The coalition parties agreed in consolidation that 17 November would not have to be linked to the day of employment. But this step was outraged by part of the public and people expressed public disagreement. Comenius University (UK) in Bratislava decided that will continue to be considered 17. November as a holiday.
“Seventeenth November is the day when the Nazis closed Czech universities in 1939, executed nine students, and more than a thousand others were sent to concentration camps. Seventeenth November is the day of launching the processes leading to the end of the totalitarian establishment in 1989. It is also the day when we started building academic self -government. It therefore deserves our attention, respect and respect across the whole societyU, “said Rector Marek Števček, adding that he is planning to symbolically announce rector’s leave on this day.
This decision was also excited by the actor Juraj Kemka (49), who sent to Prime Minister Robert Fico through a social network. “I want to believe that schools throughout Slovakia will join the UK in Bratislava and not only schools. Maybe this day Bolshevik will finally notice Fico,” wrote. He used a buzz from the cult film Pelíška, which is set in the 1960s and is known to every Czech and Slovak.
The Prime Minister said that The introduction of a transaction tax was a necessity and it affected an important day. “If we have the opportunity, we will narrow the scope of its scope. Finally, we agreed that the failure of this tax, to the extent that the CIS proposed, could be covered by the fact that 17 November would not be a public holiday. It will be a public holiday, but people will go to work. We look at other holidays, but we have one serious problem and it is called the Vatican Treaty, “he said.