(Reuters) -Prime Minister Robert Fico said on Wednesday he had secured Slovakia’s gas supply during a visit to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow last month, just before Ukraine halted the transit of gas from Russia at the start of 2025.
“I needed to secure at a minimum gas for Slovakia’s domestic consumption – which we have secure,” Fico said in a video on Facebook.
Fico did not provide more details and the government office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Fico has accused Kyiv of damaging Slovakia by not extending a transit deal for Russian gas that expired at the end of 2024, and has threatened to cut electricity flows to Ukraine and reduce aid for its refugees.
Slovakia has continued receiving gas coming via Hungary, which receives Russian gas via Turk Stream, since the halt of flows from Ukraine, according to Slovak gas transmission network operator Eustream data.
Fico said that the halt from Ukraine has cost it 500 million euros in transit fees and 1 billion euros for higher gas prices.
Fico is due to meet European Commission officials in Brussels on Thursday to discuss the halt to Ukraine gas transit.
Kyiv has said the end of gas transit deprives Moscow of revenue as long as Russia continues to attack Ukraine.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy has accused Fico of opening a “second energy front” against Ukraine on the orders of Russia.
(Reporting by Jason Hovet in Prague; Editing by Kevin Liffey and Alistair Bell)
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