Slovakia banned contacts with Russian and Belarusian cultural institutions two years ago
© Facebook / SimkovicovaOficialna
The new Slovak minister of culture Martina Simkovicova has reversed the order prohibiting cultural cooperation with Russia and Belarus, which was introduced by her predecessor in March 2022 following the outbreak of the military conflict in Ukraine.
The document overturning the suspension of “any academic cultural or other similar official cooperation with the Russian Federation or the Republic of Belarus” was issued on January 12 with the decision coming into effect three days later, Slovakia’s Pravda newspaper reported on Saturday, citing the documents it reviewed.
The minister explained her decision by saying that cultural cooperation should not be affected by the political climate.
“There are dozens of military conflicts going on in the world, and, in our opinion, artists and culture must not suffer because of them,” she said through her spokesperson Pavel Corba.
The decision was supported by the chairman of the parliamentary media and culture committee, Roman Michelko, who said that the former minister introduced the ban for ideological reasons. “I am against any censorship of culture,” he stressed, arguing that cultural exchange should continue to function regardless of politics.
“The innocent are being punished and that is sick, ideology should not interfere with culture. Creators of Russian culture should not be discriminated against or ostracized because of the regime in power,” he emphasized.
Martina Simkovicova, a former television presenter and a member of the Slovak National Party (SNS), assumed the position of the Minister of Culture in October 2023, following the victory of Robert Fico’s Slovak Social Democracy (SMER-SD) party and subsequent creation of the coalition government. At the time, the leader of SNS Andrej Darko said that he was willing to join a coalition with Fico to “compete with liberalism.”
Last week, Simkovicova said that she “rejects progressive normalization” and announced her decision to stop funding various LGBTQ projects
“Non-governmental organizations related to LGBT will no longer parasitize on the money from the culture department. I will certainly not allow it under my leadership,” she said in a ministry’s official statement on Facebook. “Such practices have come to an end, we are returning to normality.”