Prior to 1993, the Slovak Republic was a part of the now defunct state of
Czechoslovakia. On 19 January 1993, after the Slovak Republic had become a separate
state, the
National Council of the Slovak Republic enacted a
nationality law to establish "the conditions of gain and loss of citizenship" in the newly formed republic. The law came into effect the day after its publication on 16 February. Citizenship applications would be issued by the
Ministry of Interior after application with a district office. A citizen of
Czechoslovakia as of 31 December 1992, who was not already a citizen of the Slovak Republic, could acquire Slovak citizenship upon declaration until 31 December 1993. Citizenship was also open to those who had lost Czechoslovak citizenship as a result of territorial dissolution after the fall of the
Austro-Hungarian Empire. Under the 1993 law, a citizen could lose Slovak citizenship only at his or her own request, after having acquired citizenship in another country. However, release of citizenship would not be allowed for people who owed taxes, were under criminal investigation, serving a prison sentence or who were
fugitives.
Amendment Neighboring Hungary passed a resolution on 26 May 2010, amending its own
nationality law to allow any ethnic Hungarian living abroad (who was able to speak the
Hungarian language, and was a Hungarian citizen before
1920 or a descendant of a pre-1920 Hungarian citizen) to seek Hungarian citizenship. elicited a reaction in the surrounding region. The strongest reaction came from Slovakia. Prime Minister
Robert Fico said Hungary's action was a "security threat," because Slovakia hosts a 500,000-strong Hungarian minority community within its borders that could possibly become citizens of Hungary. That same day, Slovakia passed a motion to amend the Citizenship Act to limit
dual citizenship by barring Slovak citizenship for anyone, who acquired foreign citizenship by an act of will. The amendment did not, however, bar dual citizenship for those who acquired it at birth or by marriage. I believe the European Union must go further than saying this is a Hungarian-Slovak conflict ... because it violates the charter of fundamental rights. If a democracy robs its own citizens of their citizenship by applying sanctions against people who practice their right to a free choice of identity, I believe it becomes a problem of democracy. The amendments affected voting in the Slovak
2012 parliamentary election, when some people who attempted to vote were turned away because they had been granted Hungarian citizenship. ==Requirements==