A Dash for the Good News

The end of the year is a time when we wish each other happines and luck (among other things). My government is no exception and since not a lot of Slovenes are showing it any love at all, Janša & co. have given themselves a bit of love by making a bit of headlines. Good ones. You know… just to get the ball roling and to start the EU presidency in a upbeat tone. And, seemingly out of nowhere, the following happened


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A happy government… The original version from 2004


The budget is sporting a surplus. Pengovsky went huh?. From where?. OK, so the government claims it’s the economic growth, but I strongly suspect that we are facing a bit of creative accounting here… Perhaps all the money that the government got from selling Nova Kreditna Banka Maribor wasn’t yet funneled into covering the public debt…? Or could it be that cutting the costs withing the government really showed results five days before the end of the fiscal year?

The Strojan Roma family finally settled for a new patch of land. The government and the family swithced ownership of a particular piece of land, which means that the matter is basically settled. But it took the government more a year to settle something that should not have happened in the first place. A brutal violation of basic human rights.

The inflation in December is only .4 percent. Which still leaves the cumulative inflation at a record 5.6 percent. The highest in eurozone.

But hey… You gotta be happy for this government. If they believe their own spin, why shouldn’t we?

The Life And Times of Dimitrij Rupel

No, this is not an attempt at a biography of a particular foreign minister, who seems to weather the weather, whatever the weather, wether we want it ot not (even though he at one point apparently was on the outs with Janez Janša). Frankly, he seems to be doing quite well in that department on his own and God forbid me imposing myself on him, the master of the sharpened pen, the prince of eloquence, the chief of quick wit.

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Dimitrij Rupel and euro-babes Ursula Plassnik (Austria) & Dora Bakoyannis (Greece)

Case in point being the latest issue of Sinfo, a PR magazine issued monthly by the governmental Communications office, where the likes of ministers, MEPs and similiar publish their thoughts and inner-most meditations (Shit, we ain’t getting enough good press! What do we do? I know! Let’s issue our own magazine!). True, the phenomenon is not uknown in more familiar enviroments, in Ljubljana, for example, the municipality issues a rag aptly named Ljubljana, where Janković’s pictures are aplenty, praise is cheap and progress is measued in lightyears. Or so they say. But that’s beside the point for now…

Now, the latest issue of Sinfo (great choice of name, BTW. Fire your chief marketing officer toot-suite!), the Eternal Minister has provided the reading public with a rare insight into his curiously wired brain. In an article titled Slovenian EU Presidency under Fire at Home, Dimitrij Rupel – staying true to his “enumeration style” – took apart the rabid left-wing journalistic scum this country is apparently infested with. Piece by piece he breaks into sundust their claims of rampant censorship and political meddling with the media which (imagine the nerve!) took place for the better part of the past three years. And rewrites history along the way – now that is a sign of a true talent!

Outlining his strong involvment with dissidents in Slovena, Dimitrij Rupel convenietnly forgets that he was awarded a Fulbright schollarship way back in the seventies – and that the regime back then was rather picky about people who went into exchange programmes. As a rule, prominent disidents were excluded from (or at the very least heavily inhbited at) participapting in such programmes. Furthermore, the fact that he was able to continue his academic activites despite being involved with dissident movements, shows that he was not the enemy of the state he today paints himself to be.

Indeed, if one thing can be said of Dimitrij Rupel, it is that he was always a part of the establishment. One of his more “brilliant” examples of nursing a pole up his arse was a piece of intelectual snobism entitled “You Must Miss This” published in 1977 where he – a writer, nay, a publicist! – took it upon himself to tear to pieces, chew up, spit out and stomp on the first album by Pankrti, a punk band which quickly attained cult status (and becoming pop icons shortly thereafter). Unlike Rupel, nearly all of the more qualified people at the time (e.g.: music editors, reviewers, and the like) went delirious with excitement and gave rave reviews of the album. But they were mostly a part of what was then known collectively as The Alternative, that is to say, the alternative to the rulling party. The Communist Party.

