AlQa'dah 4, 1432, Oct 2, 2011, SPA -- Slovakia's ruling coalition will have to reallocate cabinet posts or face a snap election unless it can find its own majority in parliament for a crucial vote on the euro zone's rescue fund, Reuters quoted the main opposition party Smer as saying on Sunday. The euro zone's second poorest country of 5 million people has become a major risk to the bloc's July deal to give the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) more power to tackle the crisis threatening its weaker debtor economies. The centre-right coalition of Iveta Radicova is struggling to win enough support in parliament for the EFSF vote, which is due by Oct. 14, because junior partner Freedom and Solidarity (SaS) has so far refused to support the measure. "Either this government approves the EFSF and the coalition will do so by itself, or the ruling coalition will not be able to make such a decision and it will have to make it with the help of the opposition, but with consequences for the functioning of this ruling coalition," Robert Fico, leader of Smer, said in a debate on Slovak Television on Sunday. -- SPA