News

22 Apr 2020, 14:37 PM

All our stories on coronavirus are here, while those covering covid-19 and Croatia are here. We'll have an update at the end of the day, and if you want newsflashes then we'll post those on Facebook

We can’t have pictures of COVID-19 every day. So instead we’ll try and show the works of Slovenian artists. Today it’s Maruša Štibelj. You can see more of her work here.

Contents

Nine new coronavirus infections, two new deaths bring death toll to 79

Large companies largely opting for Covid-19 crisis bonus

State to guarantee up to 80% for loans to SMEs, 70% for large companies

Protective equipment apparently stolen from Ljubljana hospital

Covid-19 pushes consumer sentiment lowest on record

Nine new coronavirus infections, two new deaths bring death toll to 79

STA, 22 April - Nine new coronavirus infections were recorded in Slovenia on Tuesday, the same as on Monday, with the number of tests the highest so far, at 1,459, government data show. So far 1,353 infections have been confirmed. Both the number of hospitalised patients and patients in intensive care continues to drop.

The number of deaths rose by two to 79 on Tuesday.

The number of hospitalised patients has been decreasing for a week and now stands at 82, while 24 patients are in intensive care. Eight were released home on Tuesday.

A total of 44,435 tests have been conducted in Slovenia so far.

Among the infected, 159 are medical staff, and 291 residents of care homes, fresh data from the government show.

So far, 326 Covid-19 patients have been admitted to hospital and 210 released home.

The UKC Ljubljana hospital has 34 Covid-19 patients today, UKC Maribor 28, the Celje general hospital 13 and the Golnik hospital seven.

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Large companies largely opting for Covid-19 crisis bonus

STA, 22 April 2020 - Some large companies have already paid their employees a bonus for working during the coronavirus crisis, with others yet to do so. Some will pay the bonus as set down by the government emergency law, others their own one, while some companies have opted for both, they have told the STA.

Pharmaceutical companies Krka and Novartis have not suspended their operations during the epidemic so they plan no pay or staff cuts and will not ask for state aid for idle workers.

All Krka employees who have been working during the crisis and will work until the end of April will receive a 10% performance bonus on top of their monthly pay, or at least EUR 326 gross for a full working month.

Krka supervisors will meanwhile donate 30% of their fees to those in need in their local community.

Tool maker Unior will pay all of its employees a crisis bonus as set down by the Covid-19 emergency law, while its management will not receive performance bonuses for the 2019 business year.

Similarly, home appliance maker Gorenje, which owned by China's Hisense, will pay out a crisis bonus under the emergency legislation.

The bonus will be calculated on the basis of hourly rates for work in April and May, or EUR 200 for a full working month.

Pay at Gorenje has not been cut, not even for managers, which the company however mentioned as an option for the future.

At the NLB bank, members of the management and supervisory boards will have their pay cut by 15% until the end of the year and will not get performance bonuses. Other high-profile professionals at the bank will see their pay cut by 10% during the epidemic.

Part of the money saved there will be redistributed among the NLB employees who have for various reasons been sent home during the crisis. These idle workers will receive a wage compensation in the amount of 85% of their average pay from the last three months.

Although banks and insurance companies are not obliged to pay out a crisis bonus under the emergency legislation, NLB employees working during the crisis will receive one.

Retailer Mercator workers have already received a 30% crisis bonus for March. The crisis bonus under the emergency law will however be paid with the April salary, meaning in May, for both March and April.

Despite a 50% drop in its sales, energy company and fuel trader Petrol has paid out its own crisis bonus to the workers most at risk during the epidemic.

The Petrol management meanwhile cut its salary by 20%, heads of departments saw their salaries reduced by 10% and other employees by around 5%. The measure will stay in place until the end of May, but could be extended.

National telco Telekom Slovenije has not cut pay, saying its employees were extremely busy providing uninterrupted services during the epidemic.

Some 70-80% of its employees have been working from home, and those under the most stress received a special bonus for difficult working conditions.

Port operator Luka Koper will pay a crisis bonus for March and April in May, with a decision to cut executive pay expected in the coming days.

HSE, the group bringing together several electricity producers, will pay out the crisis bonus in line with the emergency legislation.

Its management has not cut its pay, saying it is already some 15% lower than it could be under the law on management pay in state-owned companies.

State to guarantee up to 80% for loans to SMEs, 70% for large companies

STA, 22 April 2020 - As part of the second stimulus package to help the Slovenian economy cope with the coronavirus epidemic, the state will provide quick liquidity aid to companies to the tune of EUR 2 billion. Loans to micro companies and SMEs will be guaranteed for up to 80% of the principal, and up to 70% for large companies.

Parts of the corrections to the first package and of the second package were presented on Wednesday by the head of the advisory task force Matej Lahovnik, who said that in the second package, the government "aims for quick liquidity aid to the economy."

Pointing to the loan guarantees, he said that the amount was limited to 10% of annual revenue or labour costs, with an additional condition being that the company must participate in the settlement of claims.

"By doing so, they assume a large part of the risk. We count that commercial banks will provide fast and effective liquidity aid," Lahovnik said, adding that the government would create a guarantee scheme modelled after Germany.

As for the adjustments of the first package, he said that subsidies for wages and social security contributions for workers on temporary lay-off would apply for companies whose annual turnover was down by 10% compared to the pre-crisis period.

Lahovnik noted that potential beneficiaries should be aware that the fiscal space was not unlimited and that this was state aid to the economy financed by taxpayers, which would have to be refunded at some point in the future.

"The aid is intended for companies who have found themselves in trouble due to the crisis, and is not aid intended for those who had been in trouble earlier," he stressed.

The advisory task force also recommends that production and services should be relaunched as soon as possible while sticking to the health protection protocols.

Lahovnik notes that Germany, for instance, was putting an emphasis on work from home, time corridors, same workers working in same shifts, safety distance and use of protective equipment. "Slovenia will have to implement these measures."

He also proposed subsidies for shortened working time under the German and Austrian model, noting that funds at the EU level were also available for such a measure.

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Protective equipment apparently stolen from Ljubljana hospital

STA, 22 April 2020 - The police are investigating a suspected theft of protective equipment in the UKC Ljubljana hospital. Two persons have been detained, the police told the STA on Wednesday, revealing no further details. UKC Ljubljana general manager Janez Poklukar has condemned the incident.

Slovenia's largest hospital reported the alleged robbery in mid-April, said the Ljubljana Police Department, adding that it has since conducted two house searches at properties of the detained persons. Since the investigation is ongoing, the police cannot divulge any additional information.

Prior to the police statement, UKC Ljubljana published a press release saying that the hospital "has detected deviations from safety equipment" quota and immediately notified the police of the situation. It has also ordered an emergency inventory of personal protective equipment.

The 24ur.com web portal has reported that the suspects had been stealing UKC supplies and then selling them online.

The hospital, which is currently treating 34 Covid-19 patients, finds it regrettable that the epidemic has been exploited for profiteering, however it hopes that would not leave a mark on its efforts during the crisis, the press release reads.

Poklukar deplored the incident, pledging that UKC Ljubljana "would do anything to protect its employees, reputation and patients". He did not want to comment on whether the staff was among the suspects.

Meanwhile, Slovenia continues to see a number of donations coming in - pharmaceutical company Bayer has donated EUR 40,000 to the country for mitigating the ramifications of the epidemic as well as 1,200 protective masks and several hundred gloves to three healthcare organisations in Slovenia. Moreover, the Addiko bank has given 13,000 face masks to 13 care homes.

