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Czech President Rushed To Hospital, In Intensive Care

  The Czech President Milos Zeman was taken to an intensive care unit on Sunday, a day after the country held a general election, his … Continue reading Czech President Rushed To Hospital, In Intensive Care


Photo: Wikimedia/David Sedlecký/ Czech Republic President Milos Zeman
Photo: Wikimedia/David Sedlecký/ Czech Republic President Milos Zeman

 

The Czech President Milos Zeman was taken to an intensive care unit on Sunday, a day after the country held a general election, his doctor said.

“At the moment, the patient is hospitalised at an intensive care unit of Prague’s Military University Hospital,” Zeman’s doctor Miroslav Zavoral told reporters, adding he could not yet publicise the diagnosis.

The president, who plays a critical role in nominating any future prime minister, was taken to hospital by ambulance shortly after meeting Babis and appeared to be unconscious upon arrival, with someone seen holding up his head.

His doctor said he was in intensive care, while the Blesk tabloid quoted Zeman’s office head Vratislav Mynar as saying that he “fell asleep during the transport, that’s all. He wasn’t unconscious”.

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The DNES broadsheet wrote later on Sunday that Zeman, who has liver problems according to local media, was in a stable condition and could spend up to three weeks in hospital.

Czech President Milos Zeman is being transported to the military hospital in Prague on October 10, 2021.

 

“Even if it’s Mr. President, I’m not authorised to give you any details because the patient is protected by the law,” hospital spokeswoman Jitka Zinke told AFP.

Zeman’s spokesman Jiri Ovcacek said on Twitter that Zeman’s hospitalisation would not jeopardise the post-election talks.

Babis is hoping to hold on to power despite being defeated on Saturday by the center-right together an alliance, which has said it is ready to form a majority government with another grouping.

The president, who is wheelchair-bound, had cast his ballot in his official residence because of health problems less than a month after he spent eight nights at the military hospital.

Under the Czech constitution, the authority to nominate the new prime minister falls to the speaker of the newly elected lower house of parliament if both houses of the body declare the president unable to perform his duties.

– ‘Absolutely excited’ –
The Together alliance of the right-wing Civic Democrats, the centre-right TOP 09 and the centrist Christian Democrats won 27.79 percent of the vote, while Babis’s ANO party earned 27.12 percent.

The alliance would have a majority of 108 seats in the 200-seat parliament together with another grouping comprising the anti-establishment Pirate Party and the centrist Mayors and Independents.

Together leader Petr Fiala said on Saturday that the two alliances would only talk about a government with each other and ask Zeman to tap him to form the government.

A day after voting in Prague, Zdenek Klima told AFP he was “absolutely excited” with the outcome.

“Owing to the new government, we will finally be where we historically belong,” he beamed.

Analysts saw the election result as a blow to populism.

“It’s a victory not only for the Czech Republic, but for the whole of Europe,” Jiri Priban from Cardiff Law School said on Czech TV.

“It’s a proof that even if the populists can’t be entirely defeated, their advance can be stopped and reversed,” he added.

– Communists out –
Babis currently leads a minority government with the Social Democrats, which was until recently tacitly backed by the Communist Party that ruled the former totalitarian Czechoslovakia from 1948 to 1989.

But the Communists were ousted from parliament at the polls for the first time since World War II, and the Social Democrats also failed to meet the five-percent threshold for parliament entry.

The 67-year-old Babis, a food, chemicals and media mogul, is facing police charges over alleged EU subsidy fraud and the bloc’s dismay over his conflict of interest as a businessman and a politician.

Last weekend, the Pandora Papers investigation showed he had used money from his offshore firms to finance the purchase of property in southern France in 2009, including a chateau.

He has denied any wrongdoing and slammed the allegations as a smear campaign.