This of course did not stop Rupel from joining The Alternative, or rather, the party which has its roots in The Alternative – The Liberal Democrats (LDS). Perhaps the fact that ZSMS (LDS’s socialist predecessor) was a part of both the establishment and the alternative played a role, but let’s skip this part as not to damage the demagogical tone of this post. Namely: in his latest intelectual bravado, Rupel boldly states (in paragraph eight) that “…the new generation of democratic political leaders and politicians enjoyed strong public support, but quite soon, in 1993, the old networks recovered and even prevailed.” and then goes on to add that “…The ‘continuity parties’ (occasionally in combination with one or other “new party”) ruled Slovenia until the year 2004.”. Which in its own right is more or less true, but for a small fact that “the continuity parties” actually took power in 1992 (and not 1993), by forming a coalition led by LDS and which included parties of Janez Janša and Dimitrij Rupel. This coalition then formed a government led by Janez Drnovšek and in which both Rupel and Janša retained their posts!.

Now, you may ask why do I quibble over a period of a couple of months? The answer is obvious – because the date inaccuracy enables Rupel to portray himself as a noble politician who never falteres and stays true to his principles – whereas in reality one cannot shake the feeling Rupel will stab as many backs as possible just to keep on to a job so dear to him.

Not that he is particuarly good at it… While in-between-radios, I worked for a small press agency Morel, just it time to witness the near-solution of Slovene-Croatian border dispute and subsequent Drnovšek’s indecision about wether to run for president. Namely: one of the journalists asked Drnovšek why does he always send Rupel to do the dirty work, and Drle replied with his-then-trademark-thin-smile “Really? I have a feeling it is more the other way around…“.

But Rupel’s rewriting of history does not end there… In paragraph nine he also fails to mention that his expulsion from the government of Drnovšek’s successor Tone Rop was due to the fact that he a) continually opposed his boss in public, b) became involved in some highly shady business of his ministry lending funds to a yet-to-be-established facutly where Rupel would be the principal lecturer and c) he attented a highly publicised oppostition rally just prior to 2004 elections in a manner higly offensive to PM Rop (Rupel namely prematurely left London, where Rop was on an official visit)…

The list is endless, and the more immerssed in detail we might become, the more inconsitencies we would find. Suffice it to note that if you allow for the date correction, Rupel’s role in the undertakings of the “continuity parties” becomes much more clear – up to the point that he was elected mayor of Ljubljana in 1994 on an LDS ballot, only to leave it prematurely for the highly prestigious post of the Slovene ambassador to the US, and then return as Foreign minister under PM Drnovšek (and – subsequently – Rop) in 2000, after a short lived Bajuk-Janša government was ousted in parliamentary elections.

But perhaps the most hillarious part of Rupel’s essay are the finals paragraphs where Rupel more or less echoes the sentiment expressed by his current boss on multiple occasions since the election victory of Danilo Türk: that the big bad media are doing everything in their mighty power to make the upcoming EU presidency a complete disaster and that they are actively conspiring with the opposition in this shameful deed. Rupel goes on, saying that “… other false reports (about discrimination of the Roma people, about violations of the human rights of the “Erased”) have been exposed and corrected.”

The fact that the Strojan Roma family are still not able to return to the land they own seems to be of little concern to Rupel, as is the fact that at least one case of the Erased is in front of the European Court for Human Rights and that Slovene constitutional court has declared that the Erased have been unlawfully stripped of their rights in 1992 by a government where Rupel served as Foreign minister and that two governments since (Rupel in both cases being the FM) have failed to enact the said decision by Slovene constitutional court.

Furthermore, Rupel laments the fact that he, the leading pen of Slovene intelligencia was recently deprived of his regular column in Delo daily. This severe limitation of his talent was imposed – truth be said – shortly after Laško brewery changed allegiances and parted ways with Janša’s politics, but the sounds that echoed throughout the country in those faithful days were actualy sighs of relief by the reading public which was to be tortured by the literary outbursts of the foreign minister no longer. I would even venture so far as to say that – given the unrully manner in which his blog posts were written, I have a strong suspicion than someone out there more-than-just-spellchecked his texts prior to publishing. But that’s just me being foul at the mouth.

