E15 weekly 31. 10.
E15 weekly 31. 10.
http://www.floowie.com/en/read/e15w-2016-10-31/Monday, 31 October 2016
Issue 137 l newsstand price CZK 24/¤ 1 l www.e15.cz
Sceptical but generous
UNICEF country boss Pavla Gomba
on Czechs as donors and online
fundraising tools
FACE TO FACE pages 10–11
Land of the archers
Exploring the picturesque frontier
territories once guarded by the
Székelys
SPECIAL REPORT pages 12–13
9 771803 454314 0 0 1 3 7
Photo: Anna Vacková
facebook.com/
e15weekly
Dark Tower
to fall
Daniel Novák
Once hailed as the hub of 1980s teleco-
mmunications in communist Czecho-
slovakia but later maligned as a symbol
of the decrepit telephone network that
hampered the country after 1989’s revolution, the
telephone exchange could now feature in a big
realestatetransactionbetweenrichestCzechPetr
KellnerandfellowbillionaireMarekDospiva.E15’s
information is that Dospiva’s Penta investment
groupishighlyinterestedinacquiringthebuilding,
now owned by the Czech Telecommunication In-
frastructure [CETIN] network operator, an asset
of Kellner’s PPF financial and investment group.
Located in Olšanská street, and once one of Euro-
pe’s largest and most modern telecoms facilities –
though Praguers have joked about it as like J.R.R.
Tolkien’s “Barad-dûr”, or “Dark Tower”, fortress
in Mordor from where the Dark Lord could keep
watch – it is to be abandoned by CETIN.
Continues on page 4
Plans are afoot to demolish
Prague’s legendary
telecoms exchange in
Žižkov. A tender to sell the
property, known to locals as
the stronghold of “Mordor”,
is in its final stage
http://www.floowie.com/en/read/e15w-2016-10-31/HEALTHCARE
Adéla Čabanová
An excerpt from medical
documentation, a certi-
ficate of eligibility for
driver’s a licence, a medical
check-up of a foreigner wit-
hout public health insurance
or a preventative medical re-
quested by a patient – such
are the examples of services
provided by outpatient clinic
doctors which are paid for
with cash or a payment card.
The fact that such payments
exist has prompted state finan-
ce officials to add outpatient
clinics to the ranks of trades
which from 2018 will be requi-
red to only electronically re-
gistered receipts under EET,
or the electronic records of
sales system.
Outpatient doctors are up
in arms over the requirement,
protesting that EET should
not apply in their case because
the takings from the payments
play no more than a marginal
role in their overall revenue.
They are demanding EET
exemptions, pointing out that
their income arrives in a bank
account via transfers from he-
alth insurers.
EET should not extend to
physicians with annual cash
takings of less than CZK
60,000 a year, in the view of
the Association of Outpatient
Specialists [SAS]. Should the
doctors be required to buy
EET-compatible cash regis-
ters simply because of a han-
dful of occasionally performed
services it might make more
sense for them to stop provi-
ding such services altogether.
“Services that are today paid
for in cash on the spot might
simply disappear,” said Zorjan
Jojko, chairman of the SAS.
The doctors may have an
ally in health minister Svato-
pluk Němeček. “In principle,
the health ministry does not
object to the introduction of
exemptions,” said ministry
spokesperson Ladislav Šticha.
The demand for exemptions
is also likely to receive support
from other organisations grou-
ping medical professionals.
The request made sense, said
Michal Sojka, spokesperson
news
2/3
Doctors resist digital tills imposition
Occasional cash payments mean finance minister Andrej Babiš’s EET is targeting clinics
Photo: Reuters
US embassy installs
own power unit
National Museum joins battle to save Syrian artefacts
The Czech National Museum [NM] is to help preserve and store Syrian historical artefacts. The
Prague-based institution will also help train Syrian preservation experts as part of an effort to help
protect the cultural heritage of Syria, a country torn apart by more than five years of civil war. With
the ancient city of Aleppo already partly destroyed and under threat from ongoing battles, NM
director Michal Lukes visited Syria and discussed the cooperation with Syrian Director-General for
Antiquities and Museums Maamoun Abdulkarim. Initially, Syrian conservationists will be backed
with humanitarian aid, including items needed for the preservation, restoration and safe storage
of archaeological artefacts. Special attention will be given to UNESCO-listed sites
Photo: Profimedia
for the Czech Medical Cham-
ber [ČLK].
“We are rather afraid the
introduction of EET could has-
ten decisions of our aged co-
lleagues to quit their practice
and go into retirement,” said
Václav Šmatlák, chairman of
the Union of General Practi-
tioners [SPL]. More than 15
percent of the country’s GPs
are aged 65 or more. Very
often they are found running
surgeries in places not exact-
ly in great demand among
younger colleagues. Repre-
sentatives of the stomatology
chamber recently not long
ago also expressed anxieties
about EET prompting doctors
to retire. Market stallkeepers
selling farm products recently
requested that the agriculture
ministry grant them an EET
exemption, while opposition
parties have said all small
traders should be exempted.
Daniel Novák
Not long from now a big hole
will be excavated in the gar-
dens of the Schönborn Pala-
ce, the Prague Lesser Town
home of the US Embassy in the
Czech Republic. Next, a large
diesel tank will be lowered
into it.
Should the embassy’s ex-
ternal electricity supply ever
go down, it will be possible to
draw on the resource to power
a unit with a one-megawatt
output. The embassy will start
the digging as soon as officials
have provided all the required
permits.
The fuel reservoir is to hold
nearly 23,000 litres. It will be
possible to fill it from the em-
bassy’s gatehouse, meaning the
diesel delivery vehicle need not
approach the palace. The po-
wer unit will be a product from
American supplier Caterpillar,
based in Illinois. Weighing 3.2
tonnes, the model burns throu-
gh 100 litres of diesel in one
hour.
“The placing of the under-
ground fuel reservoir as
a standby source of electricity
is one aspect of some construc-
tion adaptations in the garden
area of Schönborn Palace, re-
spectively the embassy of the
USA, which are designed to
raise the security of employees
and representatives, and also
of neighbours of the embassy,”
the embassy stated.
Schönborn Palace, loca-
ted in Tržiště street, is one
of the most renowned Early
Baroque constructions in the
Lesser Town. In 1917, writer
Franz Kafka briefly lived and
worked in part of the building.
The American government
purchased the building for its
permanent diplomatic mission
in 1924.
http://www.floowie.com/en/read/e15w-2016-10-31/David Vagaday
The maximum fine for fraudu-
lent wine trading is raised ten-
fold to CZK 50m by a legisla-
tive amendment just passed by
Parliament’s lower chamber.
Only producers and importers
should now be allowed to sell
wine from casks. On the other
hand, the producer category
should be extended to those
who have wine produced for
them. The new law also bans
vending machine wine sales.
The amended bill, which aims
to bolster consumer protec-
tion, will now be debated by
the Senate. Christian Demo-
crat [KDU-ČSL] agriculture
minister Marian Jurečka has
expressed objections to the
planned law’s wording.
