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04/10/2009
Former prisoners of the communist regime and resistance fighters who do not receive Czech pensions will get a one-off allowance from the Czech state as compensation for their suffering, under a bill President Vaclav Klaus signed into law on Friday. The legislation applies, for instance, to men and women who receive old-age pensions in Slovakia or in other foreign countries, or to those who do not receive old-age pensions at all. In the Czech Republic, former resistance fighters, political prisoners of the communist regime as well as the widows, widowers and orphans of those who were executed or died in custody, prison or a concentration camp receive extra benefits paid monthly along with their pension. The level of these bonuses is periodically upgraded.
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04/10/2009
The police is gearing up for a planned neo-Nazi march in the town of Ustí nad Labem on April 18th, just two days ahead of the 120th anniversary of Adolf Hitler’s birth. The head of the north Bohemian police force Jiří Vorálek said several hundred neo-Nazis were expected to attend predominantly from the Czech Republic and neighbouring Germany. Police reinforcements are being brought in from around the country and the city’s inhabitants have been asked to stay away from problem areas so as not to get caught up in potential street violence.
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04/10/2009
The Prague City Court on Friday sentenced businessman Bohumír Duričko to 12.5 years in prison for the murder of Václav Kočka Jr. The case generated enormous publicity since the victim was the son of a close friend of opposition leader Jiří Paroubek and the shooting incident took place at a late-night party following Mr. Paroubek’s book launch at a restaurant in the centre of Prague. Duričko, who pleaded not guilty, saying he did not intend to kill Kočka Jr and had fired his gun in self-defence, has appealed the verdict.
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04/10/2009
Czech President Václav Klaus granted pardon to 11 people, including six foreigners on the occasion of Good Friday. The pardoned were selected mostly for humanitarian reasons, and none of them were serving time for serious crimes. The president also pardoned five of the foreigners from expulsion, on the grounds that they had lived in the Czech Republic for a long time and have families here.
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04/10/2009
Fifty-seven percent of Czechs think there are too many foreigners in the Czech Republic and one-fifth of them agree with the view that the Czech Republic should not accept any more refugees, according to the outcome of a poll conducted by the CVVM agency. Seventy-eight percent of Czechs think that residence permits should be linked to certain criteria. The view that the Czech Republic should significantly curb the number of refugees the country takes in is held by 68 percent of Czechs.
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04/09/2009
Czech President Václav Klaus appointed Jan Fischer as the country’s new prime minister during a brief ceremony at Prague Castle on Thursday afternoon. Mr Fischer, the head of the country’s statistical office, should become the non-partisan leader of a caretaker government from May 9 until early elections in October. His appointment has been paved by a deal between the country’s two biggest political parties, the centre-right Civic Democrats and the opposition Social Democrats. They have enough votes in the lower house of Parliament to guarantee Fischer’s government of experts sufficient support in a confidence vote and pilot the country to early elections.
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04/09/2009
In an earlier statement, outgoing Prime Minister Mirek Topolánek said that while no major political decisions await the caretaker government it nonetheless faces some tough tasks. These include completing the Czech EU presidency with the heads of government meeting in June and a series of bilateral summits. At home, he said it would have to push through measures to counter the economic crisis and prepare the next budget. Mr Topolánek said his government had worked to find a solution to the political crisis it was not guilty of creating and which had had a severe impact on the country’s reputation abroad.
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04/09/2009
The Czech EU presidency has said that it is monitoring with deep concern developments in Moldova. The former Soviet republic has experienced unrest in the wake of parliamentary elections on April 5. In a statement, the presidency called for all sides to refrain from further action that would escalate the situation and stressed that freedom of the media and expression should be respected. Protests followed the announcement of election results confirming the ruling Communist party as the winner. A large crowd invaded the parliament building on Tuesday. The protests have ratcheted up tension with neighbouring Romania. Romanian journalists complain they have been banned from reporting in the country.
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04/09/2009
Two children remained in critical condition in hospital on Thursday following a stampede caused by a private radio stunt in the south Bohemian town of České Budějovice. As well as the two children in intensive care, five other children and two adults are also undergoing hospital treatment. Twenty-four people were injured when the radio station offered to drop 100,000 crowns among the crowd in the town’s main square. Police are investigating whether criminal charges should be pressed for recklessly endangering safety with a jail sentence of up to two years possible.
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04/09/2009
A life sentence on the hospital nurse turned mass murderer Petr Zelenka was confirmed by the Czech Supreme Court on Thursday. The court confirmed the earlier sentence on the former hospital worker who was found guilty of seven murders and 10 attempted murders of patients in his care at the central Czech hospital of Havlíčkův Brod. Mr Zelenka was found guilty of administering the blood thinning agent heparin which caused many of his victimsto die of severe haemorrhages. The court appeal was Mr Zelenka’s last chance to cut his sentence.
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