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Covid-19 pushes consumer sentiment lowest on record

STA, 22 April 2020 - Slovenia recorded the biggest drop in consumer sentiment in April since March 1996, when the statisticians started keeping record, the Statistics Office said on Wednesday. The index dropped by 30 percentage points in monthly comparison and by 41 points year on year, which statisticians attribute to the coronavirus epidemic.

All four components of the index deteriorated in April compared to March. Consumers' expectations about the financial situation in their households were down by 30 percentage points and the expectations about the economic situation in the country by 41 points.

Consumers were also pessimistic about the number of unemployed (down 39 points) and about the prospects for savings (down by 13 points).

In annual comparison, consumer sentiment deteriorated mainly because of less optimistic expectations about the number of the unemployed and about the economic situation in the country (down by 59 points each).

People's expectations about the financial situation in their households and prospects for savings were also down, by 34 and 11 points, respectively.

Expectations about the ability to buy a car, build or purchase a flat, and the ability to renovate it, which are measured only every three months, were also down in April, by 12, 6 and 15 points, respectively.

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22 Apr 2020, 12:31 PM

The cookbook Cook Eat Slovenia has won two awards at one of the world's most prestigious cookbook competitions, known as the "Oscars" of gastronomic literature.

This book on traditional Slovenian recipes was written by Špela Vodovc and published in English. The selection of recipes presented in the book has been used in her family for many generations and honors her family heritage and traditional Slovenian cuisine. Her dream was to help the world discover Slovenian foods. The dream of sharing these recipes with the world and allowing people to explore Slovenian culture through its cuisine was the driving force behind the project.

The book was published at the end of 2019, following a successful campaign on Kickstarter, and reviewed here The author then entered the world’s biggest cookbook event, the Gourmand World Cookbook Awards, and made the finals in three categories: best cookbook in translation, best self-published cookbook and best cookbook focused on food tourism (countries & regions), which made it the winner for Slovenia in all three categories.

slovenia potica best easy traditional recipe.jpg

The award announcement ceremony was meant to take place in early June in Paris at the World Cookbook Fair but this has been rescheduled due to the current crisis. For the first time since 1995, when the culinary Oscars first took place, the organisers thus announced the winners prior to the main ceremony. Out of books from 225 countries and regions, Špela Vodovc’s debut, titled Cook Eat Slovenia, ranked among the top three in the world, with 2nd place in the category of “food tourism (countries & regions)” and 3rd place in the category of “self-published.”

The book will lead to the wider recognition of traditional Slovenian dishes around the world and entice travelers to visit Slovenia, especially with next year seeing the country become an official European Region of Gastronomy.

potato pasta.jpg

You can purchase the Cook Eat Slovenia cookbook here, and take a look at some of the recipes shared from the book below:

Tarragon Potica

Easter Breakfast - Velikonočni Zajtrk

Three Kinds of Slovenian Easter Eggs

Potato and Pasta, or Grenadirmarš

22 Apr 2020, 10:49 AM

STA, 21 April 2020 - Slovenia's leading telecommunication providers are all opening shop again this week to join a number of retailers and other services providers that reopened on Monday after five weeks of coronavirus lockdown.

Telemach already started reopening its shops on Monday, AI Slovenija opened all of them today, T-2 plans a gradual reopening starting Wednesday, while Telekom Slovenije is to start welcoming customers at its major centres on Thursday after it has already opened some of its smaller branch offices.

All the providers stressed they would implement protective measures, including by reserving the first and final business hours for vulnerable groups.

In a major sign of the easing of the coronavirus epidemic and the lockdown restrictions associated with it, DIY stores, car showrooms, stores selling bicycles, technical goods and furniture, dry cleaners and some repair shops, including tyre replacement shops, are resuming their operations this week.

As a growing number of businesses reopen, passenger transport organised by business subjects or local communities to bring employees to work and back has been allowed too.

However, protective measures remain in force for all stores, including the obligatory wearing of masks or some other face coverings, hand sanitising, airing of premises and allowing 20 square metres per customer.

The government imposed a temporary ban on most retail establishments in mid March to contain the coronavirus epidemic.

Only grocery stores, pharmacies, banks, post offices, petrol stations, news stands and stores selling agricultural products remained open until pet food shops were added to the exemptions from 21 March and florist shops and nurseries from 3 April, along with construction works not involving contacts with customers.

Yet more services will be available from 4 May, with the reopening of hair salons, beauty parlours, dog and cat grooming salons and shops of up to 400 m2 sales space, except for those in shopping centres.

Ljubljana University planning exit strategy, lowering credit points threshold

STA, 21 April 2020 - The senate of the University of Ljubljana has called on its members to adjust the conditions required for students to advance to their next year of studies given that the teaching process has been disrupted despite a successful switch to remote learning. While the plan is to continue with remote classes, an exit strategy is in the making.

University of Ljubljana Chancellor Igor Papič told the STA on Tuesday that along with enabling students to advance normally by lowering the credit points threshold, it was equally important that students do not lose the chance to enrol again in the same year, as the loss of student status would affect their social situation.

He explained that the plan was to continue with remote classes also after 3 May where only possible, so that students are not exposed to risk unnecessarily.

Laboratory classes present an issue that will be hard to solve until restrictions are lifted, while another pending problem are the approaching summer exams that are taken by over 100 students simultaneously.

The faculties that are part of Slovenia's largest and oldest university have however been urged to prepare for a gradual lifting of restrictions, and Papič announced an exit strategy would be drawn up.

He meanwhile assessed the remote learning system that has been set up as successful, allowing around 85% of the programme to be covered. Also running successfully are oral defences of dissertations, with over 130 conducted remotely so far.

22 Apr 2020, 08:14 AM

Check the date at the top of the page, and you can find all the "morning headlines" stories here. You can also follow us on Facebook and get all the news in your feed.

This summary is provided by the STA:

Govt adopts second corona stimulus package worth over EUR 2bn

BRDO PRI KRANJU - The government adopted a second stimulus package to help the country overcome the coronavirus crisis and made some needed changes to the first package, PM Janez Janša announced after the government session in a video address. He did not state the exact amount of funds available in the second package, referring, however, to over EUR 2 billion. With this, the government has built a comprehensive financial cushion to overcome the epidemic and provided for the liquidity of the economy, he said. The two bills will be presented at news conferences from Wednesday to Friday. The first, EUR 3 billion package was adopted at the end of March and passed in early April, bringing measures to prevent layoffs, help the self-employed, pensioners and students and introducing bonuses for vital staff.

Agency for Commodity Reserves boss replaced amid criticism of contentious deals

LJUBLJANA - The government replaced Agency for Commodity Reserves director Anton Zakrajšek, who on Monday asked to be relieved of his duties after he recently fell ill with Covid-19. The agency, which has been subject to a barrage of criticism for potentially contentious protective equipment (PPE) deals, will be led as of Wednesday by Toni Rumpf, ex-Kobilarna Lipica stud farm boss, as acting director. Economy Minister Zdravko Počivalšek announced enhanced oversight of the agency and an internal audit, arguing "the procurement of protective equipment needs to conducted in a responsible and transparent manner. The agency was today also visited by the police, which is gathering information about suspicion of irregularities.