When the final MPs’ vote
was taken, some KDU-ČSL
deputies voted against it, whi-
le others abstained. The only
KDU-ČSL vote for the bill
came from Jurečka. “[But]
I am far from excited about the
bill’s final wording as passed
today,” said Jurečka. He added
Photo: XXXXXX
Makeover to
enliven water
tower landmark
Work on a reconstruction for
the late 19th century Letenská
water tower in Prague’s Letná
has been costed at CZK 54m
and will mean the closure
of the Neo-Renaissance
landmark for a year. Once
reopened, the newly equipped
premises will boast clubrooms
for a children’s and youth
activity group and a tearoom
with a library. A social space
will, meanwhile, emerge in
the place where the 26-metre-
high tower used to have its
water tank. In an annex to
the tower, a kindergarten
classroom will open, while
on an annex roof there will
be a garden with a wooden
terrace
Bumpy ride for wine
fraud law
Photo: ČTK
that some proposals approved
by MPs made the legislation
overly strict, such as in the
case of requirements applied
to casked wine imports. “I did
not agree with these and I will
do my best to see changes de-
livered in the Senate and have
the bill returned to the lower
chamber,” Jurečka said.
When introducing the bill,
the government stated that
when wine was tampered with
consumers often ended up buy-
ing a product that was in essen-
ce no longer wine. Jurečka said
the current top fine of CZK 5m
was too low to be a deterrent
as it paled against profits made
from adulterating wine.
Trade deal a clear win-
win for EU and Canada
Many people around the world see the European Union as
a model of prosperity that provides an open community
for all its citizens. But how have its 28 member states – all
with their own distinct languages and historical memories
– managed to achieve such a compliment? By agreeing to
put aside their differences, remove the barriers between
them and uphold common values. The EU plays a key role in
setting global standards for free and fair trade. Should we
lose this position, we lose one of our greatest virtues. In this
context, we must find a way to approve the Comprehensive
Economic and Trade Agreement with Canada (CETA).
After seven years of negotiations both the EU and Canada
came forward with an impressive and balanced agreement
which in its sheer complexity would form a milestone in
European history. We all realise the economic benefits of the
deal, yet we still cannot give our “Yes” to Canada because
of the ungrounded objections of a small minority within
the EU. Belgium’s Wallonia region is preventing the Belgian
government from signing CETA, raising uncertainty about
the future of the entire deal.
The Czech Republic has always stood against protectionism
and unfair treatment and all restrictive policies in trade.
We are also vocal on this occasion considering, as we do,
that Wallonia’s attitude is exceptionally alarming. In our
eyes, CETA would enhance economic growth, open new
opportunities for export and increase our competitiveness.
Hence, we firmly believe that the EU will not let a marginal
voice take the helm.
I spent four years in Canada as a diplomat and I’m well
aware that although the Canadians are a kind people,
they are also tough negotiators. Nevertheless, Canada
has opened itself up to trade in an unprecedented fashion
and the agreed CETA text is possibly the best free trade
agreement which the European Commission has ever had
the chance to close. It all amounts to a win-win situation for
Europe and Canada.
Canada is one of our closest allies and a like-minded partner.
It has shown great responsiveness to the needs of the EU
and the wishes of the individual member states. Now it is
time to pay back the Canadians for their trust. We all need to
take on board our responsibility and jointly move forward.
CETA would mean an excellent model, not only for us but for
international trade as a whole.
The author is a Czech
Deputy Minister for Trade and Industry
have your say
Vladimír Bärtl
E15 weekly, economic and business news magazine | www.e15.cz
Igor Záruba, Executive Editor, igor.zaruba@cninvest.cz; Marian Hronek, Editor,
marian.hronek@cninvest.cz | Translation: TextMasters, textmasters@textmasters.cz
Contact: Adéla Nová, Secretary | Call (+420) 225 977 668
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http://www.floowie.com/en/read/e15w-2016-10-31/business
4/5
RETAIL
Dušan Kütner
People last year spent
two billion crowns
on six million 0.7-li-
tre bottles of whisky in the
Czech Republic, according
to an estimate from Granette
& Starorežná Distilleries. In
revenues that amounted to
year on year growth of 11 per-
cent, and in volume a rise of
six percent. Distributor Rémy
Cointreau, meanwhile, rec-
koned seven million bottles
were sold. Consumption of
whisky in the country in the
four years that have followed
the September 2012 methanol
poisoning affair increased by
nearly eight percent. Statis-
tics from International Wine
and Spirits Research show
that it is by far the biggest
growth experienced among
imported spirits.
The popularity of whisky is
all the more surprising given
that the overall domestic spi-
rits market is stagnating and
even last year did not return
to the heights it enjoyed pri-
or to the methanol tragedy,
which killed dozens of people
and permanently damaged
the health of many more.
“For this year we are antici-
pating double-digit growth,
particularly from key brands
Tullamore Dew, Glenfiddich
and Grants,” said Rémy Co-
intreau brand manager Pavel
Hojgr. “Research shows that
the growing interest of con-
sumers in imported alcohol
is mostly driven by quality,
the ever-increasing popula-
rity of the whisky category
in general and the long-term
investments in marketing and
media support,” he added.
Spirits producer Granette
& Starorežná Distilleries has
decided to up its activities in
the field of whiskey [whisky
usually denotes Scotch whis-
ky, while whiskey with an “e”
denotes the Irish and Ameri-
can liquors –Ed.]. It has taken
over the Czech distribution
of the most well-known and
Consumers opt for whisky galore
Tainted alcohol affair has altered pattern in retail sales of spirits
Luxury business jet no flight of fancy for Travel Service
Airline company Travel Service is to strengthen its fleet of small and midsize aircraft with a Cessna
Citation Longitude business jet. American enterprise Cessna Aircraft Company in early October comple-
ted the maiden flight of the new super midsize, eight-to-12 passenger model – powered by Honeywell
HTF7000L-series turbofan engines – and the Czech company will in 2018 become the first firm in Europe
to receive one. The catalogue price for the jet, the speed of which is assisted by a fuselage and wings
made with light aluminium, is around 24 million dollars. Special features include walk-in baggage and
technology allowing passengers to manage their on-board environment and entertainment units from
any mobile device
Photo: Profimedia.cz
Continued from page 1
“Penta is verifying every possi-
bility which corresponds to its
investment strategy,” said Pen-
ta spokesperson Ivo Mravinac
when asked about the possible
deal. No more talkative was
CETIN spokesperson Tereza
Gáliková. “A decision has not at
all been taken,” she said.
Penta is set to go up against
Central Group, the largest buil-
der of apartments in Prague, in
the tender. Central has com-
pleted its Residence Garden
Towers project in Žižkov, while
it is preparing a giant real esta-
te investment on the northern
part of the former Žižkov
Freight Railway Station. Pen-
ta was originally interested in
acquiring that site but Dušan
Kunovský’s company snapped
it up this year.
Sources acquainted with
the developers’ plans for
the telecoms exchange, with
its 78-metre-high tower and
underground corridors, said
there is no intention to pre-
serve it. Instead, the plans en-
visage an apartment complex
on the site. Penta has tackled
such a project before. In 2012,
it levelled the main office of for-
mer communist official daily
Rudé právo, located between
Masarykovo railway station
and Florenc in Prague, and
then built the Florentinum
office complex.
