• 04/16/2024

    A shipment of 20,000 vaccines against whooping cough from Canada will reach doctors within days, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has said, adding that distributors expect to receive them on Tuesday.

    Because of a high incidence of whooping cough, doctors have seen a growing interest in vaccinations in recent weeks, with more than 454,000 people getting inoculated against the disease, compared to 24,000 last year.

    There were 1,494 new cases of whooping cough registered in Czechia last week, the biggest weekly increase since the start of this year. The total number of cases so far this year is 7,888, the most in one year since 1959, when the vaccine was introduced.

    Author: Ruth Fraňková
  • 04/16/2024

    The minimum gross decent wage for a full-time job in the Czech Republic that would cover the needs of an adult with a child, as well as leisure time and small savings, should be CZK 45,573. In Prague, it should be CZK 47,718 due to higher living costs.

    With such a wage, people would be able to cover the costs of food, housing, clothing, transportation, healthcare, education, and free-time activities but also be able to pay for other important expenses, including savings for unexpected circumstances.

    According to experts from the platform for a minimum decent wage, who presented the sum on Tuesday, 67 percent of employees in Czechia are beneath that wage level.

    Author: Ruth Fraňková
  • 04/16/2024

    Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala is scheduled to meet with Mike Johnson, the head of the House of Representatives, as well as other members of Congress on Tuesday, the second day of his official visit to the US. He intends to discuss the release of $60 billion in US aid to Ukraine, which has been blocked for several months in Congress by House Republicans, who have a majority in the chamber. He said he wants to convey the Central European experience and point of view to the Republicans at Tuesday's meetings in an effort to convince them of the importance of approving the package.

    The prime minister will also be giving a speech at the Hudson Institute about transatlantic relations, the war in Ukraine, and the Czech-American alliance. Before returning to Europe, he will host a gala dinner attended by Czech investors and representatives of US companies.

    Author: Anna Fodor
  • 04/16/2024

    Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala rounded off the first day of his official US trip on Monday by meeting with Czech expatriates in Washington and awarding the Karel Kramář Medal to Jana Kánská, daughter of Milada Horáková, the democratic politician who was executed in a communist show trial in 1950 on charges of treason. Kánská, who has lived in the USA since 1968 and is Milada Horáková's only daughter, received the medal for supporting democracy and Czech-American relations.

    Mr. Fiala said that the Czech expatriate community is made up of different types of people who came to the US for different reasons -- some were political refugees fleeing the communist regime, while new generations have emigrated to follow career opportunities in the US. The prime minister said that Czechia values both types of expatriates and praised the assembled guests for not forgetting their Czech roots despite their efforts to integrate into a new society.

    Following the conclusion of the official part of his program, the prime minister went to watch an NHL hockey match between Washington and Boston on Monday evening local time.

    Author: Anna Fodor
  • 04/15/2024

    During his meeting with Prime Minister Petr Fiala at the White House on Monday, US President Joe Biden praised Czechia's support for Ukraine, especially its efforts to secure ammunition from outside the EU for the invaded country, and stated that he considers it a great ally.

    For his part, the Czech prime minister described the fact that Czechia and the United States share the same core values of human rights, freedom and democracy as "crucial" for coping with today's challenges such as terrorism, the Russian invasion of Ukraine, or the complex situation in the Middle East, adding that security cooperation between democratic countries is a necessity.

    Mr. Fiala also praised Biden's role in supporting Ukraine and described the mutual relations between their two countries as "excellent", citing the signing of the Defense Cooperation Agreement last year and Czechia's purchase of US fifth-generation F-35 fighter jets as examples. He also recalled the role of the United States in the creation of the independent state of Czechoslovakia in 1918 and mentioned former US Secretary of State and Prague native Madeleine Albright as examples of the strong links between their two countries.

    Author: Anna Fodor
  • 04/15/2024

    US President Joe Biden welcomed Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala in the White House shortly after 3.30pm local time on Monday. Before the meeting, Mr. Fiala said that Czech-American relations were "excellent" and his visit was proof of that.

    The roughly hour-long meeting between the leaders and their delegations is expected to cover the global security situation, economic relations between the two countries, support for Ukraine, and the latest developments in the Middle East.

    Author: Anna Fodor
  • 04/15/2024

    Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala kicked off his US trip on Monday with a visit to the CIA headquarters in Virginia, where he discussed the current global security situation with the head of the Central Intelligence Agency, William J. Burns. The heads of all three Czech intelligence services and national security advisor Tomáš Pojar also participated in the meeting.

    The prime minister described the morning as having been "very successful" and said the invitation was a sign of the high degree of trust that the US places in Czechia and of the US's appreciation of the cooperation between the two countries in the field of security.

    Mr. Fiala is in the United States on a two-day visit, the highlight of which is a meeting with President Joe Biden at the White House.

    Author: Anna Fodor
  • 04/15/2024

    The temporary head of the Czech Tennis Federation, Jan Stočes, confirmed at a press conference on Monday afternoon that the association will not be able to pay the National Sports Agency the almost CZK 30 million fine it was supposed to because it does not have the money. At the end of February, five people associated with the Czech Tennis Federation, including its president, Ivo Kaderka, were charged with committing subsidy fraud involving millions of crowns intended for youth sports organisations, for which it was ordered to return CZK 29.7 million to the National Sports Agency within 30 days. The 30-day deadline for payment expired at the weekend. The National Sports Agency will now hand the case over to the tax office.

    The tennis organisation will be represented in the negotiations by consulting company Grant Thornton, which will try to negotiate a repayment schedule with the tax authority. The consulting company is currently conducting an audit of the federation.

    Author: Anna Fodor
  • 04/15/2024

    Czech Foreign Minister Jan Lipavský summoned the Iranian ambassador to Czechia, Seyed Majid Ghafeleh Bashi, to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Monday over the latter country's attack on Israel at the weekend, during which more than 300 drones and missiles were fired by the Islamic Republic. Mr. Lipavský wrote on social media site X that the Czech foreign ministry had clearly communicated to the Iranian government that the attack on Israel had crossed a line and that the regime was purposefully threatening the security of the region with the tacit approval of its ally, Russia.

    Saturday's attack was reportedly in retaliation for an airstrike on the Iranian consulate in Damascus that was attributed to Israel. The airstrike did not cause much damage, but it significantly increased tensions in the already troubled region.

    Author: Anna Fodor
  • 04/15/2024

    The weather on Tuesday is expected to be cooler, with daytime temperatures of between 7 and 11 degrees Celsius. Skies should be mostly cloudy and overcast, with rain and strong winds in some parts of the country.

    Author: Anna Fodor

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