So, much like Janša in his address to the parliament during the vote of confidence, Rupel took the opportunity to pound the press in a text dedicated to Slovenian presidency of the EU. The equation is simple: a subdued press equals a successful presidecy. Which in turn means the government doubts its own ability to lead the EU to the extent of pre-staging its victory podium and squashing any and all voices of dissent, no matter how founded or unfounded they may be. On that note, a small anecdote which may or may not be true, but since Mr. Rupel is bending the reality, I may be allowed the benefit of the doubt as well: when PM Tone Rop was deciding what to do with his increasingly undisciplined foreign minister, one of the options was to make him a European Commissioner, whereupon a discreet phone call was made from the cabinet of the Commission president Romano Prodi, urging Rop to send someone… well… anyone else but Rupel. Janez Potočnik was named as a replacement candidate and he became one of the most popular and successful politicians both in Brussels and in Ljubljana.

Some people think that a change in governments is imminent. But if Rupel’s writtings are any indication at all, his survival instincts still haven’t kicked in, which in turn means that Janša’s government is still going strong. Of course, all that can change rapidly. But as things stand now, the stage is set, the presidency is only threatned from within, but both Janša and Rupel have ample experience dealing with the internal enemy. And I’m sure that the act of high treason I have just commited according to Janša’s and Rupel’s criteria, would have to bring at least ten years of hard labour and listening to the collected works of both being read out loud. Shit.

However… Having wrote all of the above, I would like to take this opportunity to congratulate Mr. Rupel on yesterday’s Statehood day and thank him for his valuable contribution in a collective effort of the entire nation of creating a sovereign and independent Slovenia.

A New Prez

President-elect Danilo Türk took the oath of office yesterday and will assume the powers of the President of the Republic of Slovenia later today. He will replace Janez Drnovšek, who will apparently totally retire from political life (and otherwhise) after being at the very top of the political pyramid for exactly two decades.


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Source: Žurnal24

Political comentators this side of the newly-erased Schengen border tend to look at Drnovšek’s presidency as two separate movies. One pre-dating his spiritual renewal and one post-dating it.

For the uninitiated, a quick recap. After falling ill with cancer still while PM, Janez Drnovšek was always eyed with a bit of suspicion as far as his medical condition was involved. Since Slovenes are notoriouls secretive about personal matters (i.e.: personal whealth, healt, domestic abuse, extramarital affairs and the likes), it was sort of deemed inappropriate to ask the president about his healts. Even during his campaign the question was barely touched upon, as if the other side knew that a negative campaign would do more harm than good (a lesson which seems to have been lost on Türk’s opponents during this year’s presidential campaign). Anyways. Drle (as the outgoing Prez was known) was elected and he went below radar almost immediately. He attended only top-of-the-line state functions (in stark opposition with his predecesor, the legendary Milan Kučan, who -it seemed- attended every ceremony in 500 kilometre radius). He cut his workload to the point of Jožef Školč calling him lazy at one point. And Školč, mind you, does not have many expeditious qualities himself 😉

And then -all of a sudden- the President starts mingling with the alternative crowd (shamans, medicine men, people like that). For example: he is the only foreign dignitary to have attended inauguration of Bolivian president Evo Morales at the altitude of almost 4000 metres (that’s 12000 feet) in the Andes and survive, where most people skipped the event because of a severe shortage of oxygen at that altitude. He also took interest in the Darfur crisis long before Goran Višnjić and his ER team discovered it on the map. His moves were rather erratic and he seemed to lose interest in a particular matter quicker than you could say “alternative medicine”. Except in Darfur, when he even hosted some sort of peace negotiations, but failed to get anywhere. But all of these are just episodes in a life of a somewhat eccentric president.

In my opinion the true political legacy of President Drnovšek is at least two-fold.

