- Europe, like you've never read before -
Sunday, 18 January 2026
No Result
View All Result
  • it ITA
  • en ENG
Eunews
  • Politics
  • World
  • Business
  • News
  • Defence
  • Net & Tech
  • Agrifood
  • Other sections
    • Culture
    • Diritti
    • Energy
    • Green Economy
    • Finance & Insurance
    • Industry & Markets
    • Media
    • Mobility & Logistics
    • Sports
  • Newsletter
  • European 2024
    Eunews
    • Politics
    • World
    • Business
    • News
    • Defence
    • Net & Tech
    • Agrifood
    • Other sections
      • Culture
      • Diritti
      • Energy
      • Green Economy
      • Finance & Insurance
      • Industry & Markets
      • Media
      • Mobility & Logistics
      • Sports
    No Result
    View All Result
    Eunews
    No Result
    View All Result

    Home » Diritti » Slovenian parliament backs security crackdown; activists call out anti-Roma move

    Slovenian parliament backs security crackdown; activists call out anti-Roma move

    The National Assembly in Ljubljana has adopted by a large majority a law proposed by the government to take back control of 'high-risk' neighbourhoods, giving broad powers to the police. It targets the Roma community living in the south of the country

    Francesco Bortoletto</a> <a class="social twitter" href="https://twitter.com/bortoletto_f" target="_blank">bortoletto_f</a> by Francesco Bortoletto bortoletto_f
    18 November 2025
    in Diritti, Politics
    Slovenia

    Foto: Joe Passe via Wikimedia Commons

    Brussels -Tensions are mounting against the Roma community in Slovenia, following recent incidents that have raised the temperature of the public debate. At midnight yesterday (17 November), MPs approved a controversial law granting police broad powers to monitor so-called high-risk areas, which critics denounce as discriminatory. 

    The new regulation was tabled after the killing of Aleš Šutar on 25 October by a 21-year-old Roma man during an argument in a nightclub in Novo Mesto, in the south of the country. That incident triggered large street protests, the massive deployment of police forces in Romani neighborhoods, and the dismissal of two ministers from the cabinet of the liberal premier Robert Golob. 

    The head of government promised to remedy the situation, emphasising that the new rules were not intended “against a particular ethnic group, but against crime.” The new regulation gives police forces the power to monitor neighborhoods designated as particularly dangerous for public safety with greater discretion. 

    There, the police will be allowed to enter a property or a means of transport without a court warrant (but not to conduct a formal house search) if they assess it as being “strictly necessary” to seize potential firearms immediately. In cases of necessity, forcible entry will be permitted. For the same purposes, wider video-photographic and audio surveillance will be allowed. 

    The delimitation of “risk areas” will be the responsibility of the local police chief or the national police director, based on “objective indicators.” Surveillance orders must be issued in writing, are valid for a maximum of three months, and must be presented within 24 hours to an investigating judge for confirmation or cancellation.

    Robert Golob
    Slovenian prime minister Robert Golob (photo: Frederic Garrido-Ramirez via Imagoeconomica)

     According to some surveys, over 60 percent of Slovenian citizens support the government’s crackdown. Several observers regard the Šutar law, passed as part of an omnibus package that also included a crackdown on violent crime and a tightening of social welfare rules, as a wink from Golob to the nationalist electorate, which, according to polls, would prefer his populist predecessor, Janez Janša, to the current prime minister. 

    After all, tonight’s vote showed a rather cross-party unity of purpose in the hemicycle. Two of the three parties in the governing coalition – Golob’s Movement for Freedom (GS) and the Social Democrats (SD) – defended the bill along with opposition forces such as New Slovenia (NSi) and the Democratic Party (DS). The third partner in the majority, the Left (Levica), walked out of the chamber. The other opposition forces criticised the executive not so much on the content of the rules, but rather on the slowness in responding to crime perpetrated by the Roma (sic) people and the lack of ambition of the new regulations. 

