Prague correspondent
Tens of thousands of people are demonstrated throughout Slovakia against the government of Prime Minister Robert Fico, and challenged his warnings that the incentives associated with the liberal opposition will use protests to achieve a coup.
The gatherings are held in about 25 cities and cities of Slovak, which are the latest in a series of protests against its popular national alliance.
The demonstrators are angry with what they say is undermining the country's institutions, culture and position in the European Union and NATO, especially its increasing attacks on Ukraine and rapprochement with Moscow.
Fico says he is following a “sovereign” foreign policy aimed at “all the four Cardinal points in the compass.”
He denies the opposition's allegations that he wanted to get Slovakia out of the European Union and NATO, saying that his country's membership in both institutions was not a question.
Dennik N website estimated that about 100,000 people across Slovakia attended the protests, with at least 40,000 in the capital alone.
About 10,000 has been reported that he moved to the streets of Bystrica, a city of 75,000.
On Thursday, 15,000 demonstrated in the second city of Slovakia, Kossis, to avoid clash with a separate event that is held there this evening.
There were no reports on violence or turmoil, unlike Fico warnings this week that the incentives will encourage demonstrators to attack public buildings, causing the police reaction to lead to greater protests.
Earlier on Friday, Fico told reporters that the police would soon begin deporting many foreign “coaches” who claimed to be in Slovakia to help the opposition in an attempt to topple his government.
On Wednesday, a meeting of the government’s Security Council called, saying that intelligence services were concrete evidence that a group of foreign informed who participated in the recent protests in Georgia and in 2014 in Ukraine were active in Slovakia.
The local intelligence service in Slovakia, SIS, confirmed the claims, but provided a few details. The opposition has a little faith in SIS, where the son of the deputy is run at the Smer party at Fico.
Fico said that the cyberspace “widespread” that struck the country's health insurance company on Friday was a model of the textbook “on how to liquidate a porridge government with unconventional views on certain things” – in reference to his opposition to arming Ukraine and his efforts to reform relations with Moscow.
He said that such activities were implemented “by opposition representatives, organized NGOs from abroad, foreign trainers and the media.”
Dennik N later reported that the accident was actually an attempt to hunt, not an electronic attack, not largely large.
Slovak officials claimed that the former cybersecurity against the country's land registry could come from Ukraine. Kyiv categorically denied this accusation.