Slovakia may sue EU over plans to stop Russian gas supplies

Slovakia is considering suing the EU over its plans to stop the delivery of Russian gas supplies from 2028 as a result of its war in Ukraine, Prime Minister Robert Fico said on Wednesday. (AP/File)
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Updated 19 November 2025
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Slovakia may sue EU over plans to stop Russian gas supplies

  • Slovakia and Hungary have been sharply critical of the EU executive’s plans to phase out Russian energy
  • “There will be a document discussed by the government next week, where we will consider the possibility of filing a lawsuit,” Fico said

BRATISLAVA: Slovakia is considering suing the EU over its plans to stop the delivery of Russian gas supplies from 2028 as a result of its war in Ukraine, Prime Minister Robert Fico said on Wednesday.
Slovakia and Hungary have been sharply critical of the EU executive’s plans to phase out Russian energy, with both still highly reliant on gas and oil supplies from Moscow and fearful that more-costly alternatives will damage their economies.
Fico, who has broken ranks with most of Europe over his pro-Moscow stance, said on Wednesday he had tasked his economy, foreign and justice ministers with analizing options to sue the EU for stopping Russian gas supplies to Slovakia.
“There will be a document discussed by the government next week, where we will consider the possibility of filing a lawsuit,” Fico told a televised briefing.

UNABLE TO BLOCK PLANS “Everything will depend a lot on how the European Commission fulfils its commitments to Slovakia, which were given and signed directly by the president of the European Commission,” Fico added, in reference to guarantees over possible shortages or price spikes the EU executive gave earlier this year.
He did not say how much Slovakia may sue the EU for, nor did he explain on what precise legal basis.
EU energy ministers last month backed the proposal to phase out Russian oil and gas imports to the bloc by January 2028. EU countries must negotiate the final rules with the European Parliament, which is still debating its position.
Slovakia has been unable to block the plan as it needs only a majority in favor, rather than a unanimous vote. Instead, Fico has sought to hold up the EU’s last two sanctions packages against Russia, which require unanimity, in order to get guarantees and other demands. Fico added the government will also discuss an EU proposal — which has yet to be agreed — for using Russian frozen assets to give Ukraine a loan worth 140 billion euros ($162 billion).
He reiterated opposition to the plan, saying it raised legal questions and uncertainties.


Afghan polio survivor’s sock factory provides hope by employing disabled workers

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Afghan polio survivor’s sock factory provides hope by employing disabled workers

HERAT: In a tiny room in the center of Herat, Afghanistan’s westernmost city, Shahabuddin uses his hands to propel himself along the floor to a freshly-made pile of socks waiting to be sorted and packaged.
A double amputee since a roadside bomb took both his legs a decade ago, when Afghanistan was mired in conflict between US-led forces and Taliban insurgents, the 36-year-old father of four had struggled to find work. Unemployed for the last decade, he had been forced to rely on relatives for his family’s survival.
But a new sock production workshop in Herat employing only disabled workers has given him new hope.
“I became disabled due to the explosion. Both my legs were amputated,” Shahabuddin, who like many Afghans goes by only one name, said during a brief pause in his work in early December. “Now I work here in a sock factory, and I am very happy that I have been given a job here.”
The workshop is the brainchild of Mohammad Amiri, 35, a former grocery shop worker who started the business about a month ago. Amiri, himself disabled by childhood polio, wanted to create jobs and help provide income for other people with disabilities, particularly as many of them were injured during the conflict and have no other means of income.
He teamed up with another polio survivor to start the sock factory with a workforce of men disabled either through traumatic injuries or because of congenital issues or other reasons. They make four types of socks: long and short, for winter and summer.
“The factory, which is funded and supported by people with disabilities, began operations last month and currently employs around 50 people with disabilities,” Amiri said. “They are busy in the production, packaging and sale of socks in the city.”
A combination of decades of conflict, a weak health care system and struggling economy have contributed to high levels of disability in Afghanistan. Data from a 2019 Model Disability Survey conducted by The Asia Foundation nonprofit organization indicates that nearly 25 percent of adults live with a mild disability, while 40 percent have moderate and about 14 percent have severe disabilities.
“These figures compel us to act with greater urgency and commitment,” the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan said in a statement released on the International Day of Persons with Disabilities on Dec. 3, quoting the same figures. “Persons with disabilities must not be treated as an afterthought; they must be fully integrated into every stage of planning, decision-making, and service delivery.”
Meanwhile, Afghanistan is one of only two countries — along with neighboring Pakistan — where wild poliovirus remains endemic. The infectious disease can cause flu-like symptoms, but can also cause severe reactions, including paralysis, disability and death.
The Afghan Ministry of Martyrs and Disabled Affairs says 189,635 disabled people across the country are registered and receiving financial support from the government.
Amiri said his business faces serious competition from cheap imports of textiles, and expressed the hope that the government would stop imports from abroad. He has hopes of getting a contract to provide the Afghan security forces with socks, and wants to expand his workforce to 2,000 people.
His current employees include former refugees who have recently returned to Afghanistan after spending years abroad.
One such man is Mohammad Arif Jafari, 40, an economics graduate and polio survivor who lived in Iran for years. Returning to Afghanistan has been hard, he said.
“I suffered a lot due to unemployment. But fortunately, now I produce several types of socks,” he said while selling his wares from a stall on the streets of Herat. “I am happy that I am working here and earning an income.”