    For human rights groups, this is a direct attack against the Slovenian Roma communities and an attempt to segregate them through legislation denounced as repressive and discriminatory. Just yesterday, Amnesty International had asked – in vain – the Parliament not to pass it. The text of the law could soon be challenged before the Constitutional Court, according to remarks made by some jurists. 

    For Mensur Haliti, vice-president of the Roma Foundation for Europe, the Slovenian government has come out in the open. “This law transforms entire neighborhoods into security zones and their residents into security categories,” he said, complaining that the text “treats an entire minority as a security threat.” Addressing the European Commission (which just today organised an enlargement forum in Brussels, urging candidate countries to respect EU values), Haliti stressed that “a Union that allows fear to become internal politics cannot give lessons of democracy and rule of law to its neighbours.“

    English version by the Translation Service of Withub
    Tags: Mensur Halitipolicerightsrobert golobroma communitysafetyslovenia

    Related Posts

    Marta Kos
    World politics

    EU enlargement: Kos calls for guarantees in future accession treaties

    18 November 2025
    map visualization

    Mercosur reshapes Italy’s alliances in Europe: PD with FdI and FI, League with M5S

    by Emanuele Bonini emanuelebonini
    16 January 2026

    The plenary session of the European Parliament has the free trade agreement with South American countries as the main item...

    Defence: Commission approves first SAFE disbursements to eight Member States

    by Emanuele Bonini emanuelebonini
    16 January 2026

    The Council has been asked to authorise disbursement for Belgium, Bulgaria, Cyprus, Croatia, Denmark, Portugal, Romania, and Spain. Von der...

    Migrazione frontiere pushback

    EU, decline in asylum applications continues, down 28 per cent in October compared to 2024

    by Enrico Pascarella
    15 January 2026

    The countries that received the most requests in October were Spain and Italy, but with lower figures than in the...

    Air Canada flights show as cancelled at Pearson International Airport as flight attendants go on strike in Toronto on Saturday, August 16, 2025. Photo by Sammy Kogan/CP/ABACAPRESS.COM

    Flight cancelled, airlines must also reimburse commission costs

    by Ezio Baldari @eziobaldari
    15 January 2026

    This has been established by the Court of Justice of the European Union. When purchasing from a travel agency or...

    • Director’s Point of View
    • Letters to the Editor
    • Opinions
    • About us
    • Contacts
    • Privacy Policy
    • Cookie policy

    Eunews is a registered newspaper
    Press Register of the Court of Turin n° 27


     

    Copyright © 2025 - WITHUB S.p.a., Via Rubens 19 - 20148 Milan
    VAT number: 10067080969 - ROC registration number n.30628
    Fully paid-up share capital 50.000,00€

     

    No Result
    View All Result
    • it ITA
    • en ENG
    • Politics
    • Newsletter
    • World politics
    • Business
    • General News
    • Defence & Security
    • Net & Tech
    • Agrifood
    • Altre sezioni
      • European Agenda
      • Culture
      • Diritti
      • Energy
      • Green Economy
      • Gallery
      • Finance & Insurance
      • Industry & Markets
      • Letters to the Editor
      • Media
      • Mobility & Logistics
      • News
      • Opinions
      • Sports
    • Director's Point of View
    • L’Europa come non l’avete mai ascoltata
    • Draghi Report
    • Eventi
    • Eunews Newsletter

    No Result
    View All Result
    • it ITA
    • en ENG
    • Politics
    • Newsletter
    • World politics
    • Business
    • General News
    • Defence & Security
    • Net & Tech
    • Agrifood
    • Altre sezioni
      • European Agenda
      • Culture
      • Diritti
      • Energy
      • Green Economy
      • Gallery
      • Finance & Insurance
      • Industry & Markets
      • Letters to the Editor
      • Media
      • Mobility & Logistics
      • News
      • Opinions
      • Sports
    • Director's Point of View
    • L’Europa come non l’avete mai ascoltata
    • Draghi Report
    • Eventi
    • Eunews Newsletter

    Attention