Czechs protest replacement of justice minister
April 30, 2019Thousands of people in Prague and across the Czech Republic have taken to the streets over the nomination of a new justice minister.
Demonstrators say Marie Benesova is too close to billionaire Prime Minister Andrej Babis, who is accused of abusing EU funds to build a luxury resort on his land in 2007.
Protesters fear the allegations may be brushed under the carpet, believing the appointment is far too convenient.
Here are the main points at issue:
- Babis is suspected of abusing funds to build the Stork's Nest resort and farm near Prague. He was charged by police in 2017.
- Former Justice Minister Jan Knezinek resigned earlier this month, after police recommended that Babis be charged over the alleged scam.
- President Milos Zeman, an ally of Babis, is set to name his close confidante and lawyer Besenova as justice minister on Tuesday.
- Besenova is a former lawmaker with the Social Democratic CSSD party, which supports Babis in parliament.
- Besenova previously voted against a police request to strip Babis of parliamentary immunity.
Protesters carried Czech and EU flags and shouted slogans such as "Independent Justice," "We are not blind," and "We want an honest government."
"We fear that the prime minister might escape justice," said Mikulas Minar from the Million Moments For Democracy group, which helped organize the protest on Monday, speaking with Agence France-Presse.
Organizers said that, in addition to the protests in the capital, there were demonstrations in some 100 other towns.
Read more: Czech PM loses legal battle over secret police ties
Babis: Allegation is 'incredible filth'
Babis is suspected of abusing funds to build the Stork's Nest resort and farm near Prague. He was charged by police in 2017, and calls the allegation against him and members of his family "incredible filth.”
"If I weren't in politics, nobody would have heard about the Stork's Nest," Babis told the DNES broadsheet, which he owns, earlier this month. "People keep plotting affairs against me, delving into the past. This affair is 12 years old."
The 71-year-old Benesova was justice minister in a transitional government from July 2013 to January 2014, and was chief prosecutor from 1999 to 2005.
rc/cmk (DPA, Reuters, AFP, AP)