The article discusses Vinko Čelig, who claims he was unfairly taxed by the state after working abroad for 38 years and paying into the pension fund there. Upon retirement, he received a pension from abroad but was still required to pay taxes in Slovenia. The Financial Administration data from last year shows that over 24,000 people received such pensions, totaling more than 142 million euros, mostly from Germany, Austria, and Croatia. Residents of Slovenia are required to pay income tax on all income sources, including foreign pensions, according to Article 127 of the Income Tax Act.
Bias read (Center): The article presents factual information about taxation policies and pension payments without overtly favoring any political side. It includes quotes from Vinko Čelig and references legal provisions, providing balanced context without clear ideological framing.
Why these scores (Factual 75 · Objective 60): The article discusses pension issues but does not directly reference the privacy policy document. It mentions Delo media group in passing regarding newsletters, which aligns with the policy, but lacks specific details from the primary source. The tone shows some bias by emphasizing the unfairness of






