• 05/20/2024

    The vast majority of Czechs would be in favour of introducing a windfall tax on banks, according to the outcome of a poll conducted by the Kantar agency. Altogether 70 % of respondents said they would support the introduction of a sectoral tax, while only a quarter of respondents were against. Finance Minister Zbynek Stanjura said the coalition parties are discussing the possibility, but he himself is not in favour of such a move since in the end the burden of the tax would inevitably fall on clients. The proposal for such a tax to be introduced came from the Mayors and Independents and the Christian Democrats.

  • 05/20/2024

    The State Health Institute has warned of a sharp rise in tick-borne diseases, Lyme disease and tick-borne encephalitis. According to data from the institute, 506 cases of Lyme disease were reported in the first four months of this year, while the number of people infected with encephalitis almost doubled compared to the same period last year. Hydro-meteorologists report exceptionally good conditions for tick activity throughout the country and a large number of the ticks are reported to be infected.

  • 05/20/2024

    The country’s national broadcasters, Czech Radio and Czech Television, will start airing the election spots of the thirty political parties, movements and coalitions that are running in the European elections, on Wednesday. By law, they can fill a total of 14 hours in each of these public service media. The appearance of election spots in the media traditionally marks the start of the hottest part of the election campaign. Czech Radio will broadcast the spots daily from May 22 to  June 4 on its news channels in the late evening and night hours.

  • 05/20/2024

    Two giant butterflies made from Spitfire aircraft fuselages have being installed on the Máj department store in the centre of Prague, which will soon reopen to the public after a 2-year-reconstruction. The giant art sculptures are the work of artist David Černý, who has many unusual art pieces around Prague.

    His latest work has come under fire from the Club for Old Prague which claims that the purple-and-turquoise butterflies are kitsch.

    Černý has vehemently defended the art work, saying that the butterflies made from Spitfire fuselages were created in honour of the fighter pilots who served in the RAF. He said the sculptures were originally planned for the NATO headquarters in Brussels. A similar fighter jet will be placed there sometime in the near future, he said.

  • 05/19/2024

    Monday should be partly cloudy with scattered showers and day temperatures between 20 and 24 degrees Celsius.

  • 05/19/2024

    The opposition ANO party retains a strong edge over its rivals in opinion polls. According to a survey conducted by the Kantar agency for Czech Television, if elections were held today, ANO would get 32 percent of the votes, followed by the ruling Civic Democrats with 15.5 percent and the Pirate Party of the governing coalition with 11 percent. The opposition Freedom and Direct Democracy party would get 9 percent of the votes, followed by the coalition parties Mayors and Independents with 7.5 percent and TOP 09 with 5 percent of the votes. No other party would cross the 5 percent threshold needed to win seats in the lower chamber.

  • 05/19/2024

    Meteorologists have issued a heavy storm warning for most of the country between 2pm and midnight on Sunday. According to the Czech Hydro-meteorological Institute severe storms may be accompanied by hail and torrential rain. They do not rule out the possibility of supercells. The warning does not apply to southern Moravia and parts of the Vysočina and Zlín regions.  In the northern, northeastern and eastern parts of Bohemia and parts of Moravia, the warning is in effect until midnight," the institute said.

  • 05/19/2024

    Relations between Czechs and Sudeten Germans have improved significantly in recent years, and the days when Czechia viewed conferences of the Landsmannschaft with apprehension are now a thing of the past, the Czech ambassador to Germany, Tomáš Kafka, said in an address to the annual gathering of Sudeten Germans in Augspurk, Bavaria. The Sudeten German Landsmannschaft which organizes annual gatherings is one of the biggest organisations representing ethnic Germans expelled from Czechoslovakia after World War II. Ambassador Kafka attended the meeting as the official representative of the Czech government. He conveyed to the gathering greetings from President Petr Pavel, saying that the Czech head of state is very pleased with the direction and dynamism with which Czech-German relations are developing.

    In the past, Czech-German relations were burdened by the past, driven also by Czech fears of potential property demands from descendants of Germans expelled after the war. The moto of this year’s gathering, which was held three weeks before the European Parliament elections, is Sudeten Germans and Czechs - Together for Europe.

  • 05/19/2024

    Valtířov, a small village in the Ústí nad Labem region north of Prague, was hit by a small tornado on Saturday, the Czech Hydro-meteorological Institute said on its X network. No significant damage was reported. The tornado passed through the settlement at around 4.40 pm on Saturday and was captured on video by several locals.

  • 05/19/2024

    Top officials, WWII veterans and foreign diplomats attended a ceremony marking the 79th anniversary of the liberation of the Terezín ghetto on Sunday. Among the participants were President Petr Pavel, Senate chair Miloš Vystrčil and Speaker of the Chamber of Deputies Markéta Pekarová Adamová.

    In her address, the speaker of the lower house said it is the moral duty of people to remember what happened at Terezín and to consistently fight against those who want to forget, distort history, belittle  or even deny the horrors of the Holocaust.

    Also known as Theresienstadt, the 200-year-old fortress town was transformed by the Nazis into a camp where Jews from across Europe were massed until they could be transported to extermination camps. Between 1940 and 1945 over 155,000 prisoners entered its gates. Around 117,000 of them did not survive the war. Some 35,000 died in the camp itself of stress, hunger and atrocious living conditions.

Pages