ROB CAMERON

BBC Prague Correspondent
Articles tagged 'Communism'

TitleHeadlineSummaryMediaDatehf:tags
Albright
AlbrightMadeleine Albright: refugee childhood influenced key foreign policy decisions

Born Marie Jana Körbelová in Prague, Madeleine Albright (1937 – 2022) spent the war in London. After the Communist coup of 1948, her family emigrated to the U.S., where she later became the first female Secretary of State. “What I learnt as a result of being born here was that when the United States was not involved – as in Munich – terrible things happened.”

Radio Prague2003-10-21communism czech czechoslovakia politics usa
Driving in Tirana
StreetsTirana: Where the streets have no name

Not sure whether Bono has ever been to Tirana but in 2004 it was still in a strange state of semi-awakening from the forty-year fever dream of Communist hardliner Enver Hoxha. The old street signs had been torn down – but Albania’s new authorities couldn’t agree on new ones. This made finding your way round the city a rather surreal experience.

BBC News2004-12-03albania communism politics streets
Velvet
VelvetHavel reflects on 20th anniversary of Velvet Revolution

The anniversary of the Velvet Revolution on November 17th 1989 is now a national holiday. It’s an opportunity to look back on a defining moment and take the temperature of Czech (and Slovak) society. For the 20th anniversary, those who were at the heart of the revolution – including the shy playwright who became president – shared their memories and thoughts.

BBC Radio 42009-11-17communism czech czechoslovakia politics prague vaclav-havel velvet-revolution
Holiday
HolidayCzechs rebrand Communist holidays

A Czech travel agency is offering package holidays for people nostalgic for the trade union perks of Communist Czechoslovakia, when factory workers were bussed off to recuperate from the daily grind. For a modest sum, guests can stay at a grim-looking hotel in Slovakia’s Tatra Mountains, to relive the sights, sounds, and smells of pre-1989 holidays.

BBC News2010-05-10communism czech czechoslovakia politics slovakia velvet-revolution
Gone
GoneLeaders gather for state funeral of Václav Havel in Prague

Václav Havel died at his country home – Hrádeček – on the morning of Sunday, December 18th, 2011. He’d appeared a few months previously at the unveiling of a statue to Woodrow Wilson, looking frail and gaunt. However his death – at the age of 75 – still came as a great shock. Havel’s state funeral five days later was a momentous and immensely moving experience.

BBC World Service2011-12-23communism czech czechoslovakia politics prague vaclav-havel velvet-revolution
Vimperk
VimperkBohemia revisited: The holiday that changed my life

Holidays can expose the traveller to cultures, languages and adventures they would never have experienced at home. Trying to recreate them many years later however can be a bit of a challenge. In the summer of 2012, I returned to the idyllic town of Vimperk in South Bohemia – the place where twenty years previously I’d decided to start a new life.

BBC From Our Own Correspondent2012-09-05communism czech czechoslovakia prague
Tunnel
TunnelA Tunnel to the Other Side

In the late 1970s, Communist Czechoslovakia came up with a remarkable proposal: a 410km railway tunnel under the Alps, linking the Czech city of České Budějovice with the Yugoslav port of Koper. The governments of Czechoslovakia, Austria, Italy and Yugoslavia went so far as to open tentative discussions. Then, suddenly, it was shelved – a victim of Cold War politics.

Works That Work2013-09-02border communism czechoslovakia
Statue of Wenceslas in Prague in front of a poster reading Havel navždy (Havel forever)
DisillusionedDisillusionment sets in on 25th anniversary of Velvet Revolution

Thousands of people have protested against Czech President Miloš Zeman on the 25th anniversary of the Velvet Revolution, which ended communist rule. Demonstrators carried football-style red cards as a warning to Mr Zeman, while others threw eggs. One accidentally hit the German president. Many are angry with Mr Zeman, who they see as too sympathetic to Russia.

BBC News2014-11-17communism czech czechoslovakia milos-zeman politics vaclav-havel velvet-revolution
Jan Kubiš (left) and Jozef Gabčík (right)
HeroesCzechs search for dead heroes who killed SS chief Heydrich

The assassination of senior Nazi official Reinhard Heydrich by Czechoslovak paratroopers Jan Kubiš and Jozef Gabčík in 1942 was one of the outstanding feats of daring in World War Two. The killing led to terrible reprisals, not least for the pair themselves, who were surrounded and killed by the Germans. But one question has long troubled historians: where are their bodies?

BBC News2016-08-03communism czechoslovakia holocaust nazis prague world-war-two
Food
FoodEx-communist states complain of rip-off food in EU

When communism collapsed in Central and Eastern Europe, previously unobtainable goods flooded the market. Today, shops and supermarkets offer broadly the same food and drink as in the West – a tangible result of global capitalism. But something is dawning on Czechs, Slovaks, Poles and Hungarians: the labels are the same, but the contents might not be.

BBC News2017-05-17border communism czech economy eu germany
Billionaire Andrej Babiš, former PM of the Czech Republic
BillionsAndrej Babiš: The populist billionaire who could lead the Czech Republic

Czech voters are likely to hand power to controversial billionaire Andrej Babiš, the country’s second-richest man who ran on an anti-corruption platform but is himself under investigation. The campaign has been dominated by big themes including euro adoption, immigration and the relationship with Russia, but also some more obscure ones, such as the price of butter.

BBC News2017-10-20andrej-babis business communism czech eu politics
Corbyn
CorbynThe Czechoslovak spy who met Jeremy Corbyn

In 2018 allegations were made by a former Czechoslovak spy that the then opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn had been a paid informer for the country’s communist era secret police, the StB. Mr Corbyn emphatically denied the claims, but a few sheaves of old paper still have the power to throw lives into turmoil.

BBC From Our Own Correspondent2018-02-24communism czech czechoslovakia politics spies
Shivers
ShiversSoviet 1968 invasion: Czechs still feel Cold War shivers

Czechs are marking the fiftieth anniversary of the Soviet-led invasion of Czechoslovakia, when a 250,000-strong invasion force from five Warsaw Pact countries invaded the country from the north, east and south. They were sent by Moscow to crush the so-called Prague Spring – the liberalising reforms of Czechoslovak communist leader Alexander Dubcek.

BBC News2018-08-211968 communism czech czechoslovakia politics russia soviet-union
Stones
StonesThe European capital cobbled with Jewish gravestones

For a quarter of a century tourists and locals passing through the bottom of Prague’s Wenceslas Square were stepping unaware on Jewish gravestones. They were looted from abandoned cemeteries in the 1980s and cut up to make cobbles. The truth about the stones came to light thanks to the head of Prague’s Jewish Museum – who slipped a few into his pocket as a young man.

BBC From Our Own Correspondent2019-01-12communism czech czechoslovakia holocaust jews prague world-war-two
Anti-Babiš protest in Prague's Letná Park in 2019
LetnaAnti-Babiš Letná protest sees biggest crowds since 1989 Velvet Revolution

Mobile operators say the number of people who attended a demonstration against Prime Minister Andrej Babiš on Sunday was just shy of 300,000, making it the largest mass protest since the Velvet Revolution in 1989. Protestors want the billionaire businessman to step down over a criminal investigation into allegations of EU subsidy fraud.

BBC News2019-06-23andrej-babis communism czech politics velvet-revolution
Skeleton
SkeletonMystery of the skeleton hijacked by Nazis and Soviets

For decades, archaeologists have grappled with the identity of a 10th-Century skeleton discovered at Prague Castle. The remains were exploited by both the Nazis and Soviets for ideological purposes, claiming it as proof of a pre-existing Germanic – or Slavic – presence. But attempts to pin a clear ethnic label on a 1,000-year-old corpse perhaps reveal more about us than him.

BBC News2019-10-28communism czech czechoslovakia nazis prague soviet-union
Konev
KonevVelvet Revolution: Prague's ghosts of communism

The so-called Velvet Revolution precipitated the end of communism in Czechoslovakia. Three locations in Prague symbolise the regime and its downfall. They include a controversial statue to Ivan Stepanovich Konev, the Soviet general whose forces liberated much of the country in 1945, but also oversaw the brutal suppression of the 1956 Hungarian Uprising.

BBC News2019-11-16communism czechoslovakia politics russia soviet-union velvet-revolution world-war-two
30
3030th anniversary of Velvet Revolution becomes protest against Babiš

The thirtieth anniversary of the Velvet Revolution against the Communist regime has been overshadowed by contemporary protests against the country’s prime minister, Andrej Babiš. An estimated 200,000 people packed Letná plain – scene of the largest protests in 1989 – while Mr Babiš was heckled as he lit a candle to students beaten by riot police on Národní street.

BBC News2019-11-17andrej-babis communism czech politics velvet-revolution
Sid
SidIn search of Sid

A random face in a documentary about the Prague Spring led to a wild goose chase to track down its owner. It belonged to Zdeněk ‘Sid’ Kučera, a jazz trumpeter and singer whose band was filmed performing Georgie Fame’s Bonnie and Clyde in a Prague club. Sid emigrated not long after the Soviet tanks arrived – but finally got in touch from his adopted home in Switzerland.

BBC From Our Own Correspondent2020-03-19communism czech czechoslovakia music prague