In Slovakia, we share the fear of all Ukraine’s neighbours. So why are we turning back to Russia? | Monika Kompaníková
The election of the pro-Kremlin nationalist Robert Fico reveals a country in crisis - and one that young people like my sons will leave
When the Polish writer Witold Szabowski tried, at an event in London we both attended earlier this year, to describe the feeling shared by many people in countries bordering Russia since the invasion of Ukraine, he reached for the image of a hen house being circled by a fox. It was an apt metaphor: the fox quietly huffing and puffing, prowling menacingly, tightening the noose. Beyond the fence, the house of our neighbours lies ransacked; we watch from a distance, our own houses still quiet. But the tension and restlessness inside them has mounted like a pressure cooker.
Ahead of Slovakia's election last Saturday, the unease among pro-democracy voters was intense. Now the results are in and we watch in sadness, as parties sympathetic to Russia set about trying to form a coalition government.
Monika Kompanikova is a Slovakian writer and books editor at Dennik N. Her 2010 novel Boat Number Five was made into the movie Little Harbour
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