Jansa took part in a closed-door discussion at the parliamentary foreign policy committee on a draft brief but left before it was over.
There is awareness of the limits of the arbitration agreement. It's on Slovenian experts to use the room for manoeuvre as much as possible. But it's clear that one can't go beyond what is defined in the arbitration agreement, which was accepted in Slovenia even at a referendum, Jansa told reporters after leaving the meeting.
Foreign Minister Karl Erjavec also attended the meeting. Speaking to the press before, he voiced confidence that in the coming days the government would uphold the proposal by international legal experts who recommended that in the brief Slovenia should advocate only positions that were realistic and could be justified and proven under international law rules and documents.
Slovenia and Croatia must submit their arbitration briefs in The Hague on February 11.