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Czech foreign minister sacked after losing challenge to party leader

FILE PHOTO: European Union foreign ministers hold an emergency meeting to discuss ways to try to save the Iran nuclear deal, in Brussels
FILE PHOTO: Czech Republic’s Foreign Minister Tomas Petricek arrives at a European Union foreign ministers emergency meeting to discuss ways to try to save the Iran nuclear deal, in Brussels, Belgium, January 10, 2020. REUTERS/Johanna Geron/File Photo

April 12, 2021

PRAGUE (Reuters) -Czech Foreign Minister Tomas Petricek, who frequently warned against risks posed by Russia and China, was sacked on Monday after losing a bid to lead his own centre-left Social Democratic party (CSSD) party last week.

His replacement may take a less resolute stance on China and possibly on other issues such as Russia and its “vaccine diplomacy” or its bid in a Czech nuclear power plant tender.

President Milos Zeman, who favours close ties with Russia and China and often clashed with Petricek, dismissed him after receiving a proposal to do so from Prime Minister Andrej Babis.

Petricek had questioned a plan to let a Russian bidder participate in a tender to build a new nuclear power plant, a view shared with the country’s intelligence community and parliamentary opposition. The 6 billion euro ($7.2 billion) project is the Czech Republic’s biggest single public investment.

That view and him losing his challenge to his party’s leader, Interior Minister Jan Hamacek, were among the reasons for his dismissal, Petricek suggested at a televised news conference.

The CSSD is the junior coalition party in the minority government led by Babis. A general election is due in October in the Czech Republic, a member of both NATO and European Union.

The current Minister of Culture, Lubomir Zaoralek, is meant to replace Petricek, Hamacek said. Zaoralek had held the job in the previous government.

During his tenure, Zaoralek took part in initiatives seen as too open towards China. In 2016, he prepared a declaration of top Czech officials assuring Beijing of good relations after a minister met in Prague with the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama, to China’s dismay.

As Zaoralek has not yet decided whether to accept the nomination, Zeman appointed Hamacek to the post for the time being.

($1 = 0.8393 euros)

(Reporting by Robert Muller; Editing by Alison Williams, Larry King and Hugh Lawson)

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