• 01/28/2010

    Members of the lower house have sent two draft amendments by the Social Democrats through to a second reading, raising maternity benefits to earlier levels and reintroducing payments for individuals caring for family members on the first three days of sick leave. The right-of-centre Civic Democrats attempted to reject both proposals but were short of votes, backed only by a number of unaffiliated deputies and several Christian Democrats. The approval of the amendments was preceded by almost four hours of heated debate. Prior to the vote Prime Minister Jan Fischer and Finance Minister Eduard Janota warned deputies not to pass the amendments. Mr Janota said that raising maternity benefits had been problematic even back in 2006, when the economy was robust, while the prime minister warned against a further deepening of the country’s debt.

    Author: Jan Velinger
  • 01/28/2010

    Two Czechs who had been stranded at Machu Picchu in Peru along with around two thousand other tourists due to mudslides since Sunday, have been evacuated. Sources reported that there were three Czechs in the area – the two men and one woman – who were among those cut off. All three are now safe; the two men were evacuated on Wednesday by helicopter. Around 1,000 people remain at the site, with the Peruvian authorities saying that the rest of those stranded should be evacuated soon, although rain has complicated conditions. According to reports, helicopters have been able to transfer around 120 people per hour.

    Author: Jan Velinger
  • 01/28/2010

    Prague city councillors made public on Thursday cultural grants approved by the city for 2010. Among the highest recipients this year are Prague’s Divadlo bez zábradlí, the DOX centre for contemporary art in Prague’s Holešovice district, and Strašnické divadlo, all receiving between 1.5 and 6.4 million crowns. The One World documentary film festival will also receive funding worth 1.2 million crowns.

    Some at city hall have criticised the grant of 6.4 million awarded to Divadlo bez zábradlí, having earlier recommended roughly half of the final amount.

    Author: Jan Velinger
  • 01/28/2010

    Police in Tišnov near Brno, in Moravia, have caught a group of six boys responsible for an estimated 50,000 crowns worth of damages caused by spray painting over the last three months. The group painted graffiti at more than 50 sites. Police spokesman Bohumil Malášek told the ČTK news agency that rounding up the six was a success on the part of police, who are only ever rarely able to apprehend vandals. The Brno area has seen a noted rise in vandalism - a development noted by local town halls. Sites hit by the group included garages, elementary schools, bus stops and even a local observatory.

    Author: Jan Velinger
  • 01/28/2010

    The state-owned Lesy ČR, overseeing half of the country’s forestland, is to announce tenders in forestry as well as the sale of wood worth around 15 billion crowns. The tenders will cover work on some 108 areas of land, to be undertaken between 2011 and 2020, in total 12 million hectares, or roughly 90 percent of forest belonging to the firm. Contracts won will be signed for periods from one to up to ten years.

    Author: Jan Velinger
  • 01/28/2010

    Several centimetres of snow fell in most parts of the Czech Republic on Wednesday night as well as part of Thursday, causing complications on the country’s roads. Due to strong winds snowdrifts formed at several places. However, temperatures rose considerably, after record lows of around -25 degrees Celsius. Much of the Czech Republic has been under a blanket of snow for almost two weeks now, with the capital Prague seeing its highest snowfalls in three decades.

    Author: Jan Velinger
  • 01/28/2010

    An additional five skiers have been nominated to the Czech Olympic team ahead of the upcoming Winter Olympics in Vancouver, Canada, the head of the Czech Olympic Committee Milan Jirásek revealed on Thursday. The number of Czech sportsmen and women taking part will be 93 in total. The support team will count an additional 95 persons. Among the additional skiers nominated is 23-year-old freestyle specialist Martina Konopová, who placed 10th at the World Cup event at Mont Gabriel, Quebec, in January 2009. She has not competed on snow since last February, after falling out with her former trainer and temporarily being taken off the national team. She trained jumps on water until last November.

    Author: Jan Velinger
  • 01/28/2010

    A 16-year-old pitching prodigy from the Czech Republic, Štepán Havlíček, has signed a minor-league contract with the Tampa Bay Rays, the US Major League Baseball club announced on Wednesday. Havlíček pitched for the Czech junior national team and struck out 13 batters in 11 1/3 scoreless innings during the European Junior Championships last August in Germany. According to sources, the Rays said Havlíček will likely attend some portion of spring training, which begins in late February, and play in Major League Baseball's Australia Academy later this year. The training will help determine at what level of the minor-league developmental system Havlíček might start in his pursuit of one day reach the roster of the Rays, who lost to Philadelphia in the 2008 World Series.

    Author: Jan Velinger
  • 01/27/2010

    The Czech minister of defence, Martin Barták, and the chief of staff of the country’s army, Vlastimil Picek, have reversed a decision to have all Czech soldiers inoculated against the swine flu virus. The turnaround was announced on Wednesday after the Czech president, Václav Klaus, issued a statement condemning blanket vaccinations of troops; the president said soldiers ought to be allowed to decide for themselves on the matter and should not be treated as guinea pigs. Meanwhile, the number of deaths from swine flu in the Czech Republic has risen to 95, the Health Ministry said on Wednesday.

    Author: Ian Willoughby
  • 01/27/2010

    Thirty percent fewer Czechs took sick leave from work in 2009 than in the previous year, according to figures from the country’s social welfare authority quoted by Lidové noviny. Figures for last year were as much as 40 percent lower than in 2007, the newspaper said. The fall is evidently due to a change in the benefits system under which no money is paid during the first three days of an illness. The man behind that change, former social affairs minister Petr Necaš, said absenteeism in the Czech Republic had simply fallen to normal levels for European Union states.

    Author: Ian Willoughby

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