One: He was instrumental in completing the political transition of this country. With his political “exit-stage-left” we can put an end to a period of two decades of Slovenia making it big. Much like the country he ran (or helped run) in those 20 years, he too came out of the blue and immediately had everyone’s attention. Contraty to expectations, he was elected member of the Yugoslav federal presidency in what was possibly the first somewhat fair elections in Slovenia in 1988 – and he never left the stage again. He was there when Yugoslavia broke apart, when Slovenia declared indepencendence and when Slovenia negotiated peace with the federal army. But in 1992 he was elected prime minister as Lojze Peterle (remember him?) was given a vote of no confidence. Drnovšek and his Liberal Democrats set about doing some real social and economic transition. Ten years and three mandates as PM and one kidney later he was elected the president of the republic, as Milan Kučan’s second term ended. He left a remarkable record, with Slovenia being on the brink of becoming a member of EU and NATO, with an ever stronger economy and a growing reputation in the world (OK, there was the small mater of Dimitrij Rupel, but we’ll save than one for some other time). In short – he showed that it can be done. All it takes is a worthy goal,

Two: As president he showed that his office bears more than just a distanced dignity. When government of Janez Janša lost touch with reality, Drnovšek (at this poing already slightly etheral) took it upon himself to call spade a spade and tear Janša’s government to pieces where deserved. Among other things he called Jaša the Prince od darkness and accused him (rightly, I think) of dictatorial tendencies. And Drnovšek should know, as he had to remove Janša as defence minister in 1994 because of the Depala vas indicent (one of the two attempts at a coup d’etat in this country). But the move of his presidency came exactly a year ago when he came to try to help the Strojan family (the Romas who were ran out from the village of Ambrus by the majority population), when he told off the people of Ambrus and told them that – although they swore by all that’s holy – they are not true Catholics because they cause suffering of fellow men. While his mission was unsuccessful, it showed the pettyness, small-mindedness and xenophoby of Slovenes.

And that is what a true president should do. To tell the people of his country where they fall short and where they are trully great.


But most of all – regardless of what other people think – Janez Drnovšek loathed ruling. I’m not saying he didn’t like the power, but for almost every single day of the past two decades he gave the impression that he would rather be somewhere else. And that is about as much as you can as of any politican.

As for Danilo Türk: he may have a better hand at solving international crises but first he’ll have to solve several domestic ones

Switching Sides

This one is a bit old – more than a week, in fact, but it almost got lost in the humdrum of Veseli december and political events of slightly greater magnitude. But a bit of background first. Five years ago (in 2002) an enterpreneur who goes by the name of Boris Popovič ran for mayor of the port city of Koper. His running for office was largely seen as a last refuge from those pesky tax collectors with whom Popovič apparently had a love-hate relationship (they loved to hate each other). Popovič owned a number of companies (including some very popular bars/clubs) which at various times attracted attention of the tax people and other inspectorates. But most of the time he got away clean. And then he ran for mayor – and won.

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Franci Matoz (left) and Boris Popovič (right)

But immediately after his victory he was arrested on tax charges and held in detention for several months (BTW, Koper prison facility rates somewhere alongside the luxury Austrian prison Michael M. wrote about some time ago). And while most of Slovenia was at first convinced that Popovič was guilty as charged, it slowly emerged that the prosecution had untold problems with bringing formal charges against the detained mayor as evidence was being repeatedly thrown out, coppers in Koper (heh, nice one!) failed to produce new evidence and Popovič’s very able lawyer Franci Matoz (recenlty named one of the top 10 lawyers in Slovenia) was able to generate enough pressure (through law provisions, media exposure and some cleverly applied demagogy) to have Popovič released. He was, afterall, detained withouth proper charges.

Popovič’s case finally went to court, although it was clear that evidence was mostly circumstantial. But as if this wasn’t enough his case came in front of the least experienced judge of Koper district court. At this point it should be noted that the system requires that the judge presiding the court distributes the incoming cases evenly, with judges taking turns in being delegated cases. It was just Popovič’s luck to have his case given to a judge with milleage the lenght of Slovene coast.

Or was it?

Twelwe days ago we learned that Bogomir Horvat, the same presiding judge of Koper district court quit his post and joined Popovič’s team of lawyers as a partner in Franci Matoz’s firm. Uncomfirmed roumors also have it that upon the delegation of Popovič’s case to the inexperienced judge Horvat started sporting a brand new Audi – but it could be just a coincidence. If you believe that sort of stuff, that is…

Oh, and Popovič was re-elected mayor in 2006. Obviously.

