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Current AffairsCriticism for prime minister's Czech-Bavarian discussion forum

25-01-2001 | Lucie Krupičková

Edmund Stoiber During an official visit to Bavaria on Tuesday, Czech Prime Minister Milos Zeman and leading Bavarian politicians agreed to establish a Czech-Bavarian discussion forum. One of the main issues that is likely to be discussed is the situation of the Sudeten Germans who were expelled from Czechoslovakia after WW II. This move, however, has been criticised by leading members of the Communist Party and the Civic Democratic Party. More from :  More

Current AffairsBMW and Sudetens discussed by Zeman in Bavaria

24-01-2001 | Peter Smith

10 Billion DM and 3,000 new jobs - that's the prize on offer as the German car manufacturer BMW decides upon the location of a their new car-parts plant. BMW investment was high on the agenda of Czech Premier Milos Zeman during his visit to Bavaria Tuesday. The Bohemian town of Kolin is very much in the running for the investment, and according to government spokesman Libor Roucek, the discussions in Bavaria gave cause for optimism... He spoke to .  More

Current AffairsSudeten German leader calls on Czechs to resolve issues with German minority

21-11-2000 | Nick Carey

The issue of the Benes Decrees, which led to the expulsion of up to three million ethnic Germans from former Czechoslovakia after the Second World War, remains controversial and is a frequent topic in both the Czech and German press. The fact, however, that there are anywhere up to sixty thousand ethnic Germans living in the Czech Republic today is rarely mentioned by either side. On Monday, the leader of a Sudeten organisation in Germany, Bernd Posselt, called on the Czech government to resolve outstanding issues with the German minority in the Czech Republic, especially that of property confiscated by the Czechoslovak government both in 1945 and in 1948 after the communist takeover. According to Mr. Posselt, the Czech government deals with the German minority like second-class citizens, and warned that although the Czechs may not perceive this as a problem, the European Union is watching. Earlier, spoke to Rostislav Cerny, who runs a radio service for ethnic Germans in the Czech Republic, and asked him first what he thought of the claim that ethnic Germans are treated as second-class citizens:  More

Current AffairsFrom confrontation to reconciliation over Lezacky

05-09-2000 | Lucie Krupičková

A request for forgiveness was heard for the very first time on Friday, September 1st in the district around the former village of Lezaky. Lezaky was destroyed by the Nazis in June 1942, and 33 adults were shot dead without trial. Their descendants met on Friday with representatives of the Christian organisation of the Sudeten Germans, Ackermanngemeinde, to discuss the fate of those who died. has the story:  More

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