• 06/20/2024

    The leading Czech men’s tennis player, Jiří Lehečka, is set to miss Wimbledon and the Olympic Games after suffering a fatigue fracture of his vertebrae. Lehečka, who is 22, announced the news on social media on Thursday. He has not played since the start of last month, when he pulled out of a tournament in Madrid.

    The Czech’s career highest place in the world rankings was 23rd in January this year, after he won the Adelaide International.

    Author: Ian Willoughby
  • 06/20/2024

    A nine-year-old Czech child was killed when a car exploded in the Croatian town of Obrovac, which is near the coastal city of Zadar, on Wednesday evening, local media reported.

    Croatian police said they were acting on the suspicion that the explosion was caused by a device planted in the vehicle.

    Two women and one man were also injured in the blast and were taken to hospital in Zadar, where the man was subsequently released.

    Author: Ian Willoughby
  • 06/20/2024

    It should be mainly overcast in Czechia on Friday, with an average high temperature of 30 degrees Celsius. Sunny skies are expected to return on Sunday.

    Author: Ian Willoughby
  • 06/20/2024

    Police have arrested a fifty-two-year-old man who attacked six people with a knife at a petrol station in Prague on Wednesday afternoon. The police have ruled out a terrorist attack saying the detainee was a local and had committed the attack under the influence of alcohol. Three people were injured; one of them was transported to hospital with a stab wound to his neck. The two others were treated on the spot by paramedics. The motive is as yet unclear.

  • 06/20/2024

    Heavy storms hit Moravia and Silesia on Wednesday evening, killing one person and bringing down trees and power lines in the eastern parts of the country. The victim was a woman from Český Těšín who was out camping and was killed by a falling tree. Firefighters and emergency crews worked through the night dealing with flash floods and clearing roads and rail lines from fallen trees. Rail traffic on the main line from Prague to Brno ground to a halt for several hours and thousands of homes were left without power. A clean-up operation in now underway.

  • 06/19/2024

    The US chip manufacturer Onsemi is planning to invest up to $2 billion in its production facility in Czechia, the Czech government said on Wednesday. It is the biggest single foreign investment in the country’s modern history.

    The company’s chip production in Rožnov pod Radhoštem is expected to shoot up by hundreds of percent, boosting value-added production, creating thousands of new jobs and contributing more than CZK 6 billion annually to the country’s GDP.

    The company said the move “would solidify advanced power semiconductor supply chain for its European and global customer base.”

    The Czech  government will negotiate with Onsemi in the coming months about incentives.

  • 06/19/2024

    Thursday should be mostly clear with day temperatures between 24 and 29 degrees Celsius.

  • 06/19/2024

    The Senate has approved lawyer and sociologist Jiří Přibáň and Supreme Administrative Court judge Tomáš Langášek for judges of the Constitutional Court. Both were nominated by President Petr Pavel.

    Přibáň graduated from the Faculty of Law at Charles University and is a professor of law at Cardiff University in Wales, where he also heads the Centre for Law and Society. Langášek has been a judge of the Supreme Administrative Court since March 2013.

  • 06/19/2024

    Military police investigating the munitions explosion in the Libava military training area on Monday, which killed one soldier and injured seven more, say the evidence points to negligent homicide, the ctk news agency reported. It is not yet clear who was responsible. The injured seven soldiers and one civilian employee, are all out of danger. Three soldiers have been released from hospital. Training in the area has resumed.

  • 06/19/2024

    Labour Minister Marian Jurečka and the KOVO trade union organization have called on the employees of the country’s largest steelworks Liberty Ostrava, which is in insolvency, not to resign. Most of the company’s operations have been closed since December and employees have not been getting paid.  The labour minister said that the fate of Liberty is a top government priority and the state would look for ways to pay employees' wages to keep them in the company so that it can continue to operate when a new owner takes over, presumably in the summer. How many workers will remain at Liberty will depend on the investor who acquires the company, the minister added.

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