• 12/10/2005

    Some 300 people gathered on Prague's Kampa island to call for another investigation into the police break-up of last July's CzechTek techno music festival in west Bohemia. The protesters say not a single police officer has been charged, while 18 partygoers are being prosecuted. Water canon and tear gas were used during the operation, which left several dozen CzechTek visitors and police officers injured.

    Author: Dita Asiedu
  • 12/10/2005

    Some fifty extremists gathered in front of the Austrian embassy in Prague on Saturday to call for the release of British historian and Holocaust denier David Irving. A group of ten men and women, among them Nazi concentration camp survivors, protested against the legal extremists' gathering and were escorted away by the police. David Irving, who is barred from entering Germany, Austria, Canada, and Australia, was arrested in Vienna last month on a 1989 warrant.

    Author: Dita Asiedu
  • 12/10/2005

    The Czech Republic will face the USA in its first match at next year's World Cup in Germany. Friday's draw for the opening round of the 32 team tournament put the Czechs in the E-Group with the United States, Ghana, and Italy. Following the draw, Czech coach Karel Bruckner said preparation for the matches against the US and Ghana will be tough as he has not seen them in action. The Czechs play against the United States on June 12, Ghana on June 17, and Italy on June 22.

    Author: Dita Asiedu
  • 12/10/2005

    Czech midfielder Karel Poborsky will finish the season with second division Ceske Budejovice after Sparta Prague confirmed on Saturday that he would not return to their squad, Reuters news agency reports. Sparta kept the registration for 33-year old Poborsky when they kicked him out of the squad in September for criticising the then coach Jaroslav Hrebik. The most capped Czech player in history could appear at next year's World Cup in Germany as a second division player.

    Sparta are 11th in the Czech league, 17 points behind leaders Slovan Liberec, and finished bottom of their Champions League group with only two points.

    Author: Dita Asiedu
  • 12/09/2005

    The Czech president, Vaclav Klaus, has said he hopes the progress made by China in many spheres over the last 25 years will continue in other areas such as democracy. During talks with the country's prime minister, Wen Jiabao, in Prague on Friday, Mr Klaus also highlighted problems experienced by some Czech companies doing business in China.

    As the two men met the courtyard at Prague Castle was filled with supporters of China's Communist government waving red flags, while a group of members of the Falun Gong movement protested against Mr Wen's visit.

    Meanwhile, the chairman of the Czech Senate, Premysl Sobotka, said a trade agreement signed on Wednesday by Mr Wen and his Czech counterpart, Jiri Paroubek, was more advantageous to China and should be amended.

    Author: Ian Willoughby
  • 12/09/2005

    Representatives of the Czech Christian, Muslim and Jewish faiths have issued a joint statement condemning euthanasia and calling for changes to a new criminal code recently approved by the lower house. The new law does not set a minimum sentence for assisting in so-called mercy killings, which critics say opens the way to euthanasia.

    The religious leaders - issuing a joint statement for the first time - said the practice went against the Hippocratic Oath, and called for greater funding for hospices and carers.

    Author: Ian Willoughby
  • 12/09/2005

    A Czech missionary, Roman Musil, has been taken hostage in Haiti. His kidnappers are demanding that the Czech Roman Catholic agency he works for pay a ransom of 50,000 US dollars for his release. Mr Musil, who is 34, has been living in Haiti for several years.

    Author: Ian Willoughby
  • 12/09/2005

    The Czech economy grew by 4.9 percent in the third quarter of this year, a slowdown from 5.2 percent in the second quarter, according to figures released on Friday. That deceleration was due to a decline in agriculture, while foreign trade has remained the driving force of growth.

    In spite of the slowdown, the Czech economy has remained the second-fastest growing in central Europe, after Slovakia, and this year's growth in gross domestic product is set to be the fastest since 1995.

    Author: Ian Willoughby
  • 12/09/2005

    The minister of industry and trade, Milan Urban, says a deal on securing a site for carmaker Hyundia in Moravia must be struck very soon. Speaking after talks with a Hyundia representative on Friday, Mr Urban said December 31st was the deadline for finding a site. Three places are in consideration for the car plant, which would provide a major boost for the economy in the region.

    Author: Ian Willoughby
  • 12/09/2005

    Two German companies have applied for permission to burn 80,000 tonnes of waste in the Prague district of Malesice, Lidove noviny reported on Friday. A Czech Environment Ministry spokesperson said it was currently unclear whether permission would be given.

    There is a shortage of incinerator capacity in Germany, while incinerators in the Czech Republic are working at 55 percent of capacity, the daily said.

    Author: Ian Willoughby

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