Free Media!

OK, so the title is intentionally dubious and the reason for it is the recent politically induced turmoil that has engulfed the most influential Slovene media. On the whole it can be said that this is indicative of the looming showdown which is widely expected to leave many dead and wounded (figuratively speaking) and to be down right dirty (literally speaking).


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As noted in yesterday’s post, the battle of the headlines has already begun. This includes pressure on Slovene media which has never been totally free and independent. One rather curious statement was uttered by Jože Školč MP, a political veteran of the Liberal Democrats (among other posts he held the office of chairman of the Socialist Youth while the organisation was a driving force behind democratic changes, president of the parliament and minister of culture). Mr. Školč, while debating the state of Slovene media in the parliamentary committee said that “if the left [while in power] did things wrong, this is no excuse for the right to do the same“.

Which is of course correct. What is interesting, though, is that the former ruling option (broadly speaking, the political left) is at least on the surface apparently coming to terms with its deeds while in power. I say finally, because deeds of this government made the pressures exerted by previous governments look like a picnic. And this is the main problem. Instead of media becoming increasinlgy independent (I won’t utter the word untouchable, but feel free to think it), they are becoming more and more criticised for not reporting on this-or-that.

One of the more symptomatic phrases in yesterdays session of the parliamentary committee for culture (which covers media as well) was uttered by one of the coalition MPs who said that the “opposition has no proof of media control by the coalition“. Furthermore, the minister of culture, Vasko Simoniti, Ph. D. (otherwise a respected intelectual) challenged the opposition to name at least ten cases of government controlling the media (“You said ‘cases’! Plural! That’s not one or two! Plural! I want at least ten!”), etc, etc.


Obviously, if the government (and the opposition as well) would take their heads out of their asses and have a look around they would find that:

a) The Prime Minister demands a vote of confidence but picks apart a particular newspaper and journalists as a whole instead

b) A parliamentary body debates the state of media in the country

c) Politicos who look, walk and talk like they flunked the third grade of elementary school take it upon themselves to count charatcers or seconds devoted to a certain subject and not another, which favours the government (say inflation vs. GDP growth).

d) Pro-government journalists have a one-on-one with the PM (no counter-arguments allowed) or they invite journalists who criticise the government to their talk shows and they try do discredit them (contarty to the unwritten code that a journalist will never attack another journalist as long as they both do their job professionally)


After three years the media and journalists finally took a stand against continous rape by the government (with a not-so-little help of opportunist capitalists who smell a change in power), which is of course suddenly suffering from a bad case of amnesia and basically claims that time started with Danilo Slivnik and Peter Jančič being removed from Delo daily. Nothing is being said about Jančič and Slivnik (the former being a stooge for the latter, both doubling as governmental hench-men) running out half of journalists of Sobotna Priloga (Delo’s most read Saturday supplement), of recalling journalists on foreing posts home just because they didn’t report in line with government’s foreign policy (I didn’t even know we have one!), of the foreign minister boasting that if there is something not printed in the papers, he’ll have it printed (or else…), of articles being rewritten by Jančič to the extent of being unrecognisable to their original authors, etc, etc…


As I said, all of the above makes the pressures exerted by the political left (while it was in power) look like a picnic. Although their achievements are not to be diminished, either. I will refrain from ranting about how FM frequency were distributed and then re-accumulated by friends-of-friends, with the watchdog being as toothless and impotent as a 90-year-old siphylitic patient with Alhzeimer’s – I am, afterall, highly biased on that matter (which don’t mean I’m wrong, but still ;)). Instead, we can remember all the brouhaha about the government of Janez Drnovšek buying a jet plane and the not being entirely truthful (i.e.: they lied) about the price.

But what I’m afraid of is that the soul-searching the left is doing at the moment is only temporary, kind of like “I-said-I’m-sorry” attitude and that nothinh will change, even in the unlikely event of change in the political balance.


