• 02/05/2009

    David Rath, a deputy for the Social Democrats is demanding an apology from Reflex magazine for depicting him as Hitler on its cover page. Reflex did so in reaction to an interview for Lidove noviny in which Mr. Rath referred to the Nazi economic recovery plan. David Rath has since apologized for using an unfortunate example, but he maintains that his words were taken out of context and demonized. He said that many members of his family perished in Nazi concentration camps and that he had not in any way indicated sympathy for the Nazi regime.

  • 02/05/2009

    The Czech Republic’s trade surplus in 2008 fell by 661 million euros from the 2007 level as full-year exports dropped by 0.7 percent and imports rose by 0.1 percent, the Czech Statistical Office said on Thursday. December exports fell at a double-digit pace and this decline is expected to deepen in the months to come. Analysts say the figures prove the extremely negative impact of the eurozone recession on the Czech economy.

  • 02/05/2009

    The Czech Finance Ministry presented a tender on its website Thursday to sell a 91.5 percent state-held stake in the national air carrier Czech Airlines (ČSA). The public tender will consist of two rounds – a qualification round and a second round in which the only criterion will be the offered purchase price. In the first round bidders will have to guarantee that ČSA will retain the status of national air carrier with Prague airport as its home for five years. According to the Finance Ministry bidders from Western Europe, East Asia as well as Russia’s Aeroflot have expressed interest in the airline. The deadline for bids is March 23.

  • 02/04/2009

    Czech Interior Minister Ivan Langer will visit Washington in March to discuss ways for the EU to help the United States close Guantanamo jail, it was announced on Wednesday. Mr Langer will represent the Czech EU presidency at the meeting, and will be accompanied by Justice Commissioner Jacques Barrot. EU member states welcomed last week President Barack Obama’s decision to close the detention centre at the US naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and are keen to help Washington do so. A minority of EU countries - France, Italy, Portugal and Spain – have said they may be ready to accept former prisoners.

    Author: Rosie Johnston
  • 02/04/2009

    On Wednesday evening, it was also announced that Czech Foreign Minister Karel Schwarzenberg would visit the United States next week. Mr Schwarzenberg is expected to meet American Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Tuesday. According to a Foreign Ministry spokesperson, Mr Schwarzenberg’s visit is yet to be fully planned and further details of the trip will be revealed on Friday.

    Author: Rosie Johnston
  • 02/04/2009

    The Chamber of Deputies voted on Wednesday to postpone a debate on whether to approve a US radar base on Czech soil. The opposition Social Democrats and coalition members the Greens voted together to have the base scratched from the agenda of this month’s parliamentary session. The Greens said that they did not want to discuss the proposed radar base when it was no longer certain that the project had the White House’s support. An article published by British paper the Times on Wednesday suggested that the new American President Barack Obama may sacrifice plans for an anti-missile defence system in Central Europe if Russia agrees to enter into talks about downscaling its nuclear arsenal. Czech prime minister Mirek Topolánek, who wanted parliament to discuss the radar on Wednesday, said that the Times’ report was just speculation, and that what was important was what Mr Obama had to say.

    Author: Rosie Johnston
  • 02/04/2009

    The Chamber of Deputies has postponed a vote on ratifying the European Union’s Lisbon treaty until February 17 at the earliest. The ruling centre-right Civic Democrats, backed by the Communists, pushed through the postponement with 115 votes in the 200-seat lower house. The Czech Republic, which currently heads the EU, is the last country in the bloc to vote on the Lisbon treaty. In December, MPs voted to put off any decision until 2009. The Czech ratification process was initially delayed when right-wing senators challenged the Lisbon treaty’s constitutionality at the Czech Constitutional Court in Brno in June.

    Even if the Czech Parliament does ratify the EU reform document, the country’s eurosceptic president Václav Klaus has said that he will not sign it unless Ireland does. Irish voters rejected the Lisbon treaty in a referendum last June and are expected to vote on it again this year.

    Author: Rosie Johnston
  • 02/04/2009

    The Chamber of Deputies started debating the Czech Republic’s foreign missions for 2009 on Wednesday. In December, deputies threw out an earlier draft of the bill, which was subsequently reworked. If this draft is not approved then Czech forces could find themselves in an unprecedented situation, all having to return home. The main point of contention in the bill is a plan to raise the number of Czech servicemen in Afghanistan. The opposition Social Democrats were, in the past, opposed to this idea.

    Author: Rosie Johnston
  • 02/04/2009

    President Václav Klaus has said that he is waiting for Foreign Minister Karel Schwarzenberg to address his concerns regarding the Czech Republic’s recognition of the International Criminal Court before he signs the respective bill into force. The Czech Republic has been criticized by the Council of Europe for being one of the last council members to acknowledge the court. On Wednesday, the head of the Czech Green Party Martin Bursík attacked Mr Klaus for delaying the ratification. The Czech Chamber of Deputies and Senate has already voted to recognize the court, the bill now awaits Mr Klaus’s signature. Mr Klaus has said that he has legal concerns about the document that he would like Foreign Minister Karel Schwarzenberg to address before he signs it.

    Author: Rosie Johnston
  • 02/04/2009

    The Finance Ministry is prepared to raise the base capital of the Czech Export Bank by two billion crowns (90.1 million USD), a spokesperson said on Wednesday. In a bid to tackle the ongoing financial crisis, the government will inject 650 million crowns into the bank straight away, with another 300 million crowns at least to follow in the coming months. Last year, the Czech Export Bank offered loans and guarantees worth more than 20.5 billion crowns to Czech exporters and their foreign business partners.

    Author: Rosie Johnston

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