Finance Ministry urges banks to lend money to businesses

LJUBLJANA - The Finance Ministry urged banks to lend money to businesses, saying that state guarantees included in the newest corona crisis legislation package will apply to loans given to companies between 12 March and the end of 2020. The legislative package, which aims to boost liquidity of businesses, is being discussed by the government this afternoon and will be presented to the public tomorrow. It is expected to be passed and enter into force by the end of the month. "We urge banks to step up efforts to preserve liquidity because this is vital for a swift escape from the crisis and economic recovery," the ministry said.

Coronavirus case count up by nine, no new fatalities

LJUBLJANA - Slovenia's official tally of coronavirus cases rose by nine on Monday, bringing the total number of cases so far confirmed to 1,344. No new fatalities have been reported, leaving the death toll unchanged at 77. Fresh data from the government show that 87 Covid-19 patients were in hospital on Monday, the lowest number since 24 March. Of those, 25 were treated in intensive care, the lowest figure since 29 March. Four more people have been discharged from hospital, which means 197 Covid-19 patients have so far returned home from hospital.

Govt looking for solutions to nursing home residents with mild Covid-19

LJUBLJANA - As four nursing homes have accounted for over three quarters of all Covid-19 deaths in Slovenia, the Health Ministry has decided to move Covid-19-positive users of these homes who only have mild symptoms or are asymptomatic to one or more hospitals especially selected for this task. This is believed to prevent a further fast spread of the virus. Although it was first reported the Ptuj General Hospital agreed to admit 40 of what have been 82 Covid-19 positive residents of the nearby Ljutomer nursing home, Health Minister Tomaž Gantar said this would not be the case, because the hospital's staff is against. The Brežice General Hospital was also planned for this purpose, but now assistance for the infected residents of the Šmarje pri Jelšah nursing home could be provided by the hospitals in Celje in Maribor.

Pahor holds talks with new military chief

LJUBLJANA - President Borut Pahor, the commander-in-chief of the Slovenian Armed Forces (SAF), received Brigadier General Robert Glavaš, the new chief of the general staff, and Defence Minister Matej Tonin. Pahor notified Glavaš of the decision that he will soon be promoted to the rank of major general. Although promotions usually take place on 15 May, Slovenian Armed Forces Day, Glavaš will meet all the conditions in mid-December. The officials also discussed the annual SAF readiness report, which will reveal the state of the legacy handed down to the new chief of the general staff. Pahor is expected to unveil it to the public on 29 April.

Slovenia gains two spots on Press Freedom Index to 32nd

PARIS, France - Slovenia advanced two spots in the latest Press Freedom Index to 32nd place. It placed ahead of Slovakia and behind South Africa, and 32nd place actually equals its highest ranking since 2013. Slovenia also ranked that high in 2018. Reporters Without Borders (RSF) notes that problems for press freedom continue despite pressure from international NGOs for improvements, with defamation still criminalised and the ruling party stepping up its "campaigns of smears and threats against journalists".

Press freedom organisations write to EU Commission about Slovenian media

BRUSSELS, Belgium - Reporters Without Borders (RSF) and six other press freedom organisations urged the European Commission to put pressure on the Slovenian government and remind it of its responsibility to "protect the press, to ensure journalists are able to report independently, as well as to guarantee free and open access to information". The appeal was circulated in an open letter to the Commission on Monday evening and lists several examples of pressure on individual journalists and media outlets.

Epidemic prompts greater support for investment in agriculture

LJUBLJANA - The coronavirus crisis has prompted the Agriculture Ministry to draft changes to the Slovenian rural development programme 2014-2020 to provide greater support for investments aimed at securing greater and undisrupted food supply. As the seven-year programme is running out this year, the ministry said in a release it was preparing measures to boost the competitiveness, productivity and resilience of the agriculture sector and thus also facilitate food production.

Slovenia joins initiative promoting green economy after corona

LJUBLJANA - Slovenia joined on Monday an EU initiative aimed at making the economy green after the end of the coronavirus pandemic. The number of all participating countries, which would like the economy to be re-started based on green technologies and sustainability, has thus increased to 17. The initiative was launched by ten members on 9 April with a letter to the European Commission saying the measures designed to help the economy after the end of the crisis could stem from the European Green Deal, which seeks to make Europe a climate-neutral continent by 2050.

SAB proposes special fund for epidemic-related costs

LJUBLJANA - The opposition Alenka Bratušek Party (SAB) thinks the government should set up a special fund to finance all epidemic-related costs in a bid to maximise transparency of public spending. The SAB agrees the economy and people need state aid because of the epidemic, but warns that public money must be spent in a transparent, efficient, economical and legal manner. "If you ask the finance minister or prime minister today how much money have we already allocated for this crisis, I'm sure they are not able to give you that information off the top of their heads," SAB leader Alenka Bratušek argued.

Investment catalogue for Slovenia available online

LJUBLJANA - A catalogue of investment opportunities in Slovenia has been made available by the SPIRIT investment agency, featuring 80 projects for now, from a hydro-thermal power station and residential neighbourhoods to a foldable baby seat. The catalogue is available free of charge in Slovenian and English at investslovenia.org for potential investors as well as project developers. SPIRIT wants to expand it with as many projects as possible and has invited those looking for investors to enter their project.

Repatriation of Venezuelan Slovenians on hold over coronavirus

LJUBLJANA - The plan to repatriate Slovenians from Venezuela has been put on hold due to the coronavirus epidemic, with the authorities announcing that repatriation will resume as soon as possible. Twenty-one Slovenians had been repatriated from the South American country before the pandemic broke out. 15 more persons of Slovenian descent were expected to move to Slovenia in the second half of March and in April, but the plan is on hold since air links have been shut down, said Minister for Slovenians Abroad Helena Jaklitsch.

Two new checkpoints open on border with Italy

BOVEC/KRANJSKA GORA - While the majority of roads on the border between Slovenia and Italy remain blocked to contain the spread of coronavirus, a new entry point, Predel, opened today. Citizens can cross the border using a special certificate. Another border check point will be set up at Rateče on Wednesday. Both points, facilitating daily migrations between Italy and Slovenia, will be open on all days except Sundays and holidays, from 6am to 9am and from 3pm to 6pm.

Ljubljana University planning exit strategy, lowering credit points threshold

LJUBLJANA - The senate of the University of Ljubljana has called on its members to adjust the conditions required for students to advance to their next year of studies given that the teaching process has been disrupted despite a successful switch to remote learning. While the plan is to continue with remote classes, an exit strategy is in the making, Chancellor Igor Papič told the STA. He said the plan was to continue with remote classes also after 3 May where only possible, so that students are not exposed to risk unnecessarily. The faculties that are part of Slovenia's largest and oldest university have been urged to prepare for a gradual lifting of restrictions, and Papič announced an exit strategy would be drawn up.

If you're learning Slovenian then you can find all our dual texts here

21 Apr 2020, 20:30 PM

All our stories on coronavirus are here, while those covering covid-19 and Croatia are here. We'll have an update at the end of the day, and if you want newsflashes then we'll post those on Facebook

We can’t have pictures of COVID-19 every day. So instead we’ll try and show the works of Slovenian artists. Today it’s Aleksander Sandi. You can see more of his work here.

Contents

Coronavirus case count up by nine, no new fatalities

Two new checkpoints open on border with Italy

Committee hears care homes understaffed, residents very stressed

Taiwan donates 150,000 masks

PPE supplies a major headache for authorities

LINK

Coronavirus case count up by nine, no new fatalities

STA, 21 April - Slovenia's official tally of coronavirus cases rose by nine on Monday, bringing the total number of cases so far confirmed to 1,344. No new fatalities have been reported, leaving the death toll unchanged at 77.