So I popose a very simple excercise, which will show whether the left is serious about their newly found love for media freedom. In case they win the election they should:


a) Change the law on RTV Slovenia, radically lowering the number of politically appointed members of both boards (to a max of, say, 25%).

b) State funds must immediately sell any and all remaining shares in all media companies they may still own. And they should sell it exclusively to journalists employed by those media companies.

c) The Law on media should be ammended, re-introducing the clause forbidding media contentration.

d) Forbid operators of future digital radio and television networks from becoming content providers as well.


A rather simple test. Failing to tackle any of these points will allow the present state of politics directly or indirectly pressuring the media to perpetuate indefinitely.

Empire Strikes Back

Slovene political arena is bustling with activity – even more so after the presidential elections. I haven’t posted a real political entry ever since the PM won the vote of confidence and – by extention – earned himself a new nickname: Calimero (I can’t help but think of this post and pat myself on the back :))

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Dubbed “The Prince of Darkness” Lord Janez turns out to be Darth Janša :mrgreen:


To put it in military terms (I think), both sides of the political spectrum have tried to take the initiative in the past month. And although it may seem that Janez Janša and his government are on the run, they have very well managed to set the pace of the public debate ever since the presidential elections. But there is a catch:

Time and again we’ve seen Janša fire a full spread at seemingly at rather small targets. Time and again he advocated (and implemented) hard-line measures for goals that obviously needed a soft approach. When he came to power he went about subjugating the economy rather then winning it over. When Janša turned his sights on the media, he went about subjugating rather than winning them over (not all of them, of course, some were already strongly supportive of him). And when Janša finally seemed to have won over someone (namely the opposition for the duration of the presidency of the EU and to help him with implementing reforms) he produced a huge rise in inflation, making him as popular as a three-day-old used band-aid.

You see, the main problem this government has are its promises of a better tomorrow. But the better tomorrow missed the bus and is running late. And since today ain’t too hot either, Janez Janša decided that it is time to fire another volley – this time at the journalists, media as a whole and his allies-until-recent who have turned their backs on him (especially Laško Brewery). He accused them of actively conspiring against his government, simply by reporting about better tomorrow running late and about today being not as advertised. Which (somewhat understandably) sent most journalists and economy on the defensive. And the more they try to disprove the PM’s claims, the more they are proving them – in Janša’s eyes, at least.

And so Janša grabbed the initiative – either on his own or by proxies. The latter come in form of anal reporters (those who intensively kiss his ass), most notably Vladimir Vodušek of RTV SLO (seen here – while still at POP TV – climbing Mount Triglav with the PM and whose wife, BTW, was named ambassador to Bosnia under Janša’s tenure) who hosted a programme Vroči Stol (Hot Seat), aimed at discrediting the current Editor-In-Chief of Delo daily Janez Markeš, even though the show was suppose to deal with influences of capital on media in general.

All of this media bombardment might have even slightly forced the hand of Borut Pahor who yesterday formally announced that he will seek nomination for PM if his Social Democrats win the elections. While his announcement is not unexpected it does show that it was mostly aimed at grabbing headlines, especially since it is worthless from a legal point of view – the president of the republic formally nominates a person to the post of PM and if Social Democrats do win the election it is only natural for Pahor to get the post, whereas if they don’t win, he won’t get the job anyhow. With or without the announcement.


And so the battle continues and will continue for the better part of the next ten months…

Already Married?

A little birdie told me that Prime Minister Janez Janša and the Captain of his heart Urška Bačovnik might already be married. Obviously, this is pure hearsay of the best kind (a friend of a friend of a co-worked of someone’s second aunt’s cousin), so please, take it cum grano salis. But as the story goes, the happy couple is said to have had a civilian wedding some two weeks ago, with the religious service to be held some time in spring of next year.


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Already married? JJ and Urška in an interview for Radio Ognjišče (foto: Izidor Šček, source)


Personally, I don’t think there’s much to it, as JJ has little to gain both in terms of politics as well as PR by marrying Urška in secrecy, but then again, there is an off chance that he’s just waaay crazy about her.


P.S.: Thanks for all good wishes yesterday. Special thanks go to Disablez, Mišo and Uroš for helping with my computer headache. After pulling an all-nighter I it turned out to be a bad PHP install. Go figure.