EU neighbor urges Slovakia to lift Russia sanctions veto

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Czech Prime Minister Fiala has urged Bratislava to stop blocking the proposed restrictions Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala has urged Slovak leader Robert Fico to withdraw Bratislava’s veto of the EU’s 18th sanctions package, which targets Russia over its role in the Ukraine conflict. Slovakia blocked the measures for the second time on Friday.Slovakia opposes the sanctions due to concerns over the RePowerEU plan, an EU initiative aimed at phasing out Russian energy imports by 2027. The plan is being discussed alongside measures targeting Russia’s energy and financial sectors. Bratislava says it could lead to supply shortages, rising prices, increased transit fees, and potential legal disputes with Russian energy giant Gazprom.In a post on X on Sunday, Fiala said he sent a letter to Fico urging Slovakia to reconsider its stance, citing the “exceptionally close relations” between the two countries.While Russian gas has not been subject to a direct EU ban, most member states have voluntarily cut imports. However, several landlocked countries – including Slovakia, Hungary, Austria, and the Czech Republic – still rely on limited volumes through exemptions. Last week, Fico described the RePowerEU plan as “ideological,” and said Slovakia requires “clear guarantees, not political promises” to ensure energy security and affordability – conditions which he said are necessary for supporting the sanctions.The European Commission has proposed advancing the energy phase-out via trade legislation, allowing approval by qualified majority and potentially bypassing vetoes by member states such as Slovakia and Hungary.Budapest has also rejected the plan, with Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto warning it would “destroy Hungary’s energy security” and trigger price spikes.In June, Brussels proposed a new round of sanctions targeting Russian energy exports, infrastructure, and finance. The measures would reportedly include a lower price cap on Russian oil, a ban on the future use of the Nord Stream pipeline, restrictions on refined products from Russian crude, and sanctions on 77 vessels linked to Russia’s alleged ‘shadow fleet’ used to evade oil restrictions.Moscow has denounced the sanctions as illegal and counterproductive, arguing that they have inflated EU energy prices and forced the bloc to depend on more expensive or rerouted imports, undermining economic competitiveness.