Hope for 'divided' Slovakia after Fico attack, says ex-president

Rescue workers carry the shot and injured Slovakian Prime Minister Robert Fico on a stretcher to hospital. J·n Kroöl·k/TASR/dpa

Slovakia's former president Ivan Gašparović on Friday expressed hopes that a deep schism within the country will be overcome following the attempted assassination this week of Prime Minister Robert Fico.

"Slovakia is totally divided," 83-year-old Gašparović lamented on Czech public television, adding that society had at least found some unity in this terrible moment.

"Even those who have completely different views on Fico and politics in Slovakia have realized that things can't go on like this," said Gašparović, a lawyer who headed the country from 2004 to 2014.

The National Council, Slovakia's unicameral parliament, had become "a circus tent and a boxing ring" where politicians' private affairs are discussed or hatred is spread, he continued.

On Wednesday, Fico, 59, was hit by several gunshots fired by a single attacker as he greeted supporters in a square in the central Slovakian town of Handlová.

He is currently recovering in the university hospital in nearby Banská Bystrica after a long operation.

Regarding Fico's condition after the surgery, Gašparović said: "Not everything is in order, but his state is such that that we have great hope that it will end well."

A 71-year-old suspect who was charged on Thursday with the attempted murder of Fico was described by authorities as a "lone wolf" motivated by political grievances.