• 04/09/2007

    The Interior Ministry inspectorate is suspecting Interior Minister Ivan Langer of using borrowed mobile phones and SIM cards to make phone calls with members of the anti-organised crime police squad in order to prevent his calls from being monitored. Czech Television which broadcast the report on Sunday says Mr Langer denies the allegation. Ivan Langer's mobile phone number was among several dozen numbers monitored last year in connection with the leaked police report known as the "Kubice report" which suggested there were links between organised crime and the then ruling Social Democrats. The party says that the leak of the report harmed it in the general elections which ended in a narrow victory for the right-of-centre Civic Democrats. In all, 46 phone numbers were monitored during the police operation, some of them belonging to lawyers and also children.

  • 04/09/2007

    A spokeswoman for the Interior Ministry has categorically denied the allegation that the ministry's inspectorate is suspecting Minister Langer of deliberately using other people's phones to talk to detectives from the anti-organised crime unit. She added that "the inspectorate is not investigating Minister Langer and therefore it cannot suspect him of anything."

  • 04/09/2007

    According to figures released by the Czech Statistical Office, the number of Czechs who prefer to spend their holiday in the Czech Republic is on the rise. The number of Czechs who stayed in hotels around the country in 2006 grew by 4.3 percent year on year to 6.3 million. The South Bohemian region remains the most popular destination for domestic tourism, followed by South Moravia and the Hradec Kralove and Liberec regions. Since 2005, Czechs have been spending more on domestic holidays than on stays abroad.

  • 04/09/2007

    Some 5,000 visitors have come to see Karlstejn Castle outside Prague during the Easter weekend, about the same number as last year. Sunday was the busiest day with 2,000 visitors, most of them foreigners. Easter Monday is the only Monday in the year when the monument is open to visitors. Karlstejn Castle in Central Bohemia is a monument with the longest tourist season in the country. It opens its doors to the public in March, a month earlier than other castles and chateaux, and closes at the end of November. Around 270,000 visitors see Karlstejn every year.

  • 04/09/2007

    Many skiers in the Czech Republic have taken advantage of the prolonged weekend to visit the country's skiing resorts for the last time as the season is coming to a close. With between 15 to 40 centimetres of snow on the slopes in the Krkonose Mountains in East Bohemia, Easter Monday has been the last day of operation in some resorts. The resorts of Spindleruv Mlyn, Horni Misecky and Pec pod Snezkou will remain open for another week. All ski lifts were in operation at the weekend at the Ovcarna resort in the North Moravian mountains of Jeseniky- the only one still open to skiers in that area. With over a metre of snow on the slopes, the resort will remain open for at least another week.

  • 04/09/2007

    Preliminary police statistics suggest that the long weekend has been relatively calm on Czech roads. Three people were killed in traffic accidents on Saturday. Sunday saw two people killed, and one dead has been reported on Monday. Experts assume that favourable weather has been a positive factor and also the fact that people were afraid of busy traffic and therefore drove more carefully. On Saturday, police reported 317 traffic accidents with 8 people seriously injured. On Sunday, there were 265 accidents and 7 people sustained serious injuries.

  • 04/08/2007

    Civic Democrat deputy and former finance minister Vlastimil Tlusty says he will not support the government-proposed fiscal reform in a parliament vote unless the cabinet considers his comments. Speaking in a live TV debate on Sunday, Mr Tlusty said the government proposal will not make the calculation of the tax base and tax return any simpler. The governing coalition will be in need of the votes of all coalition deputies to be able to push the reform package through. The opposition Social Democrats and Communists have already announced they will not support the government-proposed bill. The lower house is to start discussing the government's draft reform in June and a vote could be held at an extraordinary session during the summer recess. The government wants the changes to come into force as of January 2008

  • 04/08/2007

    Deputy Chairman of the lower house Jan Kasal of the Christian Democratic Party says the chances of the government-proposed fiscal reform being passed by parliament would increase if the reform package were split into two parts. If the tax reform were discussed separately from the social system reform, the legislation would stand a better chance of being passed, Mr Kasal says. In an interview for the iHned.cz news server on Saturday, Mr Kasal said there had not been sufficient discussion about the planned reform prior to its announcement earlier this week. He added he objected to the across-the-board 15-percent personal income tax included in the reform and was concerned about the impact of the changes on families with young children.

  • 04/08/2007

    Parts of the military area in Brdy, Central Bohemia, have re-opened to the public this weekend after 68 years. In all, 45 kilometres of new tourist routes and cycling paths will be open to visitors on weekends and national holidays. The opening ceremony on Saturday was attended by Defence Minister Vlasta Parkanova and Chief-of-Staff Vlastimil Picek. Minister Parkanova said that the opening of the new routes was unrelated to the fact that the United States is planning to build a radar base in the same area. She said the routes will remain open regardless of whether the radar facility is built or not.

  • 04/08/2007

    The CTK news agency reports that substitution treatment for opiate users is increasingly available in the Czech Republic. According to data from the institute of healthcare information and statistics, 949 drug users were treated with substitution medications, mostly methadone, in 2006, 14 percent more than in the previous year. Around 480 people applied for the therapy last year. Substitution treatment is available at 14 establishments, including prisons. According to data from the National Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addictions, 11,500 people were addicted to opiates in 2005.

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