Developers in Prague are
more and more seeking out
outdated buildings with no pre-
servation status as the number
of vacant plots in the capital is
running out. The alternative
approach, commonplace in
many countries, is to replace
old with new.
Slovak developer HB Reavis
successfully joined this trend
with investments in London.
But when it attempted to knock
down the former ministry of
fuels, located next to Czech Ra-
dio in Vinohradská street, it
ran up against a determination
to list the building as protected.
Read more at E15.cz/weekly
Dark Tower to fall
sold Irish brands, Bushmills.
“While Bushmills belongs
among the most sold Irish
whiskeys globally, here it
is only so far known to real
connoisseurs. Demand for
it is rising worldwide,”said
company export director Jan
Doležel.
Retail chains also con-
firm rising interest in both
whiskies and whiskeys. “Af-
ter the methanol affair con-
sumers started to trust more,
on the one hand, in impor-
ted products such as malt
whiskies, and on the other
hand, in established brands,”
said Tesco’s Central Europe
manager for beer and spirits
retail Jaromír Koudelík.
Photo: Cessna
http://www.floowie.com/en/read/e15w-2016-10-31/Štěpán Bruner
The government has inked an
investment deal with General
Electric Aviation for the buil-
ding of a plant to develop, test
and produce turboprop engines
in the Czech Republic.
The height of the investment
to be made in constructing the
plant – a site for which should
be selected during the first half
of 2017 – should reach a mini-
mum CZK 1.35bn.
In connection with the GE
Aviation investment, the gover-
nment has, among other things,
pledged to inject nearly CZK
2bn between 2016 and 2018 to
finance preparations for the de-
velopment of new turboprop
engines at the Czech Technical
University in Prague [ČVUT].
The university is planning
a cooperation with General
Electric.
GE Aviation, a division of
U.S.-based conglomerate Ge-
neral Electric, plans to invest an
overall CZK 9.8bn in developing
new aircraft engines in Europe-
an factories, with a substantial
part of that being earmarked for
the Czech Republic. The total
GE engines deal
signed and sealed
Photo: Tesla Motors
up and down
Anthony Denny
Former owner, AAA Auto
The 54-year-old businessman has left Europe,
but not for an early retirement. The king of
the second-hand car “autobazars” is home in
Australia working as a major developer.
Charles Michel
Belgian PM
Objections from Belgium’s Wallonia region
meant he had to inform EU member states and
Canada that his country could not approve the
comprehensive Economic and Trade Agree-
ment drawn up by Brussels and Ottawa. A last-
-ditch solution was being sought.
Karolína Plíšková
Tennis player
The Czech enjoyed a highly compelling
WTA Finals debut in Singapore, recovering
from match point down and roaring back to
take the final five games to defeat reigning
Roland Garros champion Garbiñe Muguruza
6-2, 6-7(4), 7-5.
Stanislav Bruna
Director, Mero
Required shutdowns at Czech refineries have
lowered the volume of processed crude oil
meaning the pipeline operator’s revenues have
taken a substantial hit.
Jiří Šimáně
Co-owner, Travel Service
His airline company recorded 11-percent
passenger growth for the first three-quarters
of this year.
Deceleration in Tesla Model 3 business plan?
Subtle changes were overnight applied to the marketing materials for the Tesla Model 3 all-electric
four-door compact luxury sedan. The sentence “We will begin deliveries at the end of 2017” was
switched to “Model 3 production is scheduled to begin in mid-2017. At this time, the delivery esti-
mate for new reservations is mid-2018 or later.” The new sentence formulation perhaps indicates
expected delays in warehouse deliveries, but Tesla Motors insists that is not the case. The five-seat
Model 3 is to have an electric range of at least 215 miles (346 km) and will be able to accelerate
from 0 to 60 miles per hour (0 to 100 km/h) in less than six seconds
Photo: ČTK
investment in this country is
therefore set to be lower than
the originally indicated figure
of nearly 10 billion crowns.
The Czech plant is expected
to launch production of turbo-
prop engines in 2022. At full
output it is to manufacture
more than 400 engines annu-
ally. The investment deal was
signed by industry and trade
minister Jan Mládek (Social De-
mocrat), CzechInvest director
Karel Kučera and GE Interna-
tional vice-president John Rice.
Mládek hailed the agreement
as a turning point in attracting
foreign investment to the Czech
Republic. The government now
wants to focus on similar pro-
jects, which deliver well-paid
work and higher added-value,
he said. The GE Aviation plant
will create 500 jobs, thus doub-
ling the number of the compa-
ny’s employees in this country.
Bill Gates
Co-founder & co-owner, Microsoft
Microsoft announced a free “Creators Update”
to its Windows 10 operating system. The
update includes new features for augmented
and virtual reality gaming. It also lets users on
mobile devices take 3D photos by scanning an
object as they walk around it.
Putting pen to paper. GE International vice-president John
Rice (left) and industry and trade minister Jan Mládek sign
the long-awaited deal
Jeffrey Bewkes
CEO, Time Warner
He stands to earn tens of millions of dollars if he
can guide the film studios, television and comics
giant through a successful USD 85bn sale to
AT&T. As CEO, he’s shed many legacy businesses
with limited growth potential, including AOL
and Time Warner Cable, making the shrunk-
-down company more attractive to buyers.
http://www.floowie.com/en/read/e15w-2016-10-31/A furore over
the awarding of
state honours on
the occasion of
Czechoslovak In-
dependence Day
has become so-
mething of a tra-
dition in itself. As
soon as orders of
merit and medals
are announced,
suddenly everyo-
ne is a historian or
social commenta-
tor with a point to
make
Since Miloš Zeman beca-
me the first directly elec-
ted Czech president, the
heat has been decidedly turned
up at Prague Castle. It’s almost
as if an impression has been
created that the recipients of
state honours are also decided
via a public vote. But someti-
mes it’s useful to poke and prod
the choices. For example, it is
good to know that during the
Communist era Ludvík Karl,
the decorated head of Liberec-
-based glass-maker Preciosa,
was perfectly happy to utilise
prisoners as labour, including
political prisoners.
But it is also important to re-
alise that the president awards
honours purely according to
their own whims. Which is why
the list of those receiving the
honours never was an objective
assessment recognising exem-
plary heroic achievements, but
is rather an entirely subjective
recognition of a specific presi-
dent’s views on what constitu-
tes heroism and public service.
Which is why alongside irrefu-
table moral authorities we find
names like those of the singers
Karel Gott and Lucie Bílá or of
musician-writer-activist Fran-
tišek Ringo Čech.
That is the viewpoint from
which we should examine the
furore over George Brady, the
Czech-Canadian Holocaust
survivor. He was supposed to
receive a Czech State Medal,
but then alleged the president
rescinded the offer after Bra-
dy’s nephew, culture minister
Daniel Herman met with the
Dalai Lama (Miloš Zeman is
of course decidedly pro-China).
