Printed 16.08.2022 20:57 14-01-2008 Rob Cameron
Controversial Christian Democrat leader Jiří Čunek is still angling for
a return to the cabinet, although the prime minister says he’ll have to
iron out his differences with the Green Party first. Mr Čunek was forced
out over an alleged corruption scandal, but the Greens also find his views
on the Romany minority somewhat distasteful. So his latest remarks on
integration are unlikely to curry favour with the Green Party leadership,
although they may succeed in boosting his flagging approval ratings.
Mr Čunek believes these close-knit, insular families living on social security are contributing to their own social exclusion. The cushion provided by the Romany family, he argues, acts as a counter-incentive to venturing into mainstream society and finding gainful employment. That claims has angered many in the Romany community, including Gabriela Hrabaňová, a consultant for the Romany NGO Athinganoi.
Gabriela Hrabaňová was referring there to a controversial policy that propelled Mr Čunek from the Vsetín mayor’s office to a seat in the Senate, the party leadership and a cabinet post. Mr Čunek made waves nationwide after closing down a squalid tenement building in the centre of Vsetín and resettling its predominantly Romany inhabitants, most of whom were rent defaulters living on social security. Mr Čunek’s vocabulary (he spoke of “lancing a boil” in Vsetín) and the net result of his actions (Romanies moved into glorified portacabins on the outskirts of the town) divided the country. He was pilloried by Romany organisations, the media and the political elite in Prague, but cheered on by many ordinary Czechs, weary of politicians making empty promises about “integrating” a minority they perceive as social parasites. Once again his latest comments are likely to prove divisive. But some observers perceive a clear motivation for making them – his public approval ratings recently slumped, perhaps because he’s no longer in the public eye after losing his cabinet post, and perhaps because the sight of him struggling to regain that post is so ungainly. Comments such as “traditional Romany culture is not compatible with the culture of a modern society” might not win him any friends in the cabinet, but it’s a sentiment many ordinary Czechs agree with. Copyright © Radio Praha, 1996 - 2003 |