• 04/30/2024

    Digitalisation will shake up the labour market in the next seven to eight years, Minister of Labour and Social Affairs Marian Jurečka told reporters. Jurecka said he expects that 300, 000 jobs will be lost because of digitization and another million positions will undergo a significant change requiring requalification. In the next 18 months the Labour Ministry wants up to 130,000 people to upgrade their competences in digital technologies. The Labour Ministry and the Labour Office have earmarked 5 billion crowns to be invested in human capital and retraining and digital education in the coming years.

  • 04/30/2024

    Prague Castle is hosting an international conference on 20 years of Czech membership in the EU. Addressing the gathering, Prime Minister Petr Fiala said that in the past two decades the EU had significantly contributed to Czechia’s security and prosperity and the country had shown itself to be a reliable member, ready to take on its share of responsibility and defend European values. Mr. Fiala also spoke of the need to help Ukraine defend its sovereignty and expressed support for EU enlargement to the Western Balkans, Moldova and Ukraine, which he said would become an essential security guarantee in the years to come.

    Addressing the gathering, President Petr Pavel said Czechia should adopt the euro in order to become a first-league player in Europe. Pavel indirectly criticized the government’s unwillingness to set a date for euro adoption, saying that only those countries that have not yet adopted the currency are dissatisfied with the euro.

    In a video message to participants, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy thanked Czechia for actively helping Ukraine to defend itself against Russian aggression and expressed the hope that his country would one day be able to join the alliance. Europe can only be strong if no one is left out in the cold, he said.

    The 20th anniversary of the country’s accession to the EU will also be marked by a gala concert at the Rudolfinum performed by the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra. The Chamber of Commerce of the Czech Republic is also planning an event on 4 April to mark the anniversary and to evaluate EU membership from a business perspective.

  • 04/30/2024

    The government has approved changes to the pension system proposed by the Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs. The proposal envisages a gradual increase in the retirement age linked to a higher life expectancy, a different basis for calculating old-age pensions, a lower indexation of pensions and a minimum pension amounting to 20 percent of the average wage. Most of the changes would affect people born after 1966. The present retirement age is 65 for both men and women.

    According to Labour Minister Marian Jurečka the reform is necessary for the sustainability of the pension system. However the opposition ANO party is critical of the planned changes and has said that if it wins the 2025 general elections and gets to form a government it will abolish them. Trade unions and associations of disabled and senior citizens are also opposed to the reform.

  • 04/30/2024

    A fire warning for the entire country in the coming days, issued in connection with the warm, dry and windy weather, has led to a ban in Prague on lighting fires in high-risk places such as parks, gardens and woodland areas until midnight Thursday. The ban is intended to limit the traditional bonfires on Walpurgis or witch burning night, on Tuesday, April 30. Large events taking place under the supervision of firefighters can go ahead.

  • 04/30/2024

    Grammy-winning American singer Billie Eilish will perform in the Czech Republic in June of next year within her European tour to promote her highly anticipated third studio album HIT ME HARD AND SOFT, set for release on May 17. Eilish is scheduled to appear at Prague’s 02 Arena, which she sold out in 2019, on 1 June 2025. According to Ondřej Pojzl from the LiveNation production agency, tickets will go on sale on 3 May.

  • 04/30/2024

    Czechia will continue to seek compensation from Russia through diplomatic channels for the ammunition depot explosions in Vrbětice in 2014, Interior Minister Vít Rakušan said at a press briefing on Monday. The explosions killed two people and caused close to a billion crowns in damages. Martin Smolek, of the Foreign Ministry's legal and consular section, said that while there was no hope of getting Russia to take responsibility for the attack at present, the situation could change in the future.

    Minister Rakušan said the police have proof  that the Vrbětice explosions were carried out by members of the Russian military intelligence agency GRU, whose motive was to prevent the delivery of weapons to the places where the Russians were conducting operations.

  • 04/29/2024

    Czech Health Minister Vlastimil Válek wants to introduce a new excise tax on soft drinks before the next parliamentary elections.  According to the minister, the popular soft drinks, which are high in sugar, are having a negative impact on the health of the population, including a higher incidence of obesity among the young. The National Economic Council of the Government supports the idea and the minister says he is confident the proposed tax will be approved by both chambers of Parliament. It would make soft drinks more expensive by several crowns, depending on the amount of sugar they contain.

  • 04/29/2024

    Tuesday should be clear and dry around the country with day temperatures between 22 and 27 degrees Celsius.

  • 04/29/2024

    Meteorologists have issued a fire warning for the entire country in the coming days in connection with a warm, dry and windy weather forecast. People should not light fires in forests and open countryside. They should also watch out for discarded cigarette butts and be careful with portable cookers. Fire brigades around the country will be on high alert on Walpurgis Night, on April 30, when bonfires are traditionally lit around the country.

  • 04/29/2024

    About 5, 000 foreigners are granted Czech citizenship every year, according to Interior Ministry statistics cited by Czech Television.  Most of them are Ukrainians, Slovaks and Russians, whose interest in Czech citizenship has increased since the Kremlin launched a war on Ukraine. In 2023 over one thousand Russians obtained Czech passports, which is a 50 percent increase on the previous year. Foreigners are eligible to file for citizenship after having resided in the country for a minimum of ten years and must pass a Czech language test in order to obtain it.

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