If the Castle’s story holds true
that Brady was never even con-
sidered for such an award, it
means a number of people, who
apparently have no reason to
do so, are lying. And if anyone
is used to lying to try to battle
incoming scandals, then surely
it is Zeman’s Castle.
Without exception, the pre-
sident utilises every power
entrusted to him to push his
influence, or at least his own
perceptions of power and im-
portance. So it is hardly surpri-
sing at all that he is also using
the state honours system to
make himself heard. And, who
knows, perhaps Zeman is con-
vinced that Czech trade with
China is so quintessentially im-
portant to our prosperity that
the culture minister’s meeting
with the Tibetan spiritual le-
ader really does represent a ge-
nuine danger to our interests.
Of course, these assertions are
highly dubious, but, as noted,
state honours are entirely an
expression of the president’s
convictions. And if Zeman re-
ally has the stomach to use an
88-year-old Holocaust survivor
to make a point, there is absolu-
tely nothing to stand in his way.
From a moral standpoint,
such deeds need to be con-
demned, and it is certainly
good to see a strong public
debate in this case. However,
calls for parliament to impeach
Zeman are nothing but hyper-
bole. The president is carrying
out his mandate in a way that
suits him. He is democratica-
lly elected, and like with every
democratically elected politi-
cian, his deeds are subject to
the will of voters. They will in
two years cast their judgement
at the ballot box. Simply put,
the honours a president does
or does not award are a direct
reflection of the president and
those in his orbit. Public disgust
in this case is understandable,
but the real way to react will be
with a vote.
opinion
6/7
joke
Jana Havligerová’s diary
Calendar for party
squabbles out soon
Michal Hašek, South
Moravia’s governor, says the
Social Democrat leadership
should not be changed at
the party conference next
spring. As he says: To swap
horses – meaning replacing
the party head and thus the
PM – six months before par-
liamentary elections would
be counter-productive. Right
now, opinion polls suggest
the country’s main governing
party will only get 25 percent
of the votes. Which would
mean saving the leadership
squabbles saved for autumn
– after the predicted electoral
bruising.
The number of those talked
about as potential 2018
presidential election candi-
dates continues to grow like
mushrooms after the rain.
Incidentally, autumn is a time
of bountiful mushrooms in
parts of the country. But
back to the Castle: perhaps
it would be best to announce
some kind of competition in
which the candidate who ma-
nages to run up the Castle hill
in the fastest time is awarded
the presidency!
Parliament’s lower chamber
has assented to a legislative
amendment covering the
realms of viniculture and
viticulture. The sole aim is
to limit imports and sales of
cask or box wine. Let’s not lie
to ourselves; such measures
will hardly improve domestic
wine’s quality by any great
degree. But the problem
surrounds uncertainty over
what exactly consumers are
taking home when they have
on-tap wine poured into
plastic bottles, and whether
it really is what sellers claim
it is.
Sunday saw the clocks shift
forward one hour to Winter
Time. Cue the annual expla-
nation of why we do such
a thing. In fact the entire
value of electricity savings
associated with shifting
the clocks twice a year has
a value of less than a mere
1,000th of a GDP percentage
point, or around CZK 30m.
And as far as the workday is
concerned, we gain just about
as much as we might do by
each of us working about
a minute longer during the
year. Nonetheless, reality
is reality, and efforts to
overturn the clock-shifting
tradition have yet to succeed.
Which means the best we can
do is again grin and bear it.
Not a task worth staying up
for. It’s best left for daytime –
whenever that starts...
Photo: archive
“I prefer to read the news on my phone. The little
screen makes the world’s problems look smaller.“
Martin
Čaban
The president utilises
every power entrusted to
him to push his influence
Dishonourable
honours
255869/124 inzerce
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Photos: E15 Anna Vacková
Photo duel
gets a touch-up
Czech Press Photo
is the country’s
most prestigious
photojournalism
showcase. Launched in
1995, the competition
is now undergoing
major changes to
bring it closer to
contemporary trends
in our visual culture
Richard Guryča
After more than 20 years, the annual
Czech Press Photo competition for the
best global photojournalism images by
Czech photographers spanning several
categories, has built up a certain level of
prestige. Several thousand Czech – and
also Slovak – competing photographers
eagerly await the results each year. This
year’s winners will be announced this
21 November. As many as 349 photo-
graphers have entered 5,861 images
for the 22nd year of the competition.
The awards ceremony takes place at
Prague’s Old Town Hall and is a major
gala event. Many of the media covering
the competition are often delighted by
the fact that it was their photographer
who emerged victorious in a particular
category.
The winning photographs are often
controversial, depicting war or human
suffering. That means plenty of deba-
te and interest. Photographs are also
displayed to the public, guaranteeing
many onlookers, especially given the
prime location just next to Prague’s
famous astronomical clock. This Octo-
ber the organisers have also unveiled
a new gallery at their headquarters in
Prague’s Nové Butovice, with presented
archived material that covers the past
history of the contest.
In recent years, Czech Press Photo
has also been able to attract star na-
mes to its jury, further increasing the
prestige factor. The 2016 panel includes
US photographer Ron Haviv, Ameri-
can filmmaker Ed Kashi and Tamas
http://www.floowie.com/en/read/e15w-2016-10-31/Czech
Photo Centre
Czech Photo is the name of the
non-profit which organises the
Czech Press Photo competition.
Most recently, it has unveiled a
Czech Photo Centre exhibition
space in Prague’s Nové Butovice.
Conveniently located right by
the metro, this unique space
features a gallery, studio,
archive and restaurant. Also
at the site is a workshop area
outfitted with the most modern
studio technology, and a
photographic archive covering
the more than 20-year history
of Czech Press Photo. In front of
the building is the new 12-metre-
high “Trifot” sculpture from
Czech artist David Černý. The
work’s head is made from real
brand cameras and depicts the
development of photographic
art.
“The centre forms part of the
Smart development project from
Trigema. This company built the
site and then handed it over to
us. It is an ambitious, modern
space, specifically tailored for
photography,” explains Czech
Press Photo director Veronika
Souralová. “We want to utilise
the spaces for exhibitions by both
Czech and foreign photographers
as well as for education courses,
including for seniors, as well as
programmes for children.”
Szigeti, president of the Association
of Hungarian Press Photographers.
The renowned Czech-American photo-
grapher Antonín Kratochvíl is also on
the jury, alongside a number of other
Czechs.
All of this means that the competiti-
on is certainly the number one forum
for evaluating and celebrating Czech
and Slovak photojournalism. But res-
ting on laurels is not enough to gua-
rantee future success. Of late, Czech
Press Photo has been undergoing a
number of modernisation efforts – the
degree of public interest in this year’s
competition will prove whether or not
such efforts have succeeded.
Evolution
Czech Press Photo was founded by two
notable figures in the world of Czech
journalism, namely photographic cri-
tic Daniela Mrázková and journalist
Vladimír Remeš. Since its inception,
the contest has structured its catego-
ries along the lines of the most popular
global photojournalism competition,
namely World Press Photo. The compe-
tition’s orientation is Czech and Slovak
photography, and is not only open to
professionals but also to freelancers,
semi-professional documentary pho-
tographers, and even those who have
hitherto not found a commercial outlet
for their work.