Fresh data from the government show that 87 Covid-19 patients were in hospital on Monday, the lowest number since 24 March. Of those, 25 were treated in intensive care, the lowest figure since 29 March.

Four more people have been discharged from hospital, which means 197 Covid-19 patients have so far returned home from hospital.

A total of 1,174 tests were performed on Monday, more than twice as many as the day before. Hence the increase in the number of new cases compared to five on Sunday.

So far a total of 42,976 tests have been conducted in the country.

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Two new checkpoints open on border with Italy

STA, 21 April - While the majority of roads on the border between Slovenia and Italy remain blocked to contain the spread of coronavirus, a new entry point, Predel, opened on Tuesday. Citizens can cross the border using a special certificate. Another border check point will be set up at Rateče on Wednesday.

Both points, facilitating daily migrations between Italy and Slovenia, will be open on all days except Sundays and holidays, from 6am to 9am and from 3pm to 6pm. Outside those time slots, the roads will be blocked.

The authorities have thus responded to the calls for a partial reopening of the border to enable daily cross-border migrations in the north-west of Slovenia, which had been issued by local communities and mayors of both Bovec and Kranjska Gora.

So far, the closest check point between Italy and Slovenia has been Robič, situated more than 30 kilometres from Bovec.

Apart from daily migrants, other citizens in need of taking care of urgent business activities can also cross the border provided they have ID and the relevant permit, which is issued by a local authority.

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Committee hears care homes understaffed, residents very stressed

STA, 21 April - The parliamentary Health Committee started debating the situation in nursing homes, which has become very complex in the face of the Covid-19 epidemic. The session, requested by the opposition Left, heard demands for more staff from trade unions and care home organisations before being suspended until tomorrow.

 The hours-long discussion heard that care homes are understaffed, while most residents are completely dependent on others' help. The debate also heard that the average age of employees is high and that many residents suffer severe stress because they had been cut off from their families for more than a month.

The understaffing issues became more severe after schools were shut down because the care homes lost students and interns, and volunteers also had to leave due to the shortage of protective equipment. Family members were also of great help, said Biserka Marolt Meden, head of Srebrna Nit, an association promoting dignified old age.

Marolt Meden said that it was up to the Health Ministry to change things. Health Minister Tomaž Gantar admitted that the situation was critical after years of understaffing and lack of funds, but said the ministry was doing everything it could.

He denied allegations that residents do not get appropriate care. "Entire homes cannot be moved to hospitals. Patients who need hospital care are moved," he said in response to the Left's demand that all retirement home residents with Covid-19 be hospitalised.

He was also critical of Tomislav Nemec, the director of the Ljutomer retirement home, which has been hit the worst of all. Gantar said the home did not ban visitors in time, while the nearby Murska Sobota hospital had complained that Nemec was impossible to work with.

Alenka Trop Skaza of the Celje office of the National Institute of Public Health (NIJZ) said that apart from work overload issues for staff, many residents suffer severe stress because they had not seen their families in weeks.

"The elderly cannot understand why their families do not come and visit," she said, describing a case in which the staff could only just prevent a suicide. Moreover, dementia patients in retirement are in great stress when they need to be swabbed for Covid-19 testing.

The committee will convene again tomorrow afternoon to vote on several resolutions proposed by the Left. Apart from hospitalisation of all Covid-19 patients in retirement homes, the party also wants an increased volume of testing for residents and more funds for retirement homes in general.

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Taiwan donates 150,000 masks

STA, 21 April - Taiwan has donated 150,000 surgical masks to Slovenia. The donation was handed over to Slovenia's Civil Protection in Austria's Vienna on Tuesday by Taiwan's representation in Austria. The Administration for Civil Protection and Disaster Relief thanked Taiwan in a tweet.

At the beginning of the month, Taiwan donated ten million protective masks to the countries hit hardest by the global coronavirus pandemic. Soon after, it said it would donate another six million masks to countries in northern, central and southern Europe.

Taiwan's representative in Vienna Vanessa Shih said that the pandemic is affecting all countries in the world and that her country wants to help its friends.

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PPE supplies a major headache for authorities

STA, 21 April - The government coronavirus spokesman Jelko Kacin has announced measures to deal with the problem of faulty supplies of personal protective equipment (PPE) as criticism is mounting among opposition parties and the public.

 The issue was discussed at the coronavirus press briefing on Tuesday following news reports questioning the cost and suitability of supplies, and alleged ties between suppliers and government officials.

Kacin said that the government would provide explanations about concrete measures to prevent errors in the coming days.

Meanwhile, Srečko Šestan, Slovenia's Civil Protection commander, said the equipment that the recipients were unhappy with was being replaced and their complaints were being addressed.

Representatives of the Civil Protection and Disaster Relief Administration and the UKC Ljubljana hospital are involved in the examination of the bids made by PPE suppliers.

They check the goods offered, supply terms and whether the equipment has all the required certificates. If the offered goods are suitable on paper, the bids are referred to the Agency for Commodity Reserves.

The agency is responsible for closing the contracts, price negotiations and for examining the quality and quantity of the supplies. The Civil Protection does not check the goods again but only accepts the supplies and distributes them.

"Once the equipment has been supplied and if the mask offered was FFP2, but what actually arrives is a surgical mask, this is a matter of receipt and complaint," said Šestan.

Most of the problems so far have involved the supplied equipment not complying with what has been ordered or offered.

Such a problem appears to have been in the case of the supply by Public Digital Infrastructure, a company owned by the gaming machines businessman Joc Pečečnik.

The Agency for Commodity Reserves had ordered FFP2-type masks from him, but the newspaper Dnevnik and commercial broadcaster POP TV reported the company actually supplied mislabelled ordinary surgical masks.

Šestan also noted complaints over unsuitable protective gowns supplied to the Šmarje pri Jelšah care home and Izola hospital, and ordinary paper napkin masks turned back by some local communities.

"Today we're being returned a shipment of 2,500 masks from the Begunje psychiatric hospital which we're going to replace," said the official.

If the returned equipment is found to be faulty, it will "probably be destroyed", if it proves suitable, it will be sent back.

A meeting over the issue of complaints was planned today with the Agency for Commodity Reserves, and extra experts are being sought to help them examine hundreds of bids for new supplies.

Police paid a visit to the agency today over suspicion of irregularities regarding PPE deals, explaining they were "checking various pieces of information".

It is not clear however whether the government dismissed the agency's director Anton Zakrajšek, but Economy Minister Zdravko Počivalšek is to speak about it after the government's session later today.

PPE supplies have been causing problems from the start as a major planned supply failed to arrive, with new incidents reported almost on a daily basis. The opposition has demanded a parliamentary inquiry to look into the matter.

Dnevnik today reported that the contract with Pečečnik's company also included 400,000 protective goggles, thirteen times the number of all health care staff in the country, and at three times the supply price too.

The newspaper Finance raised issue over a EUR 1.8 million contract on the supply for surgical masks with SLA Marketing from the town of Destrnik "which has generated little revenue in recent years, does not even have a publicly available telephone number and whose ownership can be traced via Slovakia to Wyoming, US".

The news portal 24ur reports that while the state has paid Pečečnik 50 cents for a certified surgical mask, it has paid more than 20 cents for a "paper" mask, a reference to the EUR 860,000 paid to two companies for just over a million masks made of a special type of cellulose called air-laid.

