News

President Klaus against referendum on joining EU’s planned fiscal union

Czech President Václav Klaus on Saturday dismissed a proposal by the senior coalition Civic Democrats to hold a popular vote on joining the EU’s planned fiscal union. Speaking after talks in Vienna with Austrian President Heinz Fischer, Mr Klaus, who opposes the plan, said politicians should assume responsibility and take a decision. The Czech president rejected the planned fiscal union as “radical liquidation” of member states’ sovereignty.

The Czech coalition government remains divided on the issue; PM, and Civic Democrat leader Petr Nečas hinted he was opposed to the plan, while Foreign Minister and chair of the coalition TOP 09 party Karel Schwarzenberg threatened to quit the cabinet if the Czech Republic does not join.

Zambia’s minister calls for runaway Czechs charged with espionage to return for trial

Zambia’s Interior Minister Kennedy Sekeni has called on three Czech nationals who were charged with espionage but fled the country in December to return for trial, Reuters news agency reported on Saturday. Mr Sekeni said a special police team was investigating how the men left the country. The three Czechs, who work for a Dutch firm, visited Zambia after a business trip to South Africa, and were arrested after they took pictures outside a local military base. They were charged with espionage and face up to 30 years in jail. They returned to the Czech Republic with the help of Czech authorities but no details were given about their escape. Spokesman for the Czech Foreign Minister Vít Kolář said on Saturday the ministry would not comment on the case.

Czech Republic will not extradite three alleged spies Zambia

In related news, the Czech Republic will not extradite the three alleged spies to Zambia, Czech Justice Minister Jiří Pospíšil told Czech Radio on Saturday. The country’s constitution prohibits the extradition of Czech citizens abroad against their will, Mr Pospíšil said. However, the three suspects could be extradited if an international arrest warrant is issued and they travel to a third country. Minister Pospíšil said the Czech authorities had not yet received an official extradition request from Zambia.

No news of Czech citizen aboard capsized cruise ship

The fate of a Czech citizen aboard the Costa Concordia cruise ship which capsized off the Italian coast on Friday remains unknown, the online news portal lidovky.cz reported. There was one Czech national traveling aboard the ship according to the passengers’ list released on Saturday; however, the Czech Foreign Ministry has not confirmed that any Czechs were traveling on the ship.

Some 4,000 passengers were aboard the Costa Concordia which was launched in 2006 by Czech supermodel Eva Herzigova. Three people died in the accident that occurred when the ship ran aground, while another 70 are missing.

Dozens of people commemorate Jan Palach’s death

Dozens of people gathered in the central Bohemian community of Všetaty, the birthplace of Jan Palach, to commemorate the 43rd anniversary of his death in protest of the Soviet occupation of Czechoslovakia. Jan Palach set himself on fire in Prague on January 16, 1969, and died in hospital three days later.

Director Agnieszka Holland to shoot feature film about Jan Palach

In related news, the Polish director Agniezska Holland will shoot a three-part feature film about Jan Palach for the HBO channel, the daily Lidové noviny reported on Saturday. The director will unveil details about the project at a debate about Jan Palach with Charles University students in Prague next week. Agnieszka Holland was studying at Prague FAMU filmmaking school at the time.

Over 2,400 people apply for anti-communist resistance member status

More than 2,400 Czechs have applied to the Defence Ministry for the status of members of anti-communist resistance, a spokesman for the ministry said. Each application will be reviewed by the National Archive, the Archive of the Security Forces and the Institute for the Documentation and Investigation of Crimes of Communism before it is approved; the ministry will start granting the status in February. A deputy interior minister said that while some of the applicants included court verdicts in their applications to prove their anti-communist activities, others list their issues with the communist regime that are not related to resistance. Anyone granted the status of anti-communist resistance fighter will receive 100,000 crowns and their retirement pension, if lower than average, will increase to reach the country’s average pension.

Czech film critics’ awards to be handed out in Prague

The annual Czech film critics’ awards will be handed out in Prague on Saturday night. 25 feature movies and 21 documentary films are competing in this year’s installment of the awards. The feature film Poupata, or Flower Buds, by debuting Zdeněk Jiráský won eight nominations as well as Robert Sedláček’s Rodina je základ státu, or Long Live the Family. The films Alois Nebel and Innocence clinched five nominations each.

The film Flower Buds tells the story of a dysfunctional family in small Czech town. Long Live the Family follows a man who is to start his jail sentence for fraud but he has not told his wife and children whom he’s taking on a trip.

Snow, icy roads complicate travel

Snow and icy roads complicate travel in parts of the Czech Republic. The Ústí region, in the north-west of the country, is among the worst hit by snowing and some roads have been closed. Trucks have clogged traffic on the road leading to the Czech-German border crossing Hora Svatého Šebestiána in the Krušné Mountains; the authorities have asked drivers to exercise extra caution while driving on the D1 motorway between Prague and Brno.

Weather

The weekend will be party cloudy, with snow in places. Daytime highs should range between -3 and +1 degrees Celsius.