Jozef Migaš | |
Office: | Acting President of Slovakia |
Alongside: | Mikuláš Dzurinda (acting) |
Primeminister: | Mikuláš Dzurinda |
Term Start: | 30 October 1998 |
Term End: | 15 June 1999 |
Predecessor: | Vladimír Mečiar (acting) |
Successor: | Rudolf Schuster |
Office2: | Speaker of the National Council |
Term Start2: | 30 October 1998 |
Term End2: | 15 October 2002 |
Predecessor2: | Ivan Gašparovič |
Successor2: | Pavol Hrušovský |
Office3: | Ambassador to Ukraine |
Term Start3: | 1995 |
Term End3: | 1996 |
Office4: | Ambassador to Belarus |
Term Start4: | 2 February 2016 |
Term End4: | 13 May 2020 |
Birth Date: | 7 January 1954 |
Birth Place: | Pušovce, Czechoslovakia (now Slovakia) |
Party: | Direction-Social Democracy (SMER-SD) |
Otherparty: | Party of the Democratic Left, Communist Party of Slovakia (1939) |
Jozef Migaš (born 7 January 1954) is a Slovak politician who was Speaker of National Council of the Slovak Republic from 1998[1] to 2002,[2] during the government of Mikuláš Dzurinda. He is now in political retirement. He was also acting president in 1998 and 1999.
From 1973-1978 he studied at the Faculty of Philosophy at the Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv. In 1982, he graduated with a Ph.D. Until 1989, he worked as an assistant professor at the Higher Political School of the Central Committee Communist Party of Slovakia in Bratislava, working in party structures at the Slovak Academy of Sciences in Košice. In 1989, he became one of the founders of the Democratic Left Party, being a member of the party’s executive committee. In 1993, he switched to diplomatic work, being an adviser to the Embassy of the Slovak Republic in Kyiv. In 1995 and 1996, he served as Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Slovakia to Ukraine.
From 1996-2001, he was Chairman of the Democratic Left Party. During this time, he was Chairman Parliament of Slovakia (1998-2002). From 30 October 1998 to 15 June 1999, he was the Acting President of Slovakia, serving after the completion of the presidency of Michal Kováč and the political crisis lasting more than a year. In 2003, he completed an internship in foreign policy and improving English in the United States at the American Language Communication Center.
He was engaged in entrepreneurial activity in the 2000s before going back to the diplomatic sphere in 2009 to become the Ambassador of Slovakia in Russia, a position he served in until 2014. On 2 February 2016, he was appointed to the post of ambassador to Belarus.[3] [4]
One of the attendees of the 2020 Minsk Victory Day Parade was Migaš, being one of the few foreign ambassadors in attendance.[5] On 13 May 2020, he resigned as ambassador after attending the celebrations as he was one of the two European Union ambassadors (the other being the Hungarian ambassador) who did not inform the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of their home countries. The Slovak foreign ministry in fact learned about his participation from the local press. He made his explanation one of principled stance, simply stating that he is the "son of a partisan and anti-fascist".[6] In a meeting with Serbian ambassador Veljko Kovacevic on 28 May, President Alexander Lukashenko criticized the Slovak government on the move, saying that "frankly speaking, I do not fully understand the position of the official Slovak leadership which allegedly criticized his action".[7] A day after those comments were made the Slovak Foreign Ministry summoned the Belarusian ambassador, saying that Lukashenko's comments on the Slovak position were "disengaged from the truth".[8] Migaš would later be awarded the Order of Francysk Skaryna by President Lukashenko.[9] [10] [11]
He speaks several foreign languages outside the Slovak language: English, Russian, Ukrainian. He owns 35 hectares of land in his home town. Upon leaving Belarus for the final time as ambassador, he took a German shepherd dog which was gifted to him by the Border Guard Service of Belarus.[12]