link]
  22. ^ Dübörög a szlóvák-magyar diplomáciai háború
  23. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-08-26. Retrieved 2009-08-26.
  24. ^ "HírExtra". from the original on 2009-08-28. Retrieved 2009-08-26.
  25. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-08-26. Retrieved 2009-08-22.
  26. ^ "European Court of Justice: opinion of the Advocate General in Case C-364/10 Hungary v Slovakia (Freedom of movement for persons)". Court of Justice of the EC. Retrieved 6 March 2012.
  27. ^ European Court of Justice: judgment in Case C‑364/10 Hungary v Slovakia
  28. ^ "Pravda - Prezident Sólyom verzus prezident Packa". Perex, a.s. 2009-08-22. from the original on 2009-09-10. Retrieved 2009-08-23.
  29. ^ "dnes.sk - Sólyom provokuje, tvrdí Dzurinda". centrumholdings.com. 2009-08-20. from the original on 26 September 2009. Retrieved 2009-08-23.
  30. ^ "SME.sk - Sólyoma sa zastali len Csáky a Bugár (Sólyom was supported only by Csáky and Bugár)". Petit Press a.s. 2009-08-20. Retrieved 2009-08-23.
  31. ^ "Na Dunaji se hádají, který šašek je na koni (Arguments on the Danube over the clown on a horse)". MAFRA a.s. 2009-08-22. Retrieved 2009-08-23.
  32. ^ . Lidové noviny a.s. 2009-08-21. Archived from the original on 2009-08-27. Retrieved 2009-08-23.

2009, hungarian, president, from, slovakia, hungarian, president, lászló, sólyom, allowed, step, slovak, soil, august, 2009, about, attend, unveiling, statue, stephen, first, king, hungary, 1000, 1038, komárno, slovakia, hungarian, révkomárom, town, near, hung. Hungarian president Laszlo Solyom was not allowed 1 to step on Slovak soil on August 21 2009 as he was about to attend the unveiling of a statue of St Stephen the first king of Hungary 1000 1038 in Komarno Slovakia Hungarian Revkomarom a town near the Hungarian border where ethnic Hungarians form the majority of the population Laszlo Solyom is seen at right during a 2006 joint press conference with Russian Federation president Vladimir Putin The only official reason given for the denial was that the Hungarian president s visit might have constituted a security risk Slovak prime minister Robert Fico had claimed that police would be unable to prevent Slovak extremist groups from disturbing the ceremony In the two days preceding the visit Slovakia had raised four other objections to the planned trip The ceremony might suggest a claim of Hungarian sovereignty over Slovak soil Slovakia was informed late about the visit The date of the visit fell one day after the Hungarian national holiday commemorating St Stephen and coincided with the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia Slovak leaders were not invited nor did the president have plans to meet with them The square in Komarno where the life size bronze statue of St Stephen on horseback has since been erected photographed in 2007 Declaring the Hungarian head of state an unwelcome person essentially persona non grata although this term was not used created additional diplomatic conflict in already tense Hungary Slovakia relations Contents 1 Purpose of the planned visit 2 Objections of Slovakia against the visit 2 1 Security risk 2 2 Date 2 3 Late notification 2 4 Stressing Hungarian statehood in inappropriate circumstances 2 5 No plans of meeting Slovak leaders 3 Timeline of events 3 1 June 19 3 2 August 13 3 3 August 19 3 4 August 20 3 5 August 21 3 5 1 Denial of entry 4 Ceremony in absence of Solyom 5 Reactions of Hungarian diplomatic establishment 5 1 Legal disputes 5 1 1 Legality confirmed 6 Media coverage 6 1 Slovakia 6 2 Czech Republic 7 See also 8 ReferencesPurpose of the planned visit editLaszlo Solyom was invited 2 by a civic association Szent Istvan Szobor Bizottsag St Stephen Statue Committee to a statue unveiling ceremony in Komarno Slovakia Hungarian Revkomarom Both the Catholic and the Orthodox churches regard King Stephen as a saint for his role in converting the peoples of his kingdom to Christianity Pope Gregory VII canonized him his son and a bishop August 20 1083 the day of the canonization is a public holiday in Hungary regarded as the foundation of Hungarian statehood In his Admonitions to his son he declared as cited in the planned speech of Solyom for the unveiling A kingdom with only one language and having only one custom is weak and frail Stephen of Hungary The Komarno statue was due to be unveiled on the day after this anniversary that is on August 21 2009 The erection of the statue itself was criticized in February 2009 by the extremist and nationalist Slovak National Party SNS 2 one of the parties in Slovakia s governing coalition because the town had not erected statues of Saints Cyril and Methodius two Byzantine Greek missionaries among the Slavic peoples of Great Moravia and Pannonia The statue was consequently placed only on the balcony of the Matica Slovenska a cultural and scientific institution focusing on Slovakia related topics 3 Objections of Slovakia against the visit editSecurity risk edit nbsp Robert Fico Prime Minister of Slovakia Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico said on August 19 that he could not prevent Solyom from entering the country and sent a letter to the Hungarian embassy warning of potential security risks saying that his Direction Social Democracy party government would not prevent extremists of the nationalist Slovenska pospolitost Slovak Brotherhood from going there to demonstrate 4 We will not check the Slovak Republic and we cannot know whether someone will try to use the visit of the president in Komarno in some sensitive questions Robert Fico According to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Hungary there were no real security risks involved around the ceremony 5 T here was only a small number of protesters at the location of the ceremony which the Slovak police were by the usual means of the police able to keep under control Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Hungary Date edit nbsp Hungarian Prime Minister Gordon Bajnai stated that the planned visit had nothing to do with the 1968 events Two days before the planned visit the Slovak parliamentary foreign affairs committee called the trip a diplomatic provocation because of the August 21 date although the date was chosen by the mayor of Komarno not by Solyom August 21 is the anniversary of the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia led by the Soviet Union after the 1968 Prague Spring Being a Warsaw Pact state the People s Republic of Hungary also sent troops into Slovakia Poland and Bulgaria also took part in the Soviet putsch Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico compared Laszlo Solyom to the soldiers invading Czechoslovakia In 1968 Hungarian tanks were coming to Slovakia Now it s someone in a fancy limousine 6 Hungarian prime minister Bajnai telephoned his Slovak counterpart on the phone to reassure him that the visit was unconnected with the 1968 events and reminding him that in 2008 the 40th anniversary of the Prague Spring Solyom had made a speech officially expressing his regret at the 1968 invasion 7 I feel necessary as the head of state of the free and democratic Republic of Hungary to express my deep regret for the peoples of then Czechoslovakia that the Hungarian troops took part in the oppression in 1968 Can we even conceive what happened twelve years after the Soviet Army attacked Hungary to crush its revolution in a war of bloodshed The Kadar system the communist era in Hungary had driven Hungary into a situation where we attacked a country that wanted greater freedom Laszlo Solyom on 21 August 2008 in front of a Budapest museum However some in the Slovak press questioned if Fico were truly troubled by the date the Slovak paper SME wrote 8 Can anyone take it seriously that our successors of communism i e the governing coalition led by the one Fico who didn t notice November 17 date of the 1989 Velvet revolution are troubled by the date marking the beginning of normalization which jump started their career Late notification edit On June 19 2009 Solyom had notified Peter Weiss Slovakia s ambassador to Hungary of the planned visit regarded as the highest level of official notification in diplomacy 9 Solyom s office stated that Slovakia had mentioned no objections to the trip until the week of the planned visit 10 There were no indications of any objections against the ceremony its date or any other circumstance around the presence of Laszlo Solyom until the press releases of August 19 Message of the Office of the President of the Republic of Hungary Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico called this statement a lie claiming that Hungary only informed Slovakia on August 13 11 Foreign Minister of Hungary Peter Balazs retorted that the named date August 13 was the start of the technical preparations and not the notification which had happened on June 19 Stressing Hungarian statehood in inappropriate circumstances edit nbsp Ivan Gasparovic President of the Slovak Republic said Solyom likes to prowl around in areas of the Hungarian Kingdom that do not belong to present day Hungary The three main leaders of Slovakia Ivan Gasparovic President of the Republic Robert Fico Prime Minister and Pavol Paska Chairman of the Parliament stated in a common declaration that the visit is a deliberate provocation against Slovakia The president the chairman of parliament and the prime minister of Slovakia have condemned the circumstances in which the Hungarian president chose to stress Hungarian statehood on sovereign Slovak soil Robert Fico Slovak Prime Minister He will want to show it is an area where we meaning the Hungarians are the lords and we will decide about our things What Hungary especially through their president does in the recent days and months is very dangerous Robert Fico The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Hungary noted 5 Hungary respects the sovereignty and territorial integrity of other countries It considers important to have an unobstructed contact with each other s minorities Hungary sees with the Slovak step the freedom of speech one of the fundamental political rights has also been violated Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Hungary on August 24 2009 No plans of meeting Slovak leaders edit Slovaks have criticised Solyom for not inviting Slovak leaders to the ceremony or meeting them somewhere else even though Solyom was not the organizer of the ceremony as it was organized by the town of Komarno Previously the Slovak diplomatic establishment informed the Hungarian diplomatic establishment that Ivan Gasparovic the head of state of Slovakia would be on vacation on the day of the visit Gasparovic declared earlier that he would only accept any invitations if the town also erects statues of Saints Cyril and Methodius 12 Neither Gasparovic nor Fico distanced themselves from government party leader Jan Slota for his earlier comments disparaging Saint Stephen the king portrayed by the Komarno statue as a clown on a horse Fico made further attacks citation needed on Saint Stephen and also said Slovaks should not consider him as their king Timeline of events editJune 19 edit On June 19 Laszlo Solyom met the new ambassador of Slovakia to Hungary Peter Weiss On this meeting Solyom informed Weiss about the planned ceremony he was invited to and that he intends to go there August 13 edit On August 13 the bilateral technical preparations to the ceremony began August 19 edit Two days before the planned visit on August 19 the committee of foreign affairs of the Slovak Parliament called the trip a diplomatic provocation because of the date August 21 anniversary of the Warsaw Pact invasion of Czechoslovakia Ivan Gasparovic President of the Slovak Republic called the visit an inconsiderate decision stating to the press that he is not surprised because he knows Solyom likes to prowl around in the countries that are in the area of the pre 1920 Kingdom of Hungary Back then Fico said they can not and will not 13 prevent Solyom from entering the country August 20 edit nbsp Miroslav Lajcak Slovak Minister of Foreign Affairs said Slovak Hungarian relations have already been harmed by the issue On August 20 Miroslav Lajcak Minister of Foreign Affairs of Slovakia officially informed Antal Heizer ambassador of Hungary in Bratislava that Laszlo Solyom is not recommended to cross the border on the next day He also called Peter Balazs Hungarian Minister of Foreign Affairs on the phone about the issue We have reasons to think that this visit will harm the Slovak Hungarian relations If Laszlo Solyom would not like this to happen then the visit will not take place Miroslav Lajcak Slovak Minister of Foreign Affairs August 21 edit nbsp The Elizabeth Bridge connecting Komarom Hungary with Komarno Slovakia The bridge where President Solyom planned to cross the border On Friday August 21 Ivan Gasparovic President of the Slovak Republic asked Laszlo Solyom to think over the visit I d be glad if he Solyom took this message very seriously Ivan Gasparovic President of the Slovak Republic He said if despite the message Solyom decides to visit the unveiling Slovak authorities must do everything to protect him Laszlo Solyom sent a message to Gasparovic in which he indicated that he maintains his intentions about unveiling the statue He wrote in the message that he informed Slovakia in time and no objections have been raised earlier about the date He also made clear that he already expressed his regret about the aggression against Czechoslovakia in a public speech on the 40th anniversary in 2008 Denial of entry edit Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico announced in the afternoon hours before the unveiling that Solyom will be not allowed to enter the territory of Slovakia The document stating this was sent to the Hungarian embassy in Bratislava The private trip with a planned public speech is considered a provocation and in such circumstances the Hungarian president is an unwelcome person in Slovakia on August 21 14 Robert Fico Fico also told the press that Slovak authorities would not prevent the president from crossing the border by physical force but they will consider it as a serious provocation if he still enters Slovakia Miroslav Lajcak Slovak Minister of Foreign Affairs said the relations of Hungary and Slovakia have already been harmed by this issue On the border Jan Packa executive of the police of Slovakia and a great number of policemen were waiting 15 President Solyom did not enter Slovakia after the embassy received a document 16 stating that Solyom is refused entry into Slovakia in consideration of the risk to security the responsible bodies of the Slovak Republic under Directive 2004 38 EC dated 29 April of the European Parliament and the European Council 17 as well as Act 48 2002 Z z of the National Council of the Slovak Republic on the presence of foreigners and its further specifications and under Act 171 1993 of the National Council of the Slovak Republic on the Police Force and its further specifications it deny admission to the territory of the Slovak Republic to the president of the Republic of Hungary Mr Laszlo Solyom on 21 August He walked to the middle of the bridge over the Danube leading from Hungarian Komarom to Slovak Komarno and held a press conference about the events on the Hungarian side of the border He stated 18 I turn back because they can not rouse me into a deliberate law infringement as I am a lawyer and a head of state However I hope the people of Komarom will remember this visit in their hearts and that I will come back In a relation of two allied states this step is unexplainable and inexplicable with particular attention to the given reason of the ban stating that my presence constitutes a security risk 19 I hope the hysteria of the highest state levels in the last days does not reflect the feelings of the Slovak nation 20 Laszlo SolyomCeremony in absence of Solyom editThe news stating that Solyom is not allowed to enter Slovakia was received with loud whistling among the gathered 2000 3000 people on the square where the statue was about to be unveiled The speeches before the unveiling were about the needed cooperation and encouraged peace between the two countries which was received with applause by the mainly Hungarian celebrators A few Slovak protesters attended the ceremony with signs saying among others Solyom go home Antal Heizer ambassador of Hungary in Bratislava read the planned ceremonial speech of Laszlo Solyom to the crowd Hungarian politicians of Slovakia took part in the ceremony among others the mayor of the town Tibor Bastrnak Reactions of Hungarian diplomatic establishment editThe government of Hungary called the ban unexpected unfounded and its justification deplorable and unacceptable 21 Peter Balazs Hungarian Minister of Foreign Affairs cutting his vacation short called in the Slovak ambassador Peter Weiss and protested the unprecedented act coming from an EU and NATO member state 5 22 Peter Balazs asked for explanation We see it as unprecedented and unacceptable that an EU and NATO member state bars the Head of State of the Republic of Hungary from their territory Peter Balazs The chairman of the Committee of Foreign Affairs of the Parliament of Hungary Zsolt Nemeth declared 23 This is the result of a long process that raised anti Hungarianism to a government level in the last three years the main reason of which is that Prime Minister Robert Fico has put an extremist party into the government Zsolt Nemeth He also claimed that it is the duty of the international community to find a way of driving Slovakia back to the road of respecting human rights and minority rights The political parties of Hungary have also protested against the Slovak decision The governing Hungarian Socialist Party MSZP said it is definitely Slovakia who is responsible for the worsened relations who as a young nation state seek their identity which sometimes turns into fierce nationalism 24 Legal disputes edit According to Peter Balazs the ban was not lawful because the already given international permissions haven t been withdrawn and so the embassy just got an unfriendly document which would in theory have allowed Solyom to enter Slovakia He also said the Slovak diplomacy has turned international law upside down by leaving the international permissions while banning Solyom personally as a civilian 25 He stated that Hungary plans to inform the EU and a broader international public about this rude political action Legality confirmed edit On 6 March 2012 Advocate General at the European Court of Justice Yves Bot gave an opinion on the legality of the ban He concluded that the visit was not a private but an official one and as such was not covered by the free movement provisions of the EU law Diplomatic relations are governed exclusively by the member states and follow the international law under which visits by the heads of states depend on the consent of the host state 26 The court dismissing the action brought by Hungary followed the general line of reasoning of the Advocate General 27 Media coverage editSlovakia edit In the Slovak press the opinions were divided about the move of the Slovak government Those sympathizing with the government have generally agreed with the move Dag Danis of Pravda wrote 28 The trip of Hungarian president to Komarno has failed miserably For Hungary and Slovakia as well The only one responsible for it however is Solyom He could ve missed out on this diplomatic mess up Provided he hadn t been stubborn and arrogant Dag Danis journalist Pravda More liberal and less pro government papers have also condemned the Slovak reaction not only Solyom As Peter Morvay of SME wrote 8 Insinuations about deliberate provocation from beyond Danube i e Hungary is just plain nonsense Even Hungarian infatuation doesn t justify such an excessive reaction from Fico amp Co unheard of in civilized parts of Europe Can anyone take it seriously that our successors of communism i e the governing coalition led by the one Fico who didn t notice November 17 day of the Velvet revolution in 1989 are troubled by the date marking the beginning of normalization which jump started their career Most of these media empires are regularly accused of being the sole advocates of the opposition fueled mostly by the prime minister s attacks on the media Yet numerous members of the opposition have agreed with the ban Mikulas Dzurinda president of the leading opposition party SDKU has been quoted to say that Solyom is instigating conflicts 29 Pavol Abrhan member of the opposite KDH has suggested that a diplomatic note should be sent to Hungary 30 Czech Republic edit The Czech media was amongst the first comment on the topic blaming both sides for the situation that arose Mlada Fronta Dnes columnist Magdalena Sodomkova wrote 31 It was not only the provocateur Solyom who acted tragicomically The actions of the Slovak politicians are embarrassing as well With all heart connecting the celebrations of a foreign but still holy King Stephen I with the anniversary of the occupation of the Warsaw Pact is a bit far fetched Magdalena Sodomkova journalist Mlada Fronta Dnes Another daily Lidove noviny wrote an article in a similar tone 32 If we i e the Czechs would interpret history the same way as today s rulers of Slovakia then we d have to rename Charles Bridge and also Rudolfinum which bears the name of the successor to the oppressing Austrian throne Shocking is also the fact that the Slovaks are unsettled by the reason of the visit itself that is the inauguration of the statue of King Saint Stephen in Komarno Lubos Palata journalist Lidove NovinySee also editHungary Slovakia relations An unofficial Hungarian translation of the diplomatic note sent to Laszlo Solyom by the Office of the President of Hungary References edit An unofficial Hungarian translation of the diplomatic note sent to the Hungarian embassy denying the entry by the Office of the President of Hungary Archived from the original on 2009 08 26 Retrieved 2009 08 26 a b Szent Istvan szobor es ter lesz Revkomaromban St Stephen statue and square to be unveiled in Komarno MTI Hungarian news agency 12 August 2009 Retrieved 2010 03 15 SNS prekaza ze v Komarne dali prednost soche kraľa Stefana Pravda Archived from the original on 2009 06 17 Retrieved 2009 08 26 Fico Solyom lesz a felelos azert ha Revkomaromban valami tortenik Fico Solyom will be responsible if something happens in Komarno MTI 19 August 2009 Retrieved 2010 03 15 a b c A kulugyminiszter tiltakozott a szlovak nagykovetnel a koztarsasagi elnok latogatasanak meghiusulasa miatt Archived 2009 08 30 at the Wayback Machine 24 August 2009 Retrieved 2010 03 15 VG hu quotes in Hungarian Akkor a magyar tankok jottek most pedig valaki gyonyoru limuzinon Accessed 2009 08 26 Archived 2009 09 08 Solyom hivatalosan is sajnalkozott a 68 as bevonulas miatt Solyom officially regrets 68 invasion Index 21 August 2008 Retrieved 2010 03 15 a b SME Stĺpcek Petra Morvaya Zbytocna hysteria Petit Press a s 2009 08 21 Archived from the original on 2009 08 26 Retrieved 2009 08 23 Koztarsasagi Elnoki Hivatal Archived from the original on 2009 08 26 Retrieved 2009 08 26 Index Kulfold A kulugy sem erti a szlovak reakciokat 20 August 2009 Archived from the original on 2009 08 26 Retrieved 2009 08 26 http mti hu cikk 413770 dead link Bumm sk Gasparovic Solyom kedveli a kalandozo portyazasokat Solyom vegveszelyben Archived from the original on 2010 12 26 Retrieved 2009 08 26 Fico claims it s Solyom s fault Archived from the original on 2011 07 21 Retrieved 2009 08 26 The New York Times Fico kitiltotta Solyom Laszlot Szlovakiabol 21 August 2009 Unofficial Hungarian translation on the website of the Office of the Republic of Hungary Archived from the original on 2009 08 26 Retrieved 2009 08 26 Directive 2004 38 EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 29 April 2004 on the right of citizens of the Union and their family members to move and reside freely within the territory of the Member States Press release on the website of the Office of the Republic of Hungary Ez ket szovetseges allam kapcsolataban megmagyarazhatatlan es kimenthetetlen lepes kulonos tekintettel a kitiltas indokolasara vagyis arra hogy biztonsagi kockazatot jelent a jelenletem Remelem hogy az utolso napok hiszteriaja a legfelsobb allami szinteken nem a szlovak nep erzelmeit tukrozi http www mti hu cikk 413770 permanent dead link Duborog a szlovak magyar diplomaciai haboru Nemeth kormanyzati rangra emelkedett a magyarellenesseg hirsarok hu Archived from the original on 2009 08 26 Retrieved 2009 08 26 HirExtra Archived from the original on 2009 08 28 Retrieved 2009 08 26 MTI Archived from the original on 2009 08 26 Retrieved 2009 08 22 European Court of Justice opinion of the Advocate General in Case C 364 10 Hungary v Slovakia Freedom of movement for persons Court of Justice of the EC Retrieved 6 March 2012 European Court of Justice judgment in Case C 364 10 Hungary v Slovakia Pravda Prezident Solyom verzus prezident Packa Perex a s 2009 08 22 Archived from the original on 2009 09 10 Retrieved 2009 08 23 dnes sk Solyom provokuje tvrdi Dzurinda centrumholdings com 2009 08 20 Archived from the original on 26 September 2009 Retrieved 2009 08 23 SME sk Solyoma sa zastali len Csaky a Bugar Solyom was supported only by Csaky and Bugar Petit Press a s 2009 08 20 Retrieved 2009 08 23 Na Dunaji se hadaji ktery sasek je na koni Arguments on the Danube over the clown on a horse MAFRA a s 2009 08 22 Retrieved 2009 08 23 Svaty Stefan slavny kral Slovenska Saint Stephen famous king of Slovakia Lidove noviny a s 2009 08 21 Archived from the original on 2009 08 27 Retrieved 2009 08 23 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2009 ban of Hungarian President from Slovakia amp oldid 1179992921, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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