The competition’s prize certain-
ly represents a key factor for Czech
Press Photo. Asides from the value of
the awards themselves, winners also
receive financial rewards, grants or
other material subsidies designed to
enable photographers to benefit from
the best equipment, or to afford ex-
pensive sojourns to places of interest.
Which has no doubt helped to secure
the participation of top competitors
from the very start of the competition.
Brand potential
The fact that the jury sits in the presti-
gious Old Town Hall, or that the exhi-
bition there has become a key cultural
event on the Prague calendar, is also
reflected by the existence of the Prague
Grant. This award is also selected by
the jury and is presented by the mayor
of Prague. It enables one select pho-
tographer to gain a one-year creative
grant from City Hall to photograph
Prague and its changing cityscape over
the space of one year. This has resul-
ted in the gradual creation of a large
archive of photos documenting the
development of Prague over the years.
One additional key contribution of
Czech Press Photo is that it continues to
enable the Czech public to have access
to a vivid, engaging and educational
portfolio of photojournalism.
New rules
But changes are afoot at Czech Press
Photo. The first fundamental change
was evident last year with the arrival
of Veronika Souralová as competition
director, replacing founder Daniela
Mrázková. The new director imme-
diately sought to refresh the brand,
creating a new logo, a new website,
and also establishing a presence on
social networks.
Potential competitors were newly
able to submit applications electro-
nically; also updated were the com-
petition categories, the makeup of the
jury, and the methodology used for
assessing nominations. One change
which visitors can easily assess for
themselves is the fact that photographs
are now exhibited in a standardised
format.
“I am bringing in changes and some
fresh air,” says Souralová. “Czech Pre-
ss Photo sorely needed updating. The
prestigious competition, in which our
best photojournalists have their photo-
graphs assessed, was founded 21 years
ago. During that time the world has
completely changed, and we needed to
react to that.” Souralová is most proud
of enabling electronic submissions and
of purchasing related software for the
evaluation of submissions by the jury.
“We have also changed the catego-
ries,” continues Souralová. “In parti-
cular the jury will assess individual
photographs and collections separa-
tely. The results announcement will
come via a new nomination system. We
also want to also give young authors a
chance, which is why we are awarding
a CZK 70,000 Canon Junior award for
authors aged up to 20. We will also be
giving a ČTK [Czech News Agency]
award in the form of vouchers worth
CZK 80,000.”
New competition categories inclu-
de “Problems in today’s society” and
“Lifestyle”.
Taken from the magazine
Since its inception, Czech Press Photo has focused
on attracting and supporting Czech and Slovak
photographers. Although the competition has no
international ambitions, its very name helped to
quickly establish it as a well-known Czech brand
http://www.floowie.com/en/read/e15w-2016-10-31/10/11
face to face
Photos: E15 Anna Vacková
PAVLA GOMBA
As donors Czechs are
sceptical but generous
Head of UNICEF Czech Republic Pavla
Gomba is convinced crowdfunding and
online communication with donors
have become exceptionally important.
But by no means is she pushing aside traditional
fundraising approaches, especially given her
anticipation that “the internet will only have
substantially developed new friends for UNICEF
after a period of around 10 years”
Petra Horáková, Igor Záruba
Just lately you were very successful
with charitable crowdfunding on the
internet, thanks to which disabled
little monk Dorji will come to the Czech
Republic from Bhutan for a medical
visit. How difficult was it to communi-
cate with donors to collect the desired
100,000 crowns?
At the start of the campaign on on-
line portal Daruj správně [Darujsprav-
ne.cz; the name essentially translates
as “foolproof donations”] we sent out
a newsletter and subsequently put the
call out on social networks, but the mo-
ney did not accumulate. After a nervous
week – we’d planned out the crowdfun-
ding campaign for one month – I used
email to personally address our long-
-term regular donors and that worked;
we received around 60,000 crowns. Of
course, personalised communication
entails feedback, so people wrote in
and I myself responded alone. I’m used
to that and do it gladly.
We also addressed potential donors
and our teams who represent UNICEF
[the United Nations Children’s Fund] to
people on the street. But we still didn’t
have the target amount and time was
running short. Therefore we asked
actress Jitka Čvančarová, who was in
Bhutan with the little monks – orphans
and abandoned children for whom a
monastery is their sole refuge – to have
a photo taken for a postcard which we
could send as a gift to givers and as part
of a release to the media.
Did you gain some new contributors?
Yes, a good many small donors. That
we know. Overall, thanks to the crowd-
funding fundraising platform our num-
ber of donors perhaps went up by 20
percent. It remains to be seen whether
or not these people will become regular
friends of UNICEF.
And the rise in donors was enough to
allow you to hit your target amount?
No, we didn’t make the total at that
point. Finally, we fully approached our
entire database of regular givers and
http://www.floowie.com/en/read/e15w-2016-10-31/the collection then surpassed 100,000
crowns.
So crowdfunding through social ne-
tworks is not in itself enough?
No, it’s not sufficient. It is necessary
to combine communication in traditi-
onal media with personalised appro-
aches to donors. But we do consider
crowdfunding as a very good form of
collecting among givers for humanita-
rian projects. We definitely want to try
it out again at a time of a big humani-
tarian crisis.
Have you in the recent past been sur-
prised by any non-traditional form of
communication which has assisted
UNICEF?
Perhaps by the Karviná high school
graduates who last year were photo-
graphed wearing our t-shirts for their
tableau of school-leaving photos. They
raised CZK 20,000 for their evening
farewell party and they’ve sent us CZK
10,000. The students put their t-shirt
photos on their Facebook profiles and
we were taken aback by how much
these were viewed and shared. It is not
possible to say how many ways we could
devise to capture interest on these ne-
tworks, and this happened all by itself.
It’s clear that young people live quite
naturally on the networks.
Innovation however is also seen
out there in programs in the field. For
instance, in Malawi we are currently
testing drones. They are carrying blood
test kits to the most remote villages, and
bring the samples back so that pregnant
women can discover if they are HIV
positive, and we can then help their
children if they are.
How are internal forms of communi-
cation changing in your organisation,
given that it operates in 190 countries?
We are using possibilities offered by
new technology. Particularly Skype,
which to me means a quick connection
to colleagues in Rwanda on one day, and
to others in Bhutan the next. We can
not only hear each other, but generally
we can see each other, although in tho-
se countries the video link sometimes
fails. We also make plentiful use of the
intranet, we can see everything that
is being done in any one country at
a given moment. But it’s still the case
that nothing can replace a personal
meeting – once or twice a year we meet
and at those meeting we have nothing
to do with laptops, there’s not even the
paper and pencil option, it is simply just
people talking to each other.
How do you perceive new technology?
As full of contradiction. I know that
it helps an awful lot, but on the other
hand everything is greatly accelerated,
it increases the number of campaigns
and sometimes it is difficult to watch
over everything. And in addition, for pe-
ople it means oversaturation and fickle-
ness. When some years ago there was
the tsunami, the coverage stayed on the
front pages of dailies around the world
for weeks. Last year’s [earthquake] di-
saster in Nepal obtained news coverage
amounting to a couple of days before it
was quickly dislodged by other news.
