RT.com
30 Mar 2025, 18:01 GMT+10
Slovak politicians and economists argue that the measures have never worked and backfired on the countries that imposed them
Slovakia hosted a conference on Saturday calling for the removal of EU sanctions against Russia, with politicians and economists warning that the measures have backfired on the countries that imposed them - including Slovakia.
The event - For Slovakia Without Sanctions - was held in Bratislava and promoted a petition for a referendum aimed at persuading the Slovak government to push for the removal of the sanctions at the EU level.
The petition, initiated by the left-wing Party of Slovak Revival and the right-wing Homeland Party late last year, has so far gained more than 300,000 signatures, the organizers said.
Pavol Slota, the leader of the Homeland Party and one of the authors of the petition, argued that Slovakia's future depends on ending the sanctions.
"It is about our whole nation, all Slovak citizens, about us fighting for our own future. We must do everything so that our message reaches every single Slovak citizen," he said.
"If we leave everything as it is, it may happen so that we may not get a second chance... I have to ask you, do you respect weak people who adapt, who somehow just go along with the crowd? Or do you respect the strong people who respect themselves?" Slota said, urging people to support the campaign in defense of "our values, our traditions, our families, our nation."
Economist and professor Peter Stanek told attendees that research, including from Western sources, has shown that the sanctions are ineffective.
"There are dozens of studies that clearly show that sanctions have never worked," Stanek said. "They always affected those who imposed them... They drove the energy sector crazy."
He added that European energy prices have been growing since 2021, warning that new US tariffs on EU exports and Brussels' own costly militarization and climate programs will further amplify the economic fallout.
"Those sanctions begin to take on a completely different dimension [due] to the cretinism reigning in Brussels and the European Commission," he said. "I can't call it anything else, because they've probably run out of common sense."
Former Slovak Justice Minister Stefan Harabin also addressed the conference, accusing the EU of "provoking the Russians" with sanctions and escalating the conflict by arming Kiev.
Under Slovakia's constitution, the president can call a referendum if a petition gathers 350,000 valid signatures. The organizers pledged to continue collecting signatures. Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico, a critic of EU policy on Ukraine, has called the sanctions counterproductive. He urged Brussels to re-engage with Moscow and warned that the bloc's confrontational approach is hurting its own member states.
width="560"
height="315"
src="https://mf.b37mrtl.ru/files/2025.03/67e8f0c12030270c9432a646.mp4" frameborder="0"
>
(RT.com)
Get a daily dose of St Petersburg Star news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to St Petersburg Star.
More InformationEstonia and Lithuania are concerned Moscow could redeploy its forces to their borders if the fighting stops, the outlet has said ...
Estonia and Lithuania are concerned Moscow could redeploy its forces to their borders if the fighting stops, the outlet has said ...
Slovak politicians and economists argue that the measures have never worked and backfired on the countries that imposed them Slovakia...
Washington became a part of the kill chain by providing invaluable intelligence and strategic support, one official told the paper...
The Russian president has suggested that UN-backed external governance in Kiev could provide a legitimate foundation for peace negotiations...
A new 23-member cabinet has been formed four months after the ouster of former President Bashar Assad Syrian leader Ahmed al-Sharaa...
WASHINGTON, D.C: FBI Director Kash Patel said this week the bureau was probing what he called the increase in violent activity toward...
GAZA - Israel is refusing to allow search parties to access an area where 9 Red Cross ambulance crew members have gone missing in Gaza....
NEW YORK CITY, New York: A jury in Georgia has ordered Bayer, the parent company of Monsanto, to pay nearly US$2.1 billion to a man...
The death toll in Friday's massive earthquake in Myanmar has risen to 1,644, and is expected to rise significantly. At least another...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: In response to soaring egg prices and supply shortages driven by a devastating bird flu outbreak, the United States...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: U.S. President Donald Trump vowed this week that more countries will be added to the Abraham Accords, the series...