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Czