Slovakia’s Prime Minister Robert Fico was battling life-threatening wounds Wednesday after officials said he was shot multiple times in an assassination attempt condemned by European leaders.
The Dennik N daily said its reporter in the central town of Handlova heard several shots fired and then saw security guards rushing to lift the premier off the ground and into a car.
Outgoing Slovak President Zuzana Caputova told reporters that “police have detained the attacker”.
“I am shocked, we are all shocked by the terrible and heinous attack,” she added.
Slovak television showed footage of a middle-aged man in jeans being handcuffed on the ground.
Separate images from public television RTVS showed a person on a stretcher being taken out of a helicopter and wheeled into a hospital.
“Today, after the government meeting in Handlova, there was an assassination attempt” on Fico, the government said in a post on social media.
“He is currently being transported by helicopter to Banska Bystrica in a life-threatening condition, because it would take too long to get to Bratislava due to the necessity of an acute intervention,” the government’s statement added.
Fico was shot multiple times, according to a post on his official Facebook page.
Handlova local hospital director Marta Eckhardtova said “Fico was brought into our hospital and he was treated at our vascular surgery clinic”.
She was unable to describe his injuries.
Fico, whose Smer-SD party won the general election last September, is a four-time prime minister and a political veteran accused of swaying his country’s foreign policy in favor of the Kremlin.
Slovak president-elect and Fico ally Peter Pellegrini said he learned of the shooting “with horror”.
“An assassination attempt on one of the highest constitutional officials is an unprecedented threat to Slovak democracy,” he added on X, formerly Twitter.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky condemned the “appalling” shooting and wished Fico a speedy recovery.
“We strongly condemn this act of violence… Every effort should be made to ensure that violence does not become the norm in any country,” he said in a message on social media.
British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said on X he was “shocked to hear this awful new Lithuanian President Gitanas Nauseda called for a “thorough investigation” and wished Fico “a full recovery”.
Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala called the news of the attack “shocking”.
“I hope the prime minister will get well as soon as possible. We must not tolerate violence, it must have no place in society,” he said on X.
Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said: “Robert, my thoughts are with you in this very difficult moment.”
As well as his current stint as premier, Fico also headed the government in 2006-10 and 2012-18.
Since he assumed office last October, Fico has made a string of remarks that have soured ties between Slovakia and neighboring Ukraine.
He has notably questioned Ukraine’s sovereignty and called for a compromise with Russia, which invaded in 2022.
After he was elected, Slovakia stopped sending weapons to Ukraine. He pledged during the electoral campaign not to provide Kyiv with “a single bullet”.
He also sparked mass protests with controversial changes, including a media law that critics say will undermine the impartiality of public television and radio.
At a press conference following the shooting, MP Lubos Blaha from Fico’s party lashed out against his critics.
“You, the liberal media, and progressive politicians are to blame. Robert Fico is fighting for his life because of your hatred,” Blaha said.