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Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Janez Janša: An arrogant criminal group is ruling Slovenia

By: Nova24tv.si

In a new video address to the people of Slovenia, Janez Janša, in light of the corruption evidence that has recently come to light, calls on Slovenia to break free from the grip of organised crime.

The leader of the conservative opposition called on Slovenians to take their country back, stressing that only together, through elections, can we show the arrogant criminal group that has kidnapped our country the door – the door to prison.

“Even those of us who have seen a lot are downright appalled by the evidence of systemic corruption that has come to light in recent days,” Janša began. He continued by saying that we can now hear the self‑praise of the privileged, boasting about how they can arrange anything because they have connections with those who rule Slovenia both from the front and from behind the scenes.

The tentacles of the deep state are everywhere

He warned that this is “a network of political, interest‑based, and family connections elevated above the law.” If in the past only those harmed by this clique spoke of its privileges, we can now hear about the deep state straight from its own mouth. “We are ruled by an organised criminal group,” Janša emphasised. Its tentacles reach everywhere: from the police and judiciary to the media and even the Commission for the Prevention of Corruption. From leadership positions, with the help of the media, this octopus controls all subsystems. “They openly boast about this, not only among themselves but also in front of foreigners,” the SDS president pointed out.

He went on to say that this group even sent one of its own to the European Commission, a former registered collaborator of the UDBA, Marta Kos. Therefore, she should resign, and Slovenia, under a new government, will send someone who will work for its interests, not for the interests of the UDBA‑mafia.

The government should resign

Willingly or unwillingly, citizens in such a country submit to the criminal group in power and play by its rules. In other words, “they pay that 10%,” as the lawyer boasted. “I ask you: do you want to live in such a country?” Janša addressed the Slovenian people. Although elections are just around the corner, the government should resign in light of these revelations, he insisted. But this will not happen here, because they feel untouchable. He recalled Zoran Janković’s statement on Croatian television that he would never be imprisoned because he opposes the politics of Janez Janša, adding: “and indeed he has not been, to this day, because he is untouchable, first‑class.” That same year, three weeks before the election, the president of the largest party, Janez Janša himself, was sent to prison and the election was stolen.

It is precisely Mr. “10 percent” who will guard the ballot boxes in Stožice for five nights, containing uncounted and unnumbered ballots from 14 early polling stations, Janša warned. At the same time, he pointed out that, interestingly, the current government suddenly withdrew from the international lawsuit against Israel, and he wonders whether one fewer piece of evidence will be published because of it. “When a country is run by a criminal group so arrogant that it no longer hides it, then such a government becomes a target for anyone who can, without much effort, gather evidence of state‑level crime,” Janša added, asking: “Did we really fight for such a country?”

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