• 05/27/2023

    The extended tram line number 17 from Modřany to Libuše in the south of Prague opened to the public on Saturday.

    The Prague Public Transport Company added 1,700 metres to the route and four new stops at a cost of around CZK 300 million, mostly paid from EU funds.

    The opening of the new tram line will bring a number of changes to bus lines in the area of Jižní Město, Libuš, Modřany and Zbraslav.

    Author: Ruth Fraňková
  • 05/27/2023

    A commemorative marking the 81st anniversary of the assassination of the Nazi governor of Bohemia and Moravia in 1942 took place in Prague on Saturday.

    Several dozen people gathered at the Anthropoid memorial in the district of Libeň near the spot where two Czechoslovak paratroopers Jan Kubiš and Jozef Gabčík opened fire on Heydrich’s car.

    A historic tram commemorating the sites and events associated with Operation Anthropoid will be riding through the streets of Prague on Saturday between the Střešovice depot and Karlovo náměstí square.

    Author: Ruth Fraňková
  • 05/26/2023

    Czechia has won the bid to host the Women's Ice Hockey World Championship in 2025, the International Ice Hockey Federation announced at its congress in Finland’s Tampere on Friday. It is the first time in history Czechia will be hosting the event.

    Women's hockey is on the rise in Czechia. Last year, women hockey players made their first appearance at the Olympics and finished seventh in Beijing. They subsequently won a historic bronze at the World Championships in Denmark, which they defended this year in Brampton, Canada.

    Author: Ruth Fraňková
  • 05/26/2023

    Czech police have arrested and charged a man who they believed started last year’s fire in the Bohemian Switzerland national park, the Czech News Agency reported on Friday citing police spokesman Kamil Marek. It is the same man who started several fires in the nearby area around the town of Děčín in Northen Bohemia. The responsible court has decided to place the man into custody.

    The fire, which spread across 1,000 hectares of the national park and was widely covered in the media, took 20 days to put out, involving no fewer than 6,000 firefighters. If the individual is found guilty, he could face a jail sentence of up to 15 years.

  • 05/26/2023

    Saturday will be mostly sunny with day temperatures ranging between 19 and 23 degrees Celsius.

    Author: Ruth Fraňková
  • 05/26/2023

    Archaeologists have discovered around 40 fragments of an ancient vessel dating to the fifth century BC in the village of Milovice near Jičín at the construction site of the D35 motorway.

    The vessel, which was found at a former settlement from the Celtic period. According to archaeologists, it was adorned with figurative motifs and was most likely imported there from the Mediterranean.

    According to archaeologists, only a few fragments of the so-called red-figure vase paintings were found on the territory of Czechia to date.

    Other objects, including fragments of iron tools, stone mills and grinding wheels were also discovered at the site.

    Author: Ruth Fraňková
  • 05/26/2023

    More than 1,700 Czech churches will be accessible to the public during this year's Night of the Open Churches, scheduled for the weekend of June 3 and 4, the organizers announced on Friday. In Prague alone, it will be possible to visit 155 churches, temples and chapels.

    The theme of this year's event is baptism and the organisers want to reflect not only its ritual but also the places, objects, texts or traditions associated with the ritual.

    Among the newly opened sites will be the Church of St. Peter and Paul which is located in the protected zone of the Želivka dam or the newly built Church of Christ the Saviour in Prague’s district of Barrandov.

    Author: Ruth Fraňková
  • 05/26/2023

    The adoption of the euro is not a pressing topic given the current economic situation in Czechia, the country’s prime minister, Petr Fiala, told the Czech News Agency in an interview published on Friday. The head of the country’s government said that it is first necessary to sort out Czechia’s budget deficit and tame inflation, adding that the current economic situation in the country does not actually fulfil the conditions of the Maastricht criteria that define when a state is ready to adopt the currency.

    He thus echoed the words of his finance minister, Zbyněk Stanjura, made at a conference of the government Civic Democratic Party two weeks ago. The government also agreed not to set a definite date on when the country should aim to adopt the Eurozone currency.

    Mr Fiala said that the government is overall seeking to slim-down the state and increase its effectivity. Once laws covering deficit reduction and the currently proposed pensions reform are approved by the country’s legislature, the government will seek to speed up the realisation of major strategic projects that the prime minister hopes will help the country’s economy in the coming decades. This includes investments into education, transport infrastructure and security.

  • 05/26/2023

    The reconstruction and new permanent exhibition of the Army Museum at the Military History Institute in Prague has received this year’s Gloria Musaealis prize for best museum project.

    The museum, which is located at the foot of the city’s Vítkov hill in the Žižkov district, opened last October after a four-year reconstruction which cost over CZK 900 million.

    In the Exhibition of the Year category, the Central Bohemian Museum in Roztoky near Prague won with its new exhibition called Archevita – Traces of the ages.

    In total, 73 museums with a total of 123 projects took part in the competition.

    Author: Ruth Fraňková
  • 05/26/2023

    Germany is stepping up police patrols at its borders with Czechia and Poland because of illegal migration, Federal Interior Minister Nancy Faeser announced on Friday, the DPA news agency reported. Local police officers will be supplemented by mobile units and police will intensify so-called "hidden spot checks".

    Ms. Faeser rejected demands from representatives of Saxony and Brandenburg that permanent checks be introduced at the borders Czechia and Poland, arguing that such a move was a last resort that could only be introduced in case of a serious threat to public order and internal security.

    Ms. Faeser is due to meet with her Czech counterpart Vít Rakušan at the Czech-German border in Petrovice-Schwandorf on Friday to discuss the current situation.

    Author: Ruth Fraňková

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