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  1. This photo shows only one of the squares in Prague that were filled with protestors – Old Town Square. There was another huge protest on Wenceslaus Square.

    But it’s not just Prague. Protests were seen all over the country in towns such as Hradec Králové, Pardubice, Kyjov, Nový Jičín, Uherské Hradiště and others.

  2. Czech President Petr Pavel and Minister of Foreign Affairs Petr Macinka have entered into an open feud after the president published threatening messages that the minister had sent to the president’s adviser. The messages concerned the failure to appoint Filip Turek as Minister of the Environment. The photo shows the main part of the demonstration at Old Town Square, with the lower part of Wenceslas Square also filled with people.

  3. ruthrachel18reddit on

    [pzkenny](https://www.reddit.com/user/pzkenny/), you seem to speak/write Czech and are posting about the Czech Republic (which I have also visited, BTW), and you seem to have some interest in the history of the Czech Republic, but you do not understand why Melania (2026) was released in Eastern Europe?

    I don’t get that, and I say so as a woman (“she”)…

    Copy [LordSblartibartfast](https://www.reddit.com/user/LordSblartibartfast/) (Yes, Farhrenheit 9/11 in Paris)…

    Taking the time to reply here, as the relevant “Melania thread” was locked…

  4. Pavel is the guy who outlawed public support for communism and showed solidarity with Israel in the middle of its genocide?

  5. Past-Telephone4781 on

    Electing stupid governments and then protesting against them… I feel this is in store for us Bulgarians too.

  6. Cheers from Stockholm. Love to see people being active. We should surrender to these terrible leaders.

  7. Thank you people of Czechia & thank you Petr Pavel! One war, many fronts. We are all fighting for freedom and democracy!

  8. romainaninterests on

    Maybe slightly unrelated is Petr Pavel going to be running for reelection? And if he is does he have a decent shot at winning?

  9. How do the other parties in government see it? Would it be difficult for them to cooperate with the party of Petr Macinka now?