• 10/22/2023

    Random checks on the Czech-Slovak border may be extended even further, Interior Minister Vít Rakušan said on Czech Television on Sunday. The Czech government has already extended the original ten-day random border checks, which started on October 4, by another 20 days to November 2. Germany's checks on its border with Czechia could also be extended by up to two months. Mr. Rakušan reiterated that the European Union needs a workable joint solution to the issue of migration, with a focus on protecting the external Schengen border.

    The opposition ANO party's shadow interior minister Jana Mračková Vildumetzová criticised Mr. Rakušan for having supported the EU's draft migration agreement, which she said "invites migrants to Europe". However, the interior minister objected that the very fact that large numbers of migrants were coming to Europe and that return procedures and asylum proceedings weren't working well was caused precisely by the fact that no joint migration pact had been approved.

    Author: Anna Fodor
  • 10/22/2023

    House prices in Czechia are going down, mainly due to decreased interest in homeownership as a result of the currently high mortgage interest rates, Czech Television reports. While sale prices for new buildings are generally steady, older apartments and houses have seen price drops of between CZK 100,000 to sometimes CZK 1 million or more. This trend can be seen in most large cities, including Prague.

    Author: Anna Fodor
  • 10/22/2023

    Some 360,000 packs of penicillin will be delivered to the Czech Republic by the end of November, Health Minister Vlastimil Válek said on CNN Prima News on Sunday, referring to the long ongoing drug shortage in Czechia. He added that penicillin is gradually reaching pharmacies, although not all pharmacies are equally well-supplied.

    MP Kamal Farhan from the opposition ANO party countered that there was no guarantee of there being enough additional medication in pharmacies this autumn.

    Author: Anna Fodor
  • 10/22/2023

    There are no indications at present that the Muslim community in Czechia is becoming radicalised, Interior Minister Vít Rakušan said on Czech Television on Sunday in connection with the pro-Palestinian protests that have taken place since tensions erupted again in the Gaza Strip. Mr Rakušan further stated that the Muslim community in Czechia is not very large and that protests in support of Palestine that have taken place in Prague have not primarily been attended by Muslims, in contrast with, for example, Berlin or Paris. No statements were made at these events explicitly supporting Hamas and if there were any signs that terrorism was in any way being supported or condoned at pro-Palestinian rallies, the police would intervene, he added.

    Author: Anna Fodor
  • 10/22/2023

    The five-star Savoy Westend Hotel in Karlovy Vary owned by sanctioned Russian arms dealer Vladimir Yevtushenkov is operating again, Czech Television reports. According to its findings, the Financial Analysis Office granted an exemption to the hotel on the condition that Yevtushenkov would not make any profits from it. The exemption was negotiated by one of the hotel's managers, Ladislav Špišák, who has done business with many Russian investors in the past, including the sanctioned former mayor of Moscow, Vladimir Resin.

    Yevtushenkov is on the Czech sanctions list and has had property seized in the Czech Republic. In Karlovy Vary alone, this amounts to 14 plots of land and six buildings, including the Savoy.

    The Savoy, like other hotels in the area, does not officially admit Russian tourists, who have been barred from entering Czechia for the purposes of tourism, sport or culture since last year. However, Czech Television says that the hotel receives mainly Russian-speaking clientele, many of whom have German passports and are therefore able to circumvent the entry ban.

    Author: Anna Fodor
  • 10/22/2023

    Prominent psychiatrist Jan Cimický has been admitted to the Military University Hospital in Prague due to a drug overdose and is in a serious condition, according to tabloid news site Blesk.cz.

    In September, Cimický was charged with four counts of rape and 35 counts of extortion against his former patients, with the trial scheduled to begin on November 7. Around 30 women have accused him of sexual harassment or assault. The 75-year-old doctor and writer has previously rejected the accusations and said he intends to prove his innocence.

    Author: Anna Fodor
  • 10/21/2023

    The Christian Democrats want to increase tax breaks for families with three or more children, labour minister and head of the party Marian Jurečka said on Saturday at the party's program conference in Prague. He said that having three or more children is very financially demanding and added that although only ten percent of all families fulfil this criterion, they are responsible for raising 30 percent of all children.

    Mr. Jurečka also mentioned balancing work and family life, the availability of housing, solutions to migration and security, and the environment and climate change as topics which the Christian Democrats will be focussing on in the coming months.

    Author: Anna Fodor
  • 10/21/2023

    The Russian Foreign Ministry summoned Jan Ondřejka, a representative of the Czech Embassy in Moscow, this week over Prague's stance on the recent bombing of the Ukrainian village of Hroza, the Czech News Agency reported on Saturday, citing the Russian Foreign Ministry's own website. The Russian Foreign Ministry described the idea that Russia was responsible for the airstrike as a fabrication and said that it had "communicated the Russian position" on the situation in Ukraine to the Czech diplomat.

    The Russian ministry's website went on to complain about Czechia's active support of and provision of weapons to Ukraine, which the ministry said was "contributing to the continuation of the conflict and destabilising the entire region".

    According to Kyiv, 55 people were killed in the airstrike on Hroza, which it blames on Russia.

    Author: Anna Fodor
  • 10/21/2023

    The Christian Democrats would prefer to run in the European elections on a joint ticket with the Civic Democrats and TOP 09, i.e. their government coalition partners, Agriculture Minister and Christian Democrat MP Marek Výborný told the Czech News Agency on Saturday. However, they are prepared to run on their own if need be. Discussions between the three parties are still ongoing and a decision should be made by the end of October.

    Author: Anna Fodor
  • 10/21/2023

    Local volunteers from Vohančice near Brno planted around 170 trees on Saturday to contribute to the restoration of the local landscape. The project to restore the 35-hectare area of land, which had been plagued by soil erosion, began in 2018. The one-thousandth tree, a linden tree, was planted by President Petr Pavel, who participated in the event.

    Author: Anna Fodor

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