That is a pity.
You know, I always recall the public
collection that was held for the Natio-
nal Theatre [A fire that destroyed the
national monument in 1881 was seen as
a national catastrophe and led to deter-
mined fundraising for reconstruction
–Ed.] as the first Czech fundraising, and
I always think to myself that in some
situations it is better to turn to stre-
et collections, and in others to direct
mailing, and for other people social
networks might work out, or YouTube,
or some advertising in the newspapers
or on television. In my eyes, in the field
of charity there should always be a com-
bination of the old and the new.
It’s said that the trend is for online co-
mmunication with donors and that it is
the only way to attract young people to
giving...
We discuss that a lot on the inter-
national level at UNICEF and we are
attempting to be on the networks and
to communicate with young people.
But generally there will be a wait of a
minimum of 10 years before they will
be persuaded to become donors. So
for us face to face communication on
the street stays important. UNICEF
was the first to form a so-called seni-
or team of people in the early days of
their pensionable years and people of a
pre-pensionable age. Our “seniors” do
not address people of the same age or
students on the street, but people in the
group from 30 to 40 years of age, who
are the most loyal and regular givers.
There is a growing number of company
and nonprofit organisation bosses who
are personally very active on social ne-
tworks. They build a personal brand
out of themselves while at the same
time pushing the enterprise. What
about you when it comes to social ne-
tworks?
I use the LinkedIn service for pro-
fessionals where a great many people
ask me for references. And I have a
Facebook profile.
Who were your first Facebook friends?
Certainly not family. They were
acquaintances and colleagues, mainly
people abroad. Which is fine, because
with Facebook you can communicate
with anybody in the world. And I’ve
been able to keep up longstanding
friendships with people who are far
away and can’t quickly pop to a café
for a meeting.
How many Facebook friends does
UNICEF Czech Republic have?
Perhaps 12,000.
Are they organically attracted fans or
have they been pulled in by sponsored
campaigns?
No, they’re only natural, people who
really want to help.
Who runs the social network side of
things for you?
We talked through this a lot, but we
discovered that we need a combination
of publicists, graphic designers and
programmers and we couldn’t find such
people for non-commercial wages. The
content is done by colleagues who are
engaged in PR and communications
for us, and for the technical things and
campaigns we turn to agencies who
work for free.
Does HQ instruct you what to and what
not to communicate?
UNICEF is a very decentralised or-
ganisation which is actually 190 orga-
nisations. In each country the unit is a
little different because UNICEF parti-
cularly employs people from the given
country and they know best in what
ways the children in their nation need
to be helped. International personnel
have important roles during checks
and controls to combat violations, but
otherwise we really are very local.
What is very specific about the Czech
branch?
We are very successful. In financial
efficiency, i.e. the ratio between costs
and income we tend to stand around
third or fifth best in the world. Each
year we receive around CZK 70m from
donors, with small donors accounting
for 90 percent of that; companies crea-
te just a small part. Czechs as donors
are distinctive – in Europe they are the
most sceptical people, nothing, accor-
ding to them, works, nobody should
be trusted, everything in their eyes is
pilfered, but in the end they pitch in.
At the beginning there is always big
mistrust, but finally they are very em-
pathetic and generous.
Do you evaluate from which firms you
will accept money and from which you
won’t?
Pavla
Gomba (42)
She hails from Ostrava and
studied at the University of
Economics, Prague [VŠE] before
working at the Danish Embassy in
Prague and for the Dutch cham-
ber of commerce. Subsequently,
she left for a year and a half in
Africa and, after returning and
dwelling on career choices, saw
an advert which changed her life.
A woman with a keen interest in
numbers, but mainly in people,
switched to the nonprofit sphere.
Since 2000, she has been the di-
rector of UNICEF Czech Republic.
She released the book Slyšíte
nás? [Do You Hear Us?] with sto-
ries of children in Africa and Asia.
Right now she’s pondering if she
might for a short time exchange
her successful stewardship of
UNICEF’s Czech branch for some
UNICEF work in the “front line”,
perhaps in Asia or Africa where
so many children’s lives are
terribly blighted. Pavla Gomba
is divorced. She lives with her
boyfriend and parrot.
We attempt to not approve money
from firms which operate in conflict
with our values. But that does not mean
that if a company finds itself on our
black list it will be there for ever. It
can change.
An example?
IKEA was once a transgressor, in
terms of child labour, yet today it is our
main global partner.
Do you have some Czech firms on the
black list?
Yes, there are those from whom we
cannot accept money. And paradoxica-
lly these are companies who are very
much interested in cooperating with us.
What are your own plans as regards
further work for UNICEF?
I am always thinking over how I
could once more venture on to the front
line, to help in Africa or Asia, of course
under UNICEF. But currently I need
to finish my doctorate. From finance I
am, for a while, nipping into the area of
security, evaluating risks. I am studying
at the Faculty of Safety Engineering
[FBI] in Ostrava.
Do you yet have your dissertation?
Well, I’m somehow writing it...
Do you have thick skin after what you
have experienced and seen over the
years?
If the emotions depart, one should
just pack this in.
In financial efficiency, i.e. the
ratio between costs and income
we tend to stand around third
or fifth best in the world
http://www.floowie.com/en/read/e15w-2016-10-31/12/13
special report
Photos: Jiří Sladký
Jiří Sladký
The village nearest the confluence
of the two rivers is called Sekule in
Slovak and Székelyfalva in Hungari-
an, meaning a village of the Székelys.
Its name thus preserves a trace of an
ethnic group no longer found around
here. Following the disintegration of
Great Moravia in the early 10th cen-
tury, the area running from the Little
Carpathians mountain range along the
Morava river and past the White Car-
pathians was described in historical
chronicles as “confinium”, being the
borderland of Hungary. The no man’s
land devoid of inhabitants was guarded
by the Székelys, who were appointed
for the task by the Hungarian rulers of
the time. The nomadic tribe had possi-
bly arrived from the steppes of Central
Asia before becoming subordinated to
the Hungarians. Period chroniclers use
the name Terra Siculorum to refer to
the uneasy lands controlled by the Szé-
kelys. The contested region stretched
all the way to the Olšava river in the
north where the town of Uherský Brod
now lies, just south of Zlín. It witnessed
frequent clashes between Bohemian
forces and the Székelys fighting in the
pay of the Hungarian kingdom. Bo-
hemian chronicler Cosmas of Prague
mentions in his Chronica Boëmorum
the unenviable fate of those Székely
scouts unlucky enough to be captured.
They had their noses and ears cut off
before being sent back to report the
ordeal to their Hungarian king. Such
skirmishes only ceased when the Iron
and Golden King, Ottokar II of the
Přemyslid dynasty, won the Battle of
Kressenbrunn in 1260 and pushed the
frontier to the White Carpathians. It
has remained there ever since.
