• 12/31/2023

    Police and firefighters on Saturday rescued a boat that broke loose along with part of a pier in Litoměřice under Tyrš Bridge during the high flood alert. The boat, which had got stuck in the river was safely moored. A part of the pier which was also swept away by high water will be left on the bottom of the river for the time being. The level of the Elbe in Litoměřice dropped to first level alert on Sunday morning.

  • 12/31/2023

    Police are dealing with close to 90 cases of individuals expressing support for the shooting at the Prague Faculty of Arts or threatening to undertake similar action. Most of the cases are linked to social media postings. A spokesman for the police said that of the incidents under investigation, 28 cases involve approval of a criminal act, 11 involve scaremongering, and seven involve hate speech against a group of people or an individual. The attack at the Faculty of Arts, which left 14 people dead and 25 injured, is the worst in the history of the Czech Republic.

  • 12/31/2023

    Czechia has sent the UN Security Council a letter explaining its refusal to take part in a UN Security Council meeting called by Russia on Saturday over the attack on Belgorod near the Ukrainian border. Russia specifically requested Czechia’s presence at the meeting, claiming that the attack, which caused 18 deaths and many injuries, was carried out with Czech-made weapons. Czech Foreign Minister Jan Lipavsky said Czechia would not be summoned anywhere by an aggressor to serve their lies and propaganda. When Russia wants to discuss the withdrawal of its occupying forces at the UN Security Council, we will be happy to come," Lipavský wrote on the social network X.

    In a letter to the UN Security Council, Czechia says it regrets every loss of life caused by the senseless war of aggression which Russia has been waging against Ukraine for almost two years, but emphasizes that it is Russia which is responsible for the loss of life on both sides. It says Russia has repeatedly used the UN Security Council as a platform for spreading disinformation and propaganda and it has no reason to believe that this meeting would be any different.

    At the meeting, Moscow said Ukraine had used Czech-made RM-70 Vampire rocket launchers in the attack on Belgorod, but presented no evidence for its claims.

  • 12/30/2023

    Sunday should be mostly overcast with temperatures between 4 and 8 degrees Celsius.

  • 12/30/2023

    According to Prague City Tourism an estimated  650,000 tourists arrived in the Czech capital during Advent. Another 90,000 visitors are expected to celebrate New Year’s Eve in Prague, mainly tourists from Germany, Italy, Spain, Great Britain, but also from the U.S. and Asia, according to Prague City Tourism spokeswoman Klára Janderová. The influx of tourists is also reflected in the occupancy rate of hotels and other accommodation facilities in the metropolis. According to the president of the Association of Hotels and Restaurants of the Czech Republic, Václav Stárek, hotel capacity should be filled by around 85 percent on New Year's Eve, with many hotels already fully booked.

  • 12/30/2023

    Due to the unseasonably warm spell conditions at Czech ski resorts have worsened. Some have had to temporarily put their lifts out of operation, but the big ski resorts remain open. The quality of the tracks is not ideal at the moment, with natural snow completely melted in many places, making conditions for cross country skiing particularly bad, according to resorts contacted by the Czech Press Agency. However the most popular resorts remain in operation. Špindleruv Mlýn and the Ski Resort Černá hora – Pec report good conditions for skiers thanks to artificial snow. People are advised to check the respective websites for precise information.

  • 12/30/2023

    Politicians are considering the possibility of including mandatory psychological tests for obtaining a firearms license in the new gun law being prepared. Although this condition was not in the original draft law now being debated in Parliament, the tragic shooting incident at the Prague Faculty of Arts has made many deputies reconsider their earlier liberal stand. Pavel Žáček, chairman of the Committee on Security, said he was now in favour of introducing such a condition.

  • 12/30/2023

    The Czech Rectors' Conference has slammed Jiří Kobza, an MP for the Freedom and Direct Democracy Party, who suggested in a post on social networks that the faculty itself was to blame for having helped mold the shooter by the “inclusive progressive education”  it provided, which he said "begged the question what kind of indoctrination programme of hate is actually being taught there".

    In a joint statement the rectors of Czech universities said they consider the post to be “absolutely shocking, crossing the boundaries of decency, morality and good taste."

    Interior Minister Vít Rakušan also denounced the MP’s action, saying the post was "outrageous" and called on people not to abuse the tragedy by attacking the very group of people who were the target of last week's violence.

  • 12/30/2023

    The Prague Faculty of Arts has announced that in order to help students cope with the tragic shooting that left 14 people dead and 25 injured on December 21, it has cancelled classes until the end of the winter semester, January 12. Credits and exams will be voluntary this semester and may take place online or at other locations. Department heads will be informing students about the options next week. Many of the faculty’s students have said they would find it difficult to work in or even enter the building so soon after the tragedy.

  • 12/30/2023

    The Prague Faculty of Arts is organizing a month of special events that are to help students and teachers come to terms with the tragic shooting that left 14 people dead and 25 injured on December 21. The various activities, many of which will take place on Jan Palach Square where the faculty is located, are being planned together with student organizations. The first event will be a candlelight procession in memory of the victims on January 4. The main faculty building on the square, which was the scene of the horrific act, will remain closed until the end of January. The sea of candles which people have been lighting both in front of the faculty and Charles University’s main headquarters Karolinum will be used to create a memorial for a later memorial site, organizers said.

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