The portal reports that the person in charge of sales at one of those, Korez Sorting, is the boss's wife who is a tax debtor and one of the persons accused for a hacking attack on port operator Luka Koper and two other companies two years ago. Two of the defendants pleaded guilty in the case a month ago.

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21 Apr 2020, 19:52 PM

I finished my last article about three weeks ago with a relatively upbeat message, ‘We’re all in this together’, meaning we are all in the same boat. However, as the weeks progress into an increasingly unknown future, I realise that we are in very, very different boats indeed.

I started by reassuring myself with this Churchillian mantra, but now that the initial fog has cleared, I am observing first hand that we are all in very different boats on a scale ranging from a blissful, relaxed euphoria through to a lonely pinnacle of rising fear and angst, and the curve is the inverse of the traditional Gaussian Distribution curve.

Here in Slovenia, many people are employed and from what I hear, rather enjoying working from home, or they are bumbling along on their pension, living above or below their extended families, and whiling away quality time in the garden, or allotment with family. As my landlady said when it all started, ‘It’s not going to affect us.’ - and it hasn’t.

However, I know several families living the dream life – the successful, but workaholic husbands now garrisoned at home; the wives, gleefully swapping their crowded waiting rooms or tedious working days for woodland walks with the dog, finally having the time to show off innate cooking skills to an appreciative family; children, home from university are studying in domestic and gastronomic comfort, and working out in the garden to counteract the excesses of the kitchen. Bliss.

So in this most glorious Corona spring, when the sun always shines, the more fortunate can relax in their flower- filled gardens with the added comfort of knowing that there is a regular salary coming in.

Another fortunate Slovenian friend lives in a similar abode complete with all the external accoutrements of above, in the congenial company of her two twenty-something children and her buck-toothed, boss-eyed, but exceedingly friendly Jack Russell. All three humans are working from home, with ample space to carouse in the garden or work peacefully in the spacious confines of their five-bedroom home.

Fast-forward to the other end of the curve, where many are most definitely not living in such familial bliss. They inhabit cramped flats with no balconies, and worse still, some have no option but to co-habit with an obnoxious other half, vying for TV channels, and generally messing things up - or worse! This situation can also be exacerbated by having hyperactive children around to monitor . The attention seeking child doesn’t take kindly to being educated by a face on a screen with no audience other than the family cat. Whether working from home or with no work, in small confines the tensions are building. The only saving grace, in Slovenia, is the relative proximity of the parks, the river and the abundance of glorious greenery. Compare all this lush nature to the average Londoner’s concrete jungle, living in similar flat, with the added worry of a zero-hour contract.

They struggle miles on foot to get some rays on Primrose Hill or Hampstead Heath, before being brusquely moved on by overzealous police wearing masks. Gardens are a rarity in Inner London and parks and woodland scarce. The main reason I chose my London flat was for its long ample garden, and the unimpeded view of nearby Highgate Woods.

In fact, this article was prompted by an email from a semi-retired journalist friend, who wrote unabashedly ‘life has never been better’. She can scribble her weekly column in her gazebo in their vast flower-strewn garden, while her retired husband refines his already excellent culinary skills. She didn’t mention her newly-wed daughter and her husband who are in the ranks of the self-employed, a yoga instructor and a chef respectively, both now living with future dreams on fragile hold for the very uncertain future. Very different boats indeed.

Having lived overseas for the last 13 years, I am still in touch with friends in Asia and Central America, and they are in even less comfortable boats. In an ironical twist, as Europe and the UK once stigmatised innocent Asians in the run-up to the crisis, Viet friends, encouraged by their government propaganda, wholeheartedly blame the virus on the travelling Westerners, and in China, my very petite blonde Australian friend currently working as a School Principal tells me that despite her ’COVID free badge’, mask, gloves and her 21-day quarantine pass, she is treated like a white devil. Chinese mothers pick up their children and literally flee when they see her blonde locks, restaurants refuse her entry – and people in shops, look at her over their compulsory issue masks with cold, untrusting eyes and give her a very wide berth.

Masks are compulsory at all times – and in Vietnam, as in many other Asian countries, they have a natural affinity for masks. Reports from Vietnamese friends say they that although they are working from home, masks are worn at all times – I didn’t ask about bedtime. There are no motorbike taxis or car taxis, and large hotels and markets are shut. Many have lost their jobs.

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Meanwhile in Spain, my old schoolfriend is entrapped in her mountain village and is currently dogless, therefore her exercise is limited to the 200-metre walk from her home in the centre to the nearest food and wine shops – a 600 Euro fine awaits anyone who is found exploiting the rule. Her 85-year-old Scottish mother died two weeks ago, alone in a hospital in Scotland of an unrelated infection, possibly exacerbated by fear. For the last four days of her life, she relied on an iPad and daily 15 minute visits from her other daughter,clad from head to foot in a hazard suit, forbidden to touch. My friend in Spain at least has the small solace of a garden, where she is grieving alone, without any sense of closure, and trying to plan a memorial service in the unforeseen future.

Meanwhile, in Istanbul, a hyperactive party- going Australian couple, aged 63 and 65 respectively, working as teachers and energetically living a second, but childfree youth, are forbidden to leave their homes,full stop. Despite a small balcony and a 40-year marriage, they are becoming increasingly unamused and after two weeks, are already showing severe symptoms of Cabin Fever manifesting in 3 kg weight increases and an unhealthy addiction to Quiz Planet, as the lady of the house tries to elevate her starting score of zero to 21,000 before the lockdown is over. Turkey is in flux, and the once crowded streets are spookily empty, Erdogan from his 1000 roomed palace in Ankara, has sent one of his national emergency texts ( to everyone) asking the population to contribute 10 TL ( 3 Euros) to a Corona fund.

Looking further afield to Nicaragua, the situation is even more grim – with practically no direction from their government, other than some ‘Peace and Love ‘ rally in the capital, and the divine message that along with Americans, Nicaraguans will not get affected.

 My Yorkshire Oxford-educated friend, the founder of a language school and a charity that provides hands-on work for 80% of the impoverished village where she lives, located in the shadow of the virulent Massaya volcano. She tells me that news is being passed from door to door by groups of five or six police together with a handful of civil servants, all standing in perilous clusters. They are distributing COVID pamphlets on the importance of washing your hands thoroughly and often. The same pamphlet also explains the need to reduce their weekly water ration from 2 barrels of water to one and a half barrels. This ration is per household, and that usually equates to at least six people. The water is used to wash, cook, wash their clothes and to drink. Toilets are usually outdoor latrines, so flushing is not a problem for most. Very few people are on the streets, and most pulperia (small shops) have had to close. And to date, there has been no word of government assistance or even guidance, as the village limps to a gloom laden standstill.

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Then there is another boat where you sail these uncharted waters alone, and for many elderly without the ‘company’ of social media, and the physical security of a family this is very scary – alone and listening to the spurious daily statistics spewed willy nilly all over the global media; meaningless to those who understand statistics and positively terrifying for those who don’t – and with no one close by to share their fears.

Even for the less elderly, this enforced social distancing is difficult – mentally and emotionally, and I, for one have wearied of the endless ‘jokes’ on WhatsApp and unsubstantiated rants by the uninitiated on social media.I yearn for the close physical comfort of old friends, even a distanced bike ride or a glass of wine would be good, but then again, I fear my self, all my suppressed fears and emotions may come belching out in an unstoppable tirade......

Daily, I have to remind myself that I am not living in fear of snipers, bombs or starvation, I have a roof over my head and at present, I am healthy – plus, I live in one of the most beautiful cities in the world close to the river and nature. I am very lucky.

In response to the copiously asked daily question from well-meaning friends of ‘How are you?’ I answer robotically ‘Up and down, how are you?’ Maybe I should answer truthfully. ‘I don’t know!’

You can find out more about Carol Jardine at her website, SpeakEasy EnglishAll our stories on coronavirus and Slovenia are here

21 Apr 2020, 13:55 PM

STA, 21 April 2020 - Slovenian researchers are believed to be the first to have proved the existence of abundant plant viruses in wastewater that remain infective after conventional wastewater treatment, which means they can infect plants and cause disease when released into the environment.

The latest achievement by researchers of the National Institute of Biology's Department of Biotechnology and Systems Biology has been published in Water Research, a journal of the International Water Association that publishes research on the science and technology of water quality and its management.

The scientists note that presence of plant, animal and human viruses in water is a major risk when wastewater is recycled for example for watering plants, a practice applied extensively in many parts of the world.

The release of viruses into rivers may lead to viral transmission if the river water is used for irrigation or if the viruses find a new host such as plants growing near the water.

Considering new findings about the great diversity of viruses in water and their infectivity the Ljubljana-based institute says that effective methods are needed to monitor the presence of pathogenic viruses in water.

The institute has been researching viruses in various water samples for years and is currently focusing on detecting the novel coronavirus in wastewater.

Katarina Bačnik, the lead author of the article published in Water Research, says that plant viruses, that is those that cause disease in plants, are present both when wastewater enters a purifying plant as well as when it is released into a nearby river.

Applying viral concentration technology with the help of purification media made by the Slovenian company BIA Separations and the sequencing of viral nucleic acids, the researchers detected 47 different types of plant viruses, including those not previously reported in Slovenia.

They also proved their infectivity, that is the ability to infect plants both before and after passing through the purifying plant as the plants infected with wastewater showed signs of disease.

Although the study focused on plant viruses, the researchers also detected in wastewater samples the presence of bacteriophages (viruses that infect and replicate within bacteria) and some human viruses that cause gastrointestinal diseases.

Maja Ravnikar, the head of the Department of Biotechnology and Systems Biology at the National Institute of Biology, says that, at the time when virus has become an everyday word, it has become even more obvious how little humanity knows about viruses and how important it is to study them.

The research had been conducted under the leadership of Maja Ravnikar, with young researcher Katarina Bačnik as the lead author and also involving Denis Kutnjak, Ion Gutierrez Aguirre, Nataša Mehle, Anja Pecman and Magda Tušek Žnidarič.

Apart from research project and programme financiers, the study was also supported by the Domžale-Kamnik central purifying plant, a long-term partner of the National Institute of Biology, which collected wastewater samples.

The article is available at https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0043135420301640?via%3Dihub.

21 Apr 2020, 12:08 PM

STA, 20 April 2020 - As a string of retail and services establishments reopened on Monday the demand for the services was not excessive. It was quite busy at tyre replacement shops but not as busy as expected, the Slovenian Automobile Association (AMZS) said. The Chamber of Craft and Small Business (OZS) would like bars and restaurants to reopen on 15 May.

Today DIY stores, car showrooms, stores selling bicycles, technical goods and furniture, dry cleaners and some repair shops, including tyre replacement shops resumed their operations after being shut down for five weeks.

Jurij Kočar of the AMZS said that because of high demand for such services working hours would be extended somewhat in the next few days.

Vehicle inspection stations were full of customers this morning but then the situation calmed down. Bogdan Poljanšek, who is in charge of insurance, vehicle inspection and registration at the AMZS, said drivers seem to have considered the fact that registration documents will not expire until 16 June.

Avtotehna Vis said its car salons opened their door today but were not crowded.

In contrast, DIY store Bauhaus saw an exceptional turnout, but CEO Samo Kupljen said this had been expected. "That's why we increased our sales teams," he said.

The government closed all shops bar grocery stores, pharmacies, banks, post offices, petrol stations, newsstands and stores selling agricultural products on 16 March. Pet food shops reopened on 21 March and florist shops and nurseries on 3 April.

Yet more services will be available from 4 May, with the reopening of hair salons, beauty parlours, dog and cat grooming salons and shops of up to 400 m2 sales space, except for those in shopping centres.

Further easing of measures is expected after the results are in of a comprehensive random testing of the population for coronavirus starting today.

The OZS is pushing for the reopening of bars and restaurants as of 15 May, following Austria's example. All activities would have to be conducted in line with health recommendations, it added.

"Since the season allows this, we would provide for additional safety of guests and staff by serving guests outdoors, on terraces," Blaž Cvar of the OZS said in a press release.

The hospitality sector will be particularly affected by the epidemic and the recovery will be lengthy, the OZS said, proposing extension of state measures for the sector for the next six months and cutting the VAT rate on beverages.

21 Apr 2020, 11:12 AM

STA, 20 April 2020 - Ultralight aircraft maker Pipistrel has started developing cargo aircraft, a sort of a flying van, and a hydrogen-powered passenger shuttle, the company's CEO and founder Ivo Boscarol has said after the aviation authorities rescheduled the launch of its flying taxis.

An extended deadline for the development of flying taxis, commissioned by US ride-hailing company Uber, has enabled the Ajdovščina-based Pipistrel to start working on the planned freighter.

Meanwhile, the hydrogen-powered jet for 19 passengers would be intended mainly for transport between cities, for example from Maribor to Zagreb, said Boscarol.

"Currently, there are no such transports, only on roads. That is one of niche markets and the company has started working on its conceptual development," he told the press a few days ago.

Apart from a spacious facility, manufacturing the shuttles would require vast electricity capacities - the planes would be thus made in Italy, a more ideal setting than Ajdovščina, since all the required conditions are met there, he added.

The development of flying taxis for Uber has slowed down due to a "more conservative approach to using such aircraft" taken by international aviation authorities.

The taxis are supposed to be flying mainly above cities, which are considered a challenging ecosystem. The authorities have hence postponed using such vessels until the end of this decade.

As a result, Pipistrel has somewhat shifted its focus to developing a similar aircraft designed to transport cargo, an electricity-powered flying van that is supposed to fly above smaller cities.

Boscarol believes that the freighter will be launched prior to the Uber taxi.

Meanwhile, the company's investments in new plants in China and Italy have been brought to a standstill. The project in China saw zero activity in the past four months, with the investment estimated to be two years behind schedule.

On the other hand, the first phase of the investment in expanding manufacturing capacities at Gorizia Airport is completed, but the company has been deliberately moving slowly to see what happens with the airport.

"The airport was operating for a while, but it's closed now. We can fly in Slovenia, so we fly here now. The company is lucky to have two locations at its disposal," said Boscarol.

The plant in the making near the Slovenian-Italian border is meant to be for producing drones and bigger aircraft.

21 Apr 2020, 08:17 AM

Check the date at the top of the page, and you can find all the "morning headlines" stories here. You can also follow us on Facebook and get all the news in your feed.

This summary is provided by the STA:

New army chief vows to work toward improving staffing and material resources

LJUBLJANA - Brigadier Robert Glavaš pledged to work to secure the Slovenian Armed Forces (SAF) staffing and material resources as he formally took over as the chief of the general staff by accepting the SAF battle standard from his predecessor. Glavaš said he was aware financial sources would be limited during the coronavirus epidemic and potential economic slowdown coming in its wake. However, he is optimistic with plenty of work in other areas, such as attracting new staff. Defence Minister Tonin said that during the past month, when Glavaš served as interim chief of the general staff, he proved himself as a conscientious and exceptionally professional soldier who understood the SAF's needs and challenges.

Latest estimates value second stimulus package at EUR 2.8bn

LJUBLJANA - Coming out of a coordination meeting for the emerging new coronavirus emergency package, coalition members explained the current total value of the envisaged measures, focusing on securing liquidity for businesses, was EUR 2.8 billion. Reports on the liquidity measures, coming after a EUR 3 billion stimulus package seeking to prevent job loss and protect vulnerable groups, so far mentioned EUR 900 million to be given at the disposal of companies in the form of loans, guarantees and guarantee schemes. The Chamber of Commerce and Industry (GZS) spoke of EUR 2 billion in one statement. A third stimulation package was also announced.

String of stores and services reopen as lockdown eases

LJUBLJANA - In a major sign of the easing of the coronavirus epidemic and the lockdown restrictions associated with it, a string of retail and services establishments shut down five weeks ago reopened. DIY stores, car showrooms, stores selling bicycles, technical goods and furniture, dry cleaners and some repair shops, including tyre replacement shops resumed operations. The government also allowed the reopening of services performed outdoors such as gardening services, roof and facade work, and food takeaways involving minimum contact with customers. Three more Covid-19 patients died in Slovenia on Sunday, bringing the official death toll to 77. Only five new coronavirus cases were confirmed, raising the tally to 1,335.

Opposition wants top court review of expanded police powers

LJUBLJANA - Four opposition parties announced they would seek a constitutional review of two articles from the first coronavirus emergency package, including one expanding police powers, as well as of the decree limiting movement to municipal borders. The Marjan Šarec List (LMŠ), the Left, SocDems and Alenka Bratušek Party (SAB) primarily took issue with Article 103 of the emergency act which grants the police additional powers, most of them arguing the duration of the measures was too vague. They moreover want a debate on issues and potential conflict of interest in the procurement of PPE.

Employers request state subsidies for over 262,000 workers

LJUBLJANA - The Employment Service has so far received more than 32,000 applications for more than 262,000 employees under the legislation providing state subsidies for wages and social security contributions for workers temporary laid-off or quarantined due to the coronavirus epidemic. The final figure could by up to 10% lower, as some employers filed multiple applications until Sunday, the service said, noting that the rise in the number of new applications had started slowing down today. The subsidies are provided under the emergency law which entered into force on 29 March and the coronavirus stimulus package designed to aid the economy and individuals, which entered into force on 11 April.

Rise in unemployment slowing down

LJUBLJANA - Interim data by the Employment Service show that the coronavirus crisis continues to strongly affect the employment situation, albeit not as severely as in the first weeks. While the registered unemployment total rose by 7,955 between 1 and 17 April to 85,810, the figure for last week was 2,029. Last week, which had one business day less due to Easter, saw between 500 to 800 registering on a daily basis, a marked decreased on the week before, when the daily number mostly exceed 1,000. The total figures were 2,742 and 4,663 respectively, data show.

Government has helped bring 800 Slovenians home

LJUBLJANA - Since a crisis task force was set up at the Foreign Ministry in mid-February to help Slovenians stranded across the world get home amid travel restrictions imposed due to coronavirus, it has helped repatriate 800 citizens. A further 1,500 found their own way back home with the government's help themselves. The latest figures were revealed by the government spokesman Jelko Kacin at the daily coronavirus briefing. There are still at least 500 Slovenian citizens scattered around the world who have turned to the ministry for help, and many who have not contacted the Slovenian authorities, he said.

Fines issued due to lockdown violations totalling EUR 32,000

LJUBLJANA - The Health Inspectorate launched more than 2,900 procedures and issued fines worth more than EUR 32,000 to people breaking the restrictions in place to slow down the coronavirus epidemic in Slovenia. It received over 110 reports of suspected violations directly from individuals and many more from the police. During the epidemic, the inspectorate is the only authority that may initiate procedures and issue fines for violations of movement restrictions and the gathering ban. The cases processed so far have been mostly referred to the inspectorate by the police and involved individuals. Almost 300 fines have been issued, totalling more than EUR 32,000.

Unions say govt attitude to social dialogue in crisis unacceptable

LJUBLJANA - Trade unions have reiterated their call to the government to include them in the drawing up of the new round of emergency measures and urged the immediate launch of social dialogue through the Economic and Social Council, arguing that they had been sidetracked during the creation of the pending second package. While the Labour, Family, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities Ministry took a position on some of the proposals, the unions did not receive any of the documentation drawn up by the ministry. No meeting took place with either private or public sector trade union confederations. The Finance Ministry said that the government had been "leading an open dialogue with a number of stakeholders".

Revoz, Lek, Krka and Gorenje remain top exporters

LJUBLJANA - Revoz, the Slovenian subsidiary of the French car maker Renault, continues to top the Delo list of Slovenia's largest exporters, followed by pharmaceutical companies Lek and Krka, and the household appliances maker Gorenje, the only four companies whose exports exceeded a billion euro in 2019. Revoz recorded exports of EUR 1.77 billion, followed by Lek with EUR 1.48 billion and Krka with EUR 1.4 billion. Gorenje was at EUR 1.12 billion.

Pahor continues to send encouraging messages to European nations

LJUBLJANA - President Borut Pahor expressed solidarity with the German people in a video message on Twitter after posting encouraging messages for the Italian and British people, and expressing solidarity with several other European countries. Pahor also discussed the coronavirus situation with Czech President Miloš Zeman over the phone today. Pahor has so far expressed solidarity with several countries fighting coronavirus, including Spain, Croatia, the Czech Republic, the UK and Italy.

Slovenian minority in Hungary donates 2,000 protective masks

HODOŠ - The Slovenian minority in Hungary presented Minster for Slovenians Abroad Helena Jaklitsch with 2,000 home-made protective face masks. Jaklitsch said the donation was an extraordinarily lovely gesture, indicative of the ties among Slovenians on both sides of the border. The community is however not happy with the closure of border crossings, leaving relatives stranded on either side. Jaklitsch said that reopening was Hungary's decision but that Slovenia would support the minority in efforts to reopen it.

NGO calls for environmentally sustainable economic revival

LJUBLJANA - NGOs believe that economic revival after the coronavirus crisis should be environmentally sustainable, so investment into energy efficiency and renewable energy sources is crucial. They believe countries should use EU funds for funding of environmental projects. "The best way to boost economic recovery is by using EU budget, so member states must focus more on environmental measures," NGOs said on Monday, when a report was presented assessing EU investments in energy infrastructure in 2014-2020. According to NGO Focus, long-term investment into clear energy infrastructure is needed if Slovenia is to become climate neutral. Both public and private investment is essential, it added.

Emergency law on culling of bears, wolves repealed

LJUBLJANA - The Constitutional Court repealed an emergency law ordering the culling of brown bear and wolf populations which was to remain valid until late September. The court has ruled that the law is in violation of Article 3 of the Constitution, which refers to the separation of powers between the three branches of government. Based on that, it did not rule on the substance of the law, said Alpe Adria Green, an environmental NGO. Even though the cull determined by the law has already been carried out, the decision may prevent the adoption of emerging amendments that would increase the cull quota for this year.

SDS consolidates lead, LMŠ loses ground in latest Vox Populi poll

LJUBLJANA/MARIBOR - The party of Prime Minister Janez Janša (SDS) persisted at the top of the ratings in the latest Vox Populi poll, while the Marjan Šarec List (LMŠ) suffered a deep slump. The government's performance was rated successful by 65% of respondents. If a general election had been held last Sunday, the Democrats (SDS) would have gotten 22.5%, slightly less than the month before but still enough to secure 34 seats in parliament, shows the poll, conducted by Ninamedia for the newspapers Dnevnik and Večer. LMŠ, the biggest opposition party, slipped back to 9.8% compared to more than 19% in January and 15% in March, followed closely by the Social Democrats (SD, almost 9%). The opposition Left trails in fourth at some 6%, polling similarly as the previous month.

If you're learning Slovenian then you can find all our dual texts here

20 Apr 2020, 20:37 PM

All our stories on coronavirus are here, while those covering covid-19 and Croatia are here. We'll have an update at the end of the day, and if you want newsflashes then we'll post those on Facebook

We can’t have pictures of COVID-19 every day. So instead we’ll try and show the works of Slovenian artists. Today it’s Daša Šeruga, with one of a series of posters from Tam Tam, as seen here.

Contents

Three more die of Covid-19, bringing national death toll to 77

Gradual return to sports accompanied by extensive warnings

Fines issued due to lockdown violations totalling EUR 32,000

Latest estimates value second stimulus package at EUR 2.8bn

Three more die of Covid-19, bringing national death toll to 77

STA, 20 April 2020 - Three more Covid-19 patients died in Slovenia on Sunday, bringing the official national death toll 77. Only five new coronavirus cases have been confirmed, raising the tally to 1,335, fresh data from the government show.

The number of new cases as a rule drops at weekends because fewer people are tested, but the country has been seeing a steady decline in new cases for a while now.

On Sunday, 537 tests were performed, which brings the total of tests so far conducted in the country to 41,802.

A total of 88 Covid-patients were being treated in hospitals on Sunday, 26 of them in intensive care units. One was discharged from hospital, which means 193 Covid-19 patients have so far returned home from hospital.

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Gradual return to sports accompanied by extensive warnings

STA, 20 April 2020 - A limited number of outdoor sports facilities, including tennis courts, golf courses and bowls pitches, were reopened for use as part of a softening of lockdown measures on Monday. Extensive safety instructions accompanying the return to sports however also reveal the impact the virus will have for some time to come.

While group sports remain forbidden, the new coronavirus reality will also leave a strong mark on individual sports that seem risk-free at first glance.

One of the more detailed safety lists, containing many of the measures also advised for other sports, has been published by the Tennis Association, which stressed that persons noticing any signs of infection still need to stay from courts and that these are only open for recreational purposes.

Changing rooms and locker rooms will be closed, while the players are also advised against changing their shirts during or after the match.

Toilets will be closed in case the provider cannot secure regular disinfection, states the association's safety list, which consists of 34 items in total.

No doubles matches are allowed and crossing over to the opponent's side to check the validity of a close call on what are mostly red clay tennis courts in Slovenia is strongly discouraged as well.

Another issue that implies more work for tennis club owners is posed by the cleaning of the court after a match, as players are no longer allowed to touch the nets used to even out the clay surface. The restriction applies to all court maintenance equipment.

Litter bins and loitering at the club house are off limits, while special post-match care also applies to the balls, which should be left in the container for 72 hours.

Finally, players will have to make do without one of the key rituals of the sport, the post-game handshake.

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Fines issued due to lockdown violations totalling EUR 32,000

STA, 20 April 2020 - The Health Inspectorate has launched more than 2,900 procedures and issued fines worth more than EUR 32,000 to people breaking the restrictions in place to slow down the coronavirus epidemic in Slovenia. It received over 110 reports of suspected violations directly from individuals and many more from the police.

The health inspection service has been cooperating with the police in enforcing the decrees on lockdown measures and performing field inspections.

During the epidemic, the inspectorate is the only authority that may initiate procedures and issue fines for violations of movement restrictions and the gathering ban.

The cases processed so far have been mostly referred to the inspectorate by the police and involved individuals. Almost 300 fines have been issued, totalling more than EUR 32,000, the health authority told the STA on Monday.

Over the weekend, the police received a total of 199 reports of alleged violations. Moreover, police officers reported 571 violations themselves on Saturday and Sunday, giving 513 warnings and referring 661 cases to the inspectorate, show police data. Most violations occurred in the Ljubljana and Celje areas.

The police have so far received 1,825 reports and determined more than 5,860 violations by itself, issuing almost 3,970 warnings and referring some 4,820 cases to the health inspection service, including 58 violations of the protection of public order act.

To stem the COVID-19 spread, the government has imposed a number of lockdown measures, including a ban on movement outside one's municipal unit. Since Saturday, the restriction has been eased to a certain degree, allowing maintenance and seasonal works at private properties in other municipalities.

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Latest estimates value second stimulus package at EUR 2.8bn

STA, 20 April - Coming out of Monday's coordination meeting for the emerging new coronavirus emergency package, coalition members explained the current total value of the envisaged measures, focusing on securing liquidity for businesses, was EUR 2.8 billion.

Reports on the liquidity measures, coming after a EUR 3 billion stimulus package seeking to prevent job loss and protect vulnerable groups, so far mentioned EUR 900 million to be given at the disposal of companies in the form of loans, guarantees and guarantee schemes. The Chamber of Commerce and Industry (GZS) spoke of EUR 2 billion in one statement.

The coalition discussed today changes to the first package and the new stimulus, both of which the government hopes to finalise today and on Tuesday and have ready for adoption in parliament on 28 and 29 April.

The deputy group head of the senior coalition Democrats (SDS) Danijel Krivec also announced a third package today saying "it will seek to kickstart growth while the measures will secure investment in infrastructure and might also include additional measures for tourism".

The Agriculture Ministry said today the third package was also to include measures for the agriculture and food sector, primarily focussing on new investment, plant production and boosting food self-sufficiency.

Coalition partners were mostly content today with the degree to which their proposals had been incorporated into the new package, but many raised the issue of tourism, which is likely to continue to struggle even after other sectors pick up.

Janja Sluga of the Modern Centre Party (SMC) said tourism should be approached "in a more comprehensive matter". She meanwhile also suggested not enough had been done for self-employed culture workers.

Still being coordinated are provisions laying down the extent to which loans taken out by companies to bridge the crisis are to be covered with state guarantees.

Franc Jurša of the Pensioners' Party (DeSUS) revealed that small companies would probably get 80% guarantee coverage and large companies 70%.

Coalition parties can still forward their proposals to the government today to be studied by government task forces. The government is expected to endorse amendments to the first corona package and the draft second corona bill on Tuesday, so they could be discussed by the parliamentary finance committee on Friday or Saturday. The motions should be put up for a vote in parliament on 28 and 29 April.

The part of the opposition which was critical of the first corona epidemic legislative package is displeased with the draft second package as well.

MPs of the Marjan Šarec List (LMŠ), Social Democrats (SD) and the Left pointed to the "still forgotten groups of citizens" and unclarity about state guarantees.

Brane Golubović of the LMŠ said the package did not bring solutions for the most problematic sector - the hospitality and tourism sector. He also wants to know whether the EUR 2 billion in planned state guarantees included those planned for the Koper-Divača rail project, the housing scheme and the north-south expressway.

Matjaž Han of the SD warned that all companies in need of aid would still not receive it. He too pointed to the problems of the hospitality and tourism sector, which would have long-term problems with hiring.

Miha Kordiš of the Left said that a large part of precarious workers, the unemployed and tenants were still being left out.

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