Students protest Czech government's media funding overhaul plan

Thousands of students marched in Prague on Wednesday in protest against the Czech government's plan to overhaul public media funding, which would eliminate access fees and make state funding the sole source. Critics warn this could jeopardise media independence and lead to significant budget cuts and layoffs.

Unknown Author

3 min read
0

/

Students protest Czech government's media funding overhaul plan

Students protest Czech government’s media funding overhaul plan

Student Protests
Thousands of high school and university students marched in Prague against a government plan to overhaul and reduce funding for public radio and television.
Protest Scale
Thousands of students participated in nationwide protests against significant funding cuts to public media, emphasising widespread public concern over media independence and government accountability.
Media Independence
“Both media will be unable to perform their public service, which can lead to their demise,” warned Zuzana Bancanska, Deputy Chairwoman of the Independent Unions at Czech Television.

Key developments

Thousands of high school and university students protested in Prague against a government plan to overhaul public media funding, voicing concerns about media independence. Smaller demonstrations occurred nationwide.

The proposed legislation by Prime Minister Andrej Babiš’s coalition aims to abolish fees for public radio and television, risking significant budget reductions. Approval is still pending from the government and Parliament.

Czech students protest government plans to cut public media funding

Published on Updated

Thousands of high school and university students marched through the Czech capital on Wednesday to protest against a government plan to overhaul and reduce funding for public radio and television.

“We won’t let you take the media,” protesters chanted. Smaller protests were organised across the country.

The new coalition government led by populist Prime Minister Andrej Babiš drafted the plan to scrap the fees that individuals, households and businesses pay to access the outlets.

Instead, the public media would be fully dependent on the state budget. Critics say that would compromise their independence.

The draft of the plan would significantly reduce public media’s current budgets. It still needs approval from the government and Parliament.

The media’s labour unions said they were ready to go on strike if the government goes ahead with the legislation, which could take effect next year.

Deputy Chairwoman of the Independent Unions at Czech Television, Zuzana Bancanska, warned staff outside the station that the changes would lead to mass layoffs.

“Both media will be unable to perform their public service, which can lead to their demise,” she said, while urging the public to support media independence.

The Vienna-based International Press Institute said it fears that the motivation behind the proposed changes is to “weaken the broadcasters’ financial and editorial independence and compromise their ability to fulfill their public service remit.”

The Czech government has rejected accusations of meddling in media coverage, arguing that state funding media is a common practice throughout Europe.

Critics have said the plans mirror those that have led to political control in Slovakia, as well as Hungary under outgoing Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, Babiš’ ally in their Patriots for Europe group in the European Parliament.

Additional sources • AP

Responses

    Sarah Mitchell·

    Great article! This really puts things into perspective. I appreciate the thorough research and balanced viewpoint.

    James Anderson·

    Interesting read, though I think there are some points that could have been explored further. Would love to see a follow-up on this topic.

    Emma Thompson·

    Thanks for sharing this! I had no idea about some of these details. Definitely bookmarking this for future reference.

    Michael Chen·

    Well written and informative. The examples provided really help illustrate the main points effectively.

    Olivia Rodriguez·

    This is exactly what I was looking for! Clear, concise, and very helpful. Keep up the excellent work!

Stay Updated

Get the latest posts delivered right to your inbox.

No spam, unsubscribe at any time.