• 01/25/2024

    Jana Vohralíková, the head of the president’s office who took up her position last March at the same time as President Petr Pavel, has announced that she will be stepping down from the role on 15 February. She cited the pressure and social responsibilities associated with the position as reasons for her departure. Her replacement will be the director of the Central European branch of the Aspen Institute, Milan Vašina.

    Author: Anna Fodor
  • 01/25/2024

    The Czech Hydrometeorological Institute has extended its warning of high winds to Friday evening, including overnight to Saturday. The warning will come into effect again from 8pm on Friday until Saturday morning for the Pardubice region and parts of the Vysočina, South Bohemian, South Moravian, Olomouc and Moravian-Silesian regions.

    On Thursday afternoon and evening, the north-west of Moravia and Silesia is facing west to north-westerly winds with gusts of up to 70 kilometers per hour. The wind will die down a little during the day on Friday, but will increase again in approximately the same area on Friday evening.

    Author: Anna Fodor
  • 01/25/2024

    Czechia's public finance deficit should shrink to 2.2 percent of GDP this year, down from last year's 3.6 percent, the Finance Ministry revealed on Thursday. However, the overall public debt will increase to 45.6 percent of GDP from last year's 43.7 percent, according to the forecast. Finance Minister Zbyněk Stanjura applauded the fact that Czechia would no longer rank among the countries with the fastest-growing debt in the EU.

    Author: Anna Fodor
  • 01/25/2024

    Friday should be mostly overcast with a chance of rain in the late afternoon and evening. Temperatures are expected to range between 1 and 6 degrees Celsius.

    Author: Anna Fodor
  • 01/25/2024

    The Istanbul Convention would have had a better chance of being adopted if there had been a more thorough and wider societal debate, Prime Minister Petr Fiala told Czech tabloid Blesk on Thursday. In his opinion, some of the government coalition partners were in too much of a hurry to get it ratified, and it was not approved in the Senate on Wednesday evening by a very narrow margin, only two votes short of adoption.

    The Christian Democrats voted overwhelmingly against ratifying the convention, the Pirates and Mayors and Independents parties were mostly in favour, while the prime minister's own Civic Democrat party was divided.

    Author: Anna Fodor
  • 01/25/2024

    The Prague 6 municipal court has again begun hearing the case of a teacher who cast doubt on Russian war crimes in Ukraine during a lesson. The same court acquitted Martina Bednářová of denying genocide last June, saying she could not be found judged over an opinion. However, a court appeals panel threw out that ruling in the autumn.

    Weeks after Russia launched its war on Ukraine the teacher told eighth grade students that its actions were justifiable and that nothing was happening in Kyiv. Some students recorded her comments.

    Author: Ian Willoughby
  • 01/25/2024

    The Czech Senate has narrowly failed to approve the so-called Istanbul Convention on preventing and combating violence against women and domestic violence. Only 34 of the 71 senators present for Wednesday night’s vote were in favour of its ratification, two votes short of adoption. The vote followed seven hours of often intense debate.

    Czechia will thus be among the minority of European states that have signed but not ratified the convention.

    The Chamber of Deputies was also meant to vote on the document. However, in view of the Senate's position it is not now expected to discuss it, the Czech News Agency said.

    Author: Ian Willoughby
  • 01/24/2024

    The Czech Constitutional Court on Wednesday rejected a legal challenge to the government’s pension reforms made by ANO. The opposition leaders had argued that a reduction in the index-linking of state old-age pensions represented a breach of the rights of the elderly.

    The government amended the Pensions Act last year, at a time of high inflation, as part of an austerity programme.

    ANO had also accused the government of abusing a system of fast-tracking legislation in connection with the bill.

    Author: Ian Willoughby
  • 01/24/2024

    President Petr Pavel has indicated he will not run for a second term as head of state, the news site Novinky.cz reported. At a public debate in the Plzeň Region on Tuesday evening he said that one five-year term, if one carried it out to the full, would suffice.

    Mr. Pavel said that one pre-election campaign had been more than enough and he did not have much appetite to undergo another. The 62-year-old said that he had come across a comment that, at international level, high politics had become a “geriatric park”, adding that room should be made for young blood.

    Author: Ian Willoughby
  • 01/24/2024

    The Czech government’s economic council, known by the acronym NERV, says it will cost over CZK 3 trillion by 2050 for the country to switch to a green economy. At the same time, most sectors of the Czech economy will have to undergo fundamental change, the experts said in a document studying growth measures.

    NERV said the move to green policies would help make the economy more stable and resilient. It said, however, that individual ministries were lacking in terms of strategy, leading to a decline in Czechia’s competitiveness.

    Author: Ian Willoughby

Pages