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May 27, 2007
New European Union members are still on course to join the bloc's borderless travel zone at the beginning of next year, Poland's interior minister said Friday after meeting eight of his counterparts.
EU nations agreed last December to admit the nine countries to the so-called Schengen visa zone under a deal that foresees a phased-out removal of land border checks starting in the new year.
"We see nothing threatening" the plan to extend borderless travel next year, he said after meeting his counterparts from the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Slovakia and Slovenia.
They still face a final European Commission evaluation of their border and customs security standards, but Polish Interior Minister Janusz Kaczmarek said: "We see no problems today."
Kaczmarek said "timetables are being observed." Still, he noted that "the scale of preparations is different in different countries" - depending on the length of their borders and whether or not they have coastlines.
Kaczmarek said that the nine nations' readiness for the new system will be tested in September.
The other EU member that joined along with them in 2004, Cyprus, has opted to keep in place some border checks.
The Polish minister's optimism was echoed by Slovak President Ivan Gasparovic, speaking at a meeting in the Czech Republic with counterparts from central, southern and eastern Europe.
Of a possible postponement, he said: "I don't think at all that anything like that could happen."


Jul 11, 2007
Bratislava
A story about slovakian girls
On
my first night in Bratislava, Slovak Republic, while I was waiting for
the first Monica, who was going to pick me up in front of my hotel at 9
o'clock, two young Italians stopped to ask me if I could suggest a
place where they could have some fun that night in Slovakia.
Before
I had the chance to hide behind my usual "I don't speak Italian"
(spoken in English, of course), they went on to say, "You can't get any
slovak girls here. We arrived yesterday and we're leaving tomorrow. The
taxi driver refused to help us find some girls and the female
receptionist at the hotel wanted to throw us out when we asked her
where we could get some women. The Slovak Republic where taxi drivers
and receptionists can't understand the tourist is underdeveloped. We're
going back to Thailand!"
Marco and Sandro come from the small
Italian...

Jun 23, 2007
by Steve
True to God's blueprint for Eastern Europe, the girls in Bratislava have to be seen to be believed. They dress to turn heads, and probably would even if they wore shiny tracksuits salvaged from the eighties. Fortunately, short skirts, tight trousers and skimpy tops are more the order of the day.
The Slovakian capital, with its relaxed vibe, narrow streets and pavement bars, is made for drinking, drooling, and generally watching the world go by. Go somewhere else for serious conversation, which will be frequently derailed by passing lovelies causing eyes and minds to wander.
By night, Slovakian girls are not only heartbreakingly beautiful, they also love to party, and often prowl the bars and clubs of Bratislava in large groups. They love to practice their English, to chat and to be chatted up, but you will have to play your cards carefully to get anything more than an innocent peck on the cheek. You wouldn't be the first to mistake the innocent charm of Slovakian girls for something more.
After a weekend in Bratislava, you will believe in love at first sight.
...