• 02/19/2010

    The chairman of the lower house, Miloslav Vlček, has called a special session of Parliament for next week in an effort to get controversial social spending issues back on its agenda. The move comes after the lower house was deadlocked by hours of filibustering and right-wing politicians refused to vote on bills which would increase the precariously high state deficit. The centre-right Civic Democrats even proposed that the Chamber of Deputies should avoid any controversial issues and not make any crucial decisions until May’s general elections. However the party recently softened its stand on maternity benefits, saying that if there was overwhelming support for the proposal to maintain maternity benefits at last year’s level it would not block the bill. The level of maternity benefits became an issue of contention after caretaker finance minister Eduard Janota proposed their reduction within widespread cost-cutting measures.

  • 02/19/2010

    A high degree air pollution alert in Moravia and Silesia was called off on Friday morning after the smog situation improved overnight. People in these areas were warned to remain indoors and keep their windows closed on Thursday after nitrogen dioxide and dust levels soared high above thresholds set by the WHO. Pollution levels dropped overnight though in the worst affected areas around Ostrava and Karvina the amount of pollutants is still four times higher than permitted.

    Air pollution has long been a serious problem in the eastern part of the country, despite sustained efforts to improve the situation. People living in the area are more prone to allergies and asthma and medical statistics show that a higher number of people also suffer from chest infections and heart problems.

  • 02/19/2010

    The Brno police has defended the use of force in dispersing a crowd of far-right protesters outside the Supreme Administrative Court on Wednesday. The police took action against several dozen supporters of the far-right Workers’ Party who turned up to protest against the court’s decision to ban the party on the grounds that it spreads xenophobia and racial hatred. A police spokesman said the protesters had repeatedly ignored orders to disperse and in view of the fact that they were violating the law the police had no option but to use force. He stressed that no one had been injured in the operation and there had been no damage of property. The police action was criticized by the Human Rights League on the grounds that the party’s supporters were entitled to show their discontent with the court’s decision.

  • 02/19/2010

    A poll conducted by the CVVM agency suggests that if general elections were held today the Social Democrats would have a strong lead with 33 percent of the vote. The Civic Democrats would get 20 percent, followed by the Communist Party with 14 percent and TOP 09 with 12 percent of the vote.

    Three other parties stand a chance of crossing the 5 percent threshold needed to win seats in Parliament – Public Affairs, the Greens and Christian Democrats who would win 5 to 6 percent of the vote each.

  • 02/19/2010

    The sale of organic food products is reported to have slowed last year, after years of promising growth for the industry. The slow-down is being attributed to tightened family budgets as a result of the economic crisis. Organic food products are 140 percent more expensive in the Czech Republic than regular brands. According to the organic food agency Green Marketing, 2008 showed a 40 percent growth in organic food consumption, which in 2009 dropped to 5 percent. The agency Organic Monitor says there has been a slow-down in the sale of organic food products across Europe.

  • 02/19/2010

    The Czech Defense Ministry is seeking to acquire a Czechoslovak-made veteran LTP 38 tank from Peru for Prague’s Technical Museum. Negotiations are underway with the town of Mollendo which currently owns the tank, presumably the last one of several dozen that were made on commission for Peru in 1938. Thanks to their Scania motor and fine-tuning the tanks were suitable for use in mountainous terrain. The Czech Defense Ministry is prepared to pay the town 50,000 US dollars for the veteran.

  • 02/18/2010

    The region of Prague is the fifth wealthiest in Europe, according to data released Thursday by the European statistical office Eurostat. The data reflects the purchasing power standard of the individual regions of Europe in 2007 and by that measure puts Prague behind Hamburg and slightly ahead of Paris city centre. London city centre topped the list with nearly twice the buying power of Prague, or 334% of the EU standard, followed by Luxemburg and Brussels. The Czech Republic as a whole however fared much worse, with the national average amounting to 80% of the EU average. Also, some of the poorest regions in the EU were also found in the Czech Republic, particularly north-western Bohemia, which showed a purchasing power standard of 62% of the EU standard.

  • 02/18/2010

    The presiding judge in the case that banned the far-right Workers’ Party on Wednesday says there is nothing to prevent the same people from creating a new party with the same name and even logo. Judge Vojtěch Šimíček explained on Thursday that the party was only illegal based on the combined evidence against it – primary amongst was neo-Nazis involvement in its leadership – and that circumstantial evidence such as the party’s symbolism or name were not themselves prohibited. The court ruled Wednesday that the Workers’ Party promotes xenophobia and chauvinism while exploiting homophobia and fear of foreigners and immigrants. Worker’s Party chairman Tomáš Vandas said the group would appeal the ruling and run in May’s general elections.

  • 02/18/2010

    Dagmar Tauchenová, who helped her husband to escape from prison last year by opening fire on his police escort, could receive a lighter sentence or even probation under the new criminal code. Ms. Tauchenová was charged last year with extortion, assault on a public servant and obstruction of justice, which at the time carried a sentence of up to eight years in prison. However, under the new criminal code, which took effect at the beginning of this year, her offences have been reclassified as ‘freeing a prisoner’, which entails a maximum five years imprisonment or suspended prosecution. The latter sentence would have to be proposed by the state prosecutor and approved by the court.

    Ms Tauchenová’s husband had been sentenced to five years for safe-cracking and was being transferred to a hospital when she shot at on his police escort and both escaped. Police caught up with the couple shortly afterwards and Ms Tauchenová was shot and her husband committed suicide.

  • 02/18/2010

    The Ministry of Health reports that two people have died in the last week of swine flu-related illnesses, bringing the total number of deaths in the Czech Republic to 100. Meanwhile, only roughly one fourth of the available vaccine dosages have been utilised in the country. The state originally ordered one million dosages at a cost of 220 million crowns; a quarter of that was delivered by the end of 2009 and the remainder has been manufactured but is being stored by the producer GSK. The Health Ministry is currently involved in negotiations with the drug manufacturer on reimbursement for the unused dosages. The application of the vaccine has met with reluctance among Czechs; last week 500 people had themselves vaccinated, more than a thousand less than the week before.

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