Ján Čarnogurský

Ján Čarnogurský
4th Minister of Justice of Slovakia
In office
October 30, 1998  October 15, 2002
Preceded by Jozef Liščák
Succeeded by Daniel Lipšic
Prime Minister of Slovak Federal Republic
In office
May 6, 1991  June 24, 1992
Preceded by Vladimír Mečiar
Succeeded by Vladimír Mečiar
Acting Interior Minister of Slovak Federal Republic
In office
November 2, 1990  November 22, 1990
Deputy Prime minister of Slovak Federal Republic
In office
June 27, 1990  April 23, 1991
Deputy Prime minister of Czechoslovakia
In office
December 10, 1989  June 27, 1990
Personal details
Born January 1, 1944
Bratislava, First Slovak Republic
Political party Christian Democratic Movement

Ján Čarnogurský (born 1 January 1944) is a Slovak former politician, a former Prime Minister of Slovakia (1991–1992)[1] and the former chairman of the Christian Democratic Movement (1990–2000).

He is married and has 4 children.

Before 1989

He studied Law at the Charles University in Prague (graduation in 1969) and at the Comenius University in Bratislava (Doctor's title in 1971). From 1970 to 1981, first he was active as a junior attorney-at-law, then as an attorney-at-law in Bratislava, and was member of a section of the Center of Czech and Slovak attorneys-at-law. In 1981, he was deprived of his attorney-at-law licence by the Communist authorities, because he had defended a person in a political process. However, he continued to provide legal advice to opposition (Charta 77) and religious activists. Between 1982 and 1986 first he was active as a driver, then as a company lawyer. In 1987 he was fired and remained unemployed. He was an important figure in the secret church in Slovakia and, between 1987 and 1989, he published illegally the magazine Bratislavské listy (Bratislava Papers). He represented the Christian Democratic wing within the Anti-Communist opposition in Czechoslovakia.

1989–1992

Shortly before the Velvet Revolution, on August 14, 1989, he was imprisoned and released only after the collapse of the Communist regime through a presidential amnesty on November 25, 1989. From December 1989 to April 1990 he was the first vice-prime minister, since April to June 1990 the vice-prime minister of Czechoslovakia. He was a co-founder and, since February 1990, the chairman of the Christian Democratic Movement of Slovakia. Since the Christian Democratic Movement was Slovakia's second largest party after the Slovak parliamentary election, 1990, Čarnogurský became the vice-prime minister of Slovakia and in June 1990. After the Movement for a Democratic Slovakia split from the Public against Violence, i.e. from the party that had won the 1990 elections, Čarnogurský took over the post of the prime minister of Slovakia in April 1991.

During this period characterized by quarrels between Czechs and Slovaks concerning the future of their co-existence he became famous by his statement that in the future Slovakia should have its own "little [European] star" in Europe, which at the time of existence of Czechoslovakia was a shocking statement.

1992–2002

After the 1992 election he ceased to be prime minister and was a deputy to the National Council of the Slovak Republic (Slovak parliament) as an opposition member and strong Mečiar opponent from 1992 to 1998.

After the 1998 election he was the Minister of Justice of Slovakia from 1998 to 2002.

After 2002

In 2002, he retired from politics altogether and has been working as an attorney-at-law since. Pavol Hrušovský became the new chairman of the Christian Democratic Movement.

Secondary functions

Other Advisory Board Members include George Robertson (former NATO Secretary General and UK Defense Minister), Barbara McDougall (Former Minister of Foreign Affairs and Finance, Canada) and Stuart Eizenstat (former Deputy Treasury Secretary, Under-Secretary of State and Ambassador under President Bill Clinton) among others.

Works

References

  1. "Ján Čarnogurský" (in Czech). Government of the Czech Republic. Retrieved June 10, 2010.
Political offices
Preceded by
Vladimír Mečiar
Prime Minister of Slovakia
1991–1992
Succeeded by
Vladimír Mečiar