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Slovak Ex-Ministers Sentenced in Landmark Anti-Corruption Case

Slovak Ex-Ministers Sentenced in Landmark Anti-Corruption Case

(Bloomberg) -- A special Slovak court sent two former government ministers to prison for corruption, the first-ever jail sentence handed to a top-level politician in this eastern European Union member state.

Former Construction and Development Ministers Marian Janusek and Igor Stefanov were handed 12- and nine-year sentences, respectively, for facilitating a 120 million-euro ($141 million) tender in 2007, Katarina Kudjakova, spokeswoman for the court in Pezinok, said by phone on Wednesday.

The court said the tender was non-transparent and designed to suit a company close to the officials, who were both members of the Slovak National Party. Charges against three lower-ranking ministry officials involved in the transaction were dismissed. All verdicts can be appealed.

Slovakia ranks 54th in the world in Transparency International’s corruption-perception index, the fifth-worst among the EU’s eastern members after Croatia, Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria. While third-time Prime Minister Robert Fico has set the fight against corruption as a priority, the case against his ex-ministers is the first such high-level conviction. The party was part of a Fico-lead coalition in 2006-2010 and has been back in the government since last year.

While the ex-communist country has made headway in catching up with its richer western peers in terms of living standards, a sense of frustration is mounting over the way the government rules. Public discontent with what citizens view as widespread corruption has helped fuel the rise of anti-establishment parties and led to protests in streets of Bratislava, the Slovak capital, this year.

To contact the reporter on this story: Radoslav Tomek in Bratislava, Slovakia at rtomek@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Andrea Dudik at adudik@bloomberg.net, Andrew Langley