Following the Morava
The river Morava flows south from the
confluence and becomes much bigger,
swelled by the water of the Dyje, flan-
ked by stretches of alluvial plains. Only
when it reaches Sekule does the land
begin to rise somewhat in low sandy
bumps. It is a land the Morava once
ruled, as documented by the nume-
rous pools, small lakes, ditches and
channels passing through woodland
The land
of the Székelys
Who were the Székelys? Where did they come from and what
have they left behind? In an attempt to trace this ancient
ethnic group one needs to cross the border into Slovakia, into
the Záhorie region. There, not far from the confluence of the Morava
and Dyje rivers, history throws up unexpected connections. These days
the country of the Székely archers is crisscrossed by bike paths winding
through picturesque meadows and alluvial forests
and bisecting fields and meadows. The
river’s banks are home to probably the
most valuable of Europe’s alluvial me-
adows. This region, once considerably
wilder than what can be experienced
today, was occupied by nomadic tribes
that originated from the steppes of Cen-
tral Asia. They built their watchmen’s
posts along the frontline, some more
permanent than others. On the eas-
tern side the confinium was guarded
by robust stone castles inhabited by
another migratory tribe, the Cumans,
sometimes also called the Polowci [the
“Swimmers”].
The westernmost kishlaq
The alluvial plains along the Morava are
flat as a table, save for the infrequent
sand dunes strewn across both banks
and referred to as “clumps” in both re-
gions of Slovácko and Záhoří [Záhorie
in Slovak]. With a bit of luck one can
find shards of ancient Slavic pots deco-
rated with the typical wavy line. They
can be up to 1,300 years old, predating
even Great Moravia. Slavs continued to
live here until they were pushed north
by the arriving Hungarians. As the area
has not yet been subject to systematic
archaeological research, it may spring
a surprise or two.
It is quite possible that the area near
modern-day Sekule was once home
to Europe’s westernmost kishlaq [or
qishlaq: in Turkic languages it means
“wintering place”: a fortified Székely
settlement.Amostlikelylocationwould
beononeofthehillocksoverlookingthe
riverwhereitwouldhavebeenprotected
from floodwaters. In selecting the high
groundthe Székelys wouldhavemimic-
ked the approach taken before them
by the Slavs. The kishlaq, most likely a
winter-time but possibly a year-round
settlement,wouldhavebeensurrounded
bywickerfences.Modern-dayresidents
of Sekule call it the “Methuselah fence”
anditcanstillbeseensurroundingsome
ofthegardens.Youcanalsocomeacross
suchfencesthroughouttheCarpathians,
further south in the Balkans and even
as far as the Iranian mountains on the
shores of the Caspian Sea where they
are still made and used by local she-
pherds.Inthecaseofapermanentfron-
tier camp, the wicker fence would most
likely be erected on top of a rampart
and be reinforced with clay to create a
fortification of sorts.
What did the Székelys
leave behind?
Not much was left behind in terms of
tangible objects, or at least none that
would have been found on the banks
of the Morava. But that does not mean
they departed entirely without leaving
a trace. There are both Székely names
preserved throughout the region as
well as certain Asian features in the
faces of locals. The frontier tribes en-
joyed similar privileges to those of yeo-
men: they paid no tax to the country’s
http://www.floowie.com/en/read/e15w-2016-10-31/Taken from the magazine
ruler but instead each settlement sent
a head of cattle to the court for the kin-
g’s festivities. The frontier settlements
finally lost their function around 1320
and the once feared tribe of frontier-
smen and warriors blended with the
local population as soon as villages and
towns sprung up across the land.
There is a cross by the side of the
road not far from Sekule with an in-
scription dated 1842 saying “Erected by
Michal Dobša”. The family name is ano-
ther Székely legacy as Dobsa or Dobša
is considered Székely by historians.
And how about Oširid, Cipánoš, Čé-
kre, Ciglád, Fók, or Kišín? Local names
derived from Turkish and Hungarian
expressions taken over from the Széke-
lys by incoming settlers. Passing though
the alluvial plains along the Morava
with an old map in hand, one can easily
imagine where a Székely camp might
have been, where barriers and dams
were built using felled trees, where the
fires burned, where cattle were kept
and where the Székelys would hone
their skills in mounted archery.
The land of archers
Osirét, or “the grandfathers’ meadow”,
was where the Székelys once grazed
their cattle. It has since become popu-
lar with bathers and anglers following
gravel excavation at the site and the
flooding of the resulting void. Fók
was a Hungarian name for a stream
flowing from a lake and there really
is one flowing through a forest of the
name. Čékre or Čeker, meaning the
“Devil’s well”, must have been an oxbow
lake once as “çukur” is Turkish for a
hole filled with water. That is what the
Székelys must have come upon in these
parts. Aged anglers of our time would
talk of a number of deep ponds full of
fish. Turkish also gave name to another
branch of the Morava – Ciglád – now
incorporated into a navigable channel.
The word would have originally been
used to describe an embankment built
by the Székelys. The building of impa-
ssable embankments and barriers was
one of their duties back in the day. The
most valuable name preserved even
now is Kišín, the name used today for a
sandy expanse near the Morava. Local
residents have long since forgotten the
meaning of the name, although they
may say that “huts used to stand the-
re once”. For them the Middle Ages
may easily be as shrouded in myth as
last summer. Linguists tend to believe
that the name is not derived from the
Hungarian word “kis” which means
“small” but rather from the Turkish
for winter – kiş – denoting a winter
dwelling, frequently referred to as the
kishlaq, or qishlaq, in Central Asia and
among Turkic peoples.
Open doors at homesteads
Today’s Sekule tells a different story.
Following a visit for example to the
tourist hotspot of Lednice-Valtice re-
gion in South Moravia why not make
the short trip across the border into
Slovakia to get a taste of this virtually
unknown region and its peculiar histo-
ry. Local folk architecture has houses
that face with their gables onto the tri-
angular village common, or a square a
century ago when Sekule still enjoyed
the status of a town. A jewel of Sekule is
the fortified churchyard with Baroque
headstones, low stelas terminated in
simple leaf-shaped ornaments. Modern
Sekule is cautiously beginning to open
its doors to tourists. With a bit of luck
you may chance upon a Sekule homes-
teads festival promoting local crafts-
men. It takes place every September
with a similar if smaller fair occurring
in the spring. It comes nowhere near
the Znojmo historical grape harvest
in terms of scale as it is more of a limi-
ted affair organised by enthusiasts and
supported by the whole village.
More than 20 homesteads open their
doors to visitors and showcase a range
of crafts and farming activities. Repre-
sentatives of individual guilds, clad in
historicalgarmentsfirstsolemnlyswear
to trade fairly and honestly before they
receive the “village sceptre” from the
hands of the mayor. Visitors are treated
todisplaysbyafishfarmer,butcher,hun-
ter, spirits distiller and wine producer.
On the menu there is plenty of traditi-
onal sauerkraut to go with roast boar,
traditionallocal“lokše”thinpotatopan-
cakes, various pig slaughter products,
bean soup with homemade noodles and
of course plenty of good wine.
What else is on
the menu in Sekule?
The local “information officer”, clad
in undyed sirwal, typical baggy trou-
sers, could easily pass for either the
night watchman or the herald, had he
had a drum slung across his belly. The
whole event gives the impression of a
bit of a slapstick comedy rather than a
serious affair and the mayor’s speech
is no exception. The open homesteads
are dispersed throughout the village
while floats are the means of transport
of choice. A minibus is available for the
more remote destinations in a nearby
pine wood. The local pub transforms for
the duration into a fishermen’s inn whe-
re the fish soup “halaszle” is served by
the gallon, spicy and rich. Local fisher-
men have no doubt about the best fish
being not in the river itself but within
old branches. Before the river became
regulated they would employ a special
technique to catch fish using branches
tied together with water plants. They
would push the branches up the river
and against a bank where they would
pick the fish that got caught in their
ingenious device.
http://www.floowie.com/en/read/e15w-2016-10-31/food
14/15
Some like it greasy
Photo: xxx
Taken from the magazine
To put it mildly, lard does not enjoy
a good reputation, particularly
among health fanatics. But goose
lard compares with olive oil, given its
unsaturated acids. It is even used
as a medicine for various maladies
Goose lard
with liver
2 GLASSES (250 ml)
PREPARATION:
20 minutes + time for
congealing
300 ml goose lard incl.
enough for frying
2 shallots
200 g goose liver
1 handful of thyme salt and
pepper
Štěpán Vašák
In a little goose lard, fry finely sliced shallots
and chopped and cleaned goose liver. Add
thyme, salt and pepper and for a short while
(perhaps 3 minutes) fry. The middle of the
liver pieces must stay pink. Tip all the con-
tents into glasses and flood with goose lard.
Place in the fridge. Ideally leave overnight
so that the lard will certainly congeal and
solidify properly.
http://www.floowie.com/en/read/e15w-2016-10-31/society
Hanakian village takes ecology prize in E.ON
Energy Globe awards
The village of Haňovice has been declared the overall winner of the eighth
edition of the E.ON Energy Globe awards for ecological projects. The judges
were impressed by the Haňovice and Litovel municipality’s partnership in
preventing groundwater contamination that threatened drinking water supplies
and by a biogas plant that provides free heating for local government buildings.
A greenhouse vegetable cultivation project is also under way in Haňovice, located
in the Haná ethnic region in central Moravia, where the Hanakian dialect is
spoken. Energy Globe awards were also given in categories entitled Company,
Construction, Youth, Handyman and Community
Photo: Huawei
Photo: E.ON
Great Hall celebration of Huawei’s Seeds
for the Future
Huawei has celebrated the completion of its corporate social responsibility
project Seeds for the Future. The Chinese multinational networking and
telecommunications equipment and services company awarded 10 talented Czech
information and communications technology students who in September attended
a two-week educational program in China. The award-giving occasion, held in the
Great Hall of Charles University, Prague, was attended by Huawei specialists, Czech
government representatives and the Chinese ambassador Ma Keqing
advertising
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Monday, 31 October 2016
Issue 137l newsstand price CZK 24/¤ 1l www.e15.cz
Sceptical but generous
UNICEF country boss Pavla Gomba
on Czechs as donors and online
fundraising tools
FACE TO FACE pages 10–11
Land of the archers
Exploring the picturesque frontier
territories once guarded by the
Székelys
SPECIAL REPORT pages 12–13
9 771803 454314 0 0 1 3 7
Photo: Anna Vacková
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e15weekly
Dark Tower
to fall
Daniel Novák
Once hailed as the hub of 1980s teleco-
mmunications in communist Czecho-
slovakia but later maligned as a symbol
of the decrepit telephone network that
hampered the country after 1989’s revolution, the
telephone exchange could now feature in a big
realestatetransactionbetweenrichestCzechPetr
KellnerandfellowbillionaireMarekDospiva.E15’s
information is that Dospiva’s Penta investment
groupishighlyinterestedinacquiringthebuilding,
now owned by the Czech Telecommunication In-
frastructure [CETIN] network operator, an asset
of Kellner’s PPF financial and investment group.
Located in Olšanská street, and once one of Euro-
pe’s largest and most modern telecoms facilities –
though Praguers have joked about it as like J.R.R.
Tolkien’s “Barad-dûr”, or “Dark Tower”, fortress
in Mordor from where the Dark Lord could keep
watch – it is to be abandoned by CETIN.
Continues on page 4
Plans are afoot to demolish
Prague’s legendary
telecoms exchange in
Žižkov. A tender to sell the
property, known to locals as
the stronghold of “Mordor”,
is in its final stage
EW16103101A1.indd 1
26.10.2016 17:24:34
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http://www.floowie.com/en/read/e15w-2016-10-31/16
diversions
Covered in shawls
A Jewish worshipper at Wailing
Wall in Jerusalem uses his mobile
phone to record worshippers who
are covered in prayer shawls as they
recite the priestly blessing
invitations
picture of the week
Photos: Archive Photo: RFeuters
GIG
Crystal Fighters
at MeetFactory
“Fast, mesmeric and
passionate” electro-folk group
Crystal Fighters, who mix
folk music with dance beats,
return to Prague. The London/
Brooklyn-based band put out
their impatiently awaited new
album Everything Is My Family
last week. 4 November.
EXHIBITION
David Černý at DSC
Gallery
Notorious Czech sculptor David
Černý presents Black Hole.
It showcases the last three
years of his work. Monumental
stainless steel sculptures
and his latest smaller reliefs
feature. 29 November. Černý
first sprang to attention in 1991
by painting a Soviet tank pink.
CINEMA
Florence Foster Jenkins
(2016)
It’s the 1940s and New York
socialite and amateur soprano
Florence Foster Jenkins (Meryl
Streep) dreams of becoming
a great opera singer. Her
husband goes to extreme
lengths to make sure his wife
never discovers how truly awful
she is. Various cinemas.
GIG
Onyx at Rock Café
Hardcore hip hop group Onyx
from Queens, New York,
play Prague’s Rock Café on 5
November. Composed of East
Coast rappers Sticky Fingaz and
Fredro Starr, the outfit’s music
has featured in movies such as
How High and 8 Mile.
TRIP TIP
Saint Barbara’s Church
in Kutná Hora
Built in the style of a cathedral
in Kutná Hora, this is one of
Central Europe’s most famous
Gothic churches. UNESCO-listed,
it is notable for its windows,
choir stalls, altars, pulpits and
medieval frescoes depicting the
medieval silver mining town
and religious themes.
About us. E15 Weekly is one of a group of business and economics-oriented publications printed by CN Invest a. s. It is a sister title to the E15 daily. Both
periodicals, as well as a number of others, came under new ownership in the spring of 2016 when part of a portfolio formerly published by Mladá fronta a. s.
was acquired. CN Invest a. s. publishes a broad range of print and online titles. In addition to other business-minded titles, the company also publishes lifestyle
and women’s magazines (Maminka, Dieta, Moje psychologie) and children’s titles (Mateřídouška, Sluníčko). The publishing house also enjoys a considerable
presence in the segment of technical and men’s online titles. CN Invest, and its sister company CZECH NEWS CENTER a. s. (the biggest publishing house in the
Czech Republic, with titles such as Blesk, Reflex, Svět motorů, ABC), are members of the media concern CZECH MEDIA INVEST a. s.
http://www.floowie.com/en/read/e15w-2016-10-31/