• 04/15/2010

    Top Czech tennis player Tomáš Berdych has crashed out of the Monte Carlo open. Berdych was beaten by Spaniard Fernando Verdasco for a place in the quarter finals of the ATP tournament. He won the first set 7:5 but lost the next two sets 3:6 and 2:6. He had won six out of the previous nine encounters with Verdasco. Berdych is currently ranked the top Czech men’s singles player with a 15th place on the ATP world rankings.

    Author: Chris Johnstone
  • 04/15/2010

    In football, the Czech football association’s disciplinary committee imposed a record 6.0 million crowns fine and deducted 20 points from the club for failing to play in a Gambrinus League game on Saturday. The points deduction guarantees automatic relegation. The committee also banned striker Marek Kincl from holding the captaincy for two years and banned club boss Karel Kapr from holding any post connected with the game for the same period. Kapr said the club would appeal.

    Earlier, Bohemians 1905 was awarded three points and a 3:0 win over Bohemians Praha. The refusal of Bohemians Praha to play amounts to one of the biggest scandals to hit the top Gambrinus league in recent years. The two clubs have been conducting a legal battle and war of words over the right to use the Bohemians name. Bohemians Praha has called for European football’s governing body, UEFA, to intervene in the dispute.

    Author: Chris Johnstone
  • 04/14/2010

    The Czech president, Vaclav Klaus, has vetoed a government-sponsored bill that would force airlines operating in the Czech Republic to buy emissions permits, thereby paying for the damage planes do to the environment. Mr Klaus, who denies mankind is responsible for global warming, rejected the legislation on the grounds that it was based on a directive from the European Union, adding that it could have a negative impact on the economy. The Czech president said such schemes interfered with economic freedom. The bill, which was due to come into effect in 2012, now returns to the lower house for further consideration.

    Author: Ian Willoughby
  • 04/14/2010

    The Social Democrats have admonished senior party member Miloslav Vlček for his links to a businessman suspected of misusing state grants. Mr Vlček, who is chairman of the lower house, lobbied on behalf of businessman Petr Vrtal for funding for a sports centre. However, Mr Vrtal is accused of putting the money into a large hotel owned by his company. The Social Democrats on Wednesday called on the minister of finance, Eduard Janota, to file charges if wrongdoing is confirmed. A party spokesperson said ultimate responsibility lay with the Finance Ministry for okaying the grant, but said Mr Vlček had made a mistake in becoming involved with the hotel owner.

    Author: Ian Willoughby
  • 04/14/2010

    The management of a plant producing Toyota, Peugeot and Citroen cars in Kolín have agreed a new collective pay agreement with union leaders. Workers at the central Bohemian factory will receive a 2.5 percent pay rise this year, along with a one-off bonus of CZK 4500 (around USD 250). Overtime payments will also increase at the plant, which was opened in 2005 and last year rolled out over 300,000 cars.

    Author: Ian Willoughby
  • 04/14/2010

    A 24-year-old man is in a serious condition after falling from the statue of St Wenceslas on Prague’s Wenceslas Square in the early hours of Wednesday. The man, who is not Czech, was drunk at the time. He is reported to have broken several bones and sustained other injuries in the fall, which took place around 3:30 am. The man refused to comply with police calls for him to get down for a period of half an hour. When he did decide to dismount the statue he slipped when half-way down and plunged several metres to the ground. The man could now also face a fine.

    Author: Ian Willoughby
  • 04/14/2010

    The lower house of the Czech Parliament has rejected a plan to build a new university in the central Bohemian town of Kutná Hora. The idea had been put forward by the regional governor David Rath. Only MPs from his party the Social Democrats gave their support to the project in a vote on Wednesday, along with about half of the Communists present. Meanwhile, the university in Ostrava is to get a medical school after five decades of pushing for one, a spokesperson said. The current faculty of medical studies is being transformed into a full medicine faculty, with the first intake due this autumn.

    Author: Ian Willoughby
  • 04/14/2010

    The leader of the new party TOP 09, Karel Schwarzenberg, and the new leader of the Civic Democrats, Petr Nečas, are the most popular choices to be Czech prime minister, suggests a poll conducted by the Median agency published in Wednesday’s Lidové noviny. Both men received the backing of nearly 31 percent of respondents. Around a fifth of those polled said they would like to see Social Democrats chairman Jiří Paroubek head the next government. His party has been in front in polls of support for individual parties for some time. Czechs will cast their ballots in general elections on the last weekend of May.

    Author: Ian Willoughby
  • 04/14/2010

    A long running legal battle over an Ostrava pub’s refusal to serve Romany customers has been settled out of court. Bar owner Jiří Ozdinec agreed to pay the three Romanies CZK 20,000 (just over USD 1,000) each, as well as covering their legal costs. Jaroslav Drobek, Roman Dubnický and Soňa Horvátová first launched legal proceedings on the grounds of discrimination nine years ago after staff at Mr Ozdinec’s pub refused to serve them on the grounds they were not members; soon afterwards they did serve customers who also were not members.

    Author: Ian Willoughby
  • 04/14/2010

    A new documentary about thwarted plans to build a futuristic National Library building in Prague premieres in the city on Wednesday night. Entitled Oko nad Prahou (The Eye above Prague), the film records the victory of Jan Kaplický in the Czech Republic’s first international architecture tender with an ultra-modern design nicknamed the “Blob”, and the subsequent shelving of the plan following opposition from President Václav Klaus and others. The Czech-born Mr Kaplický, who was 71, died in January last year on the day his wife gave birth to their first child.

    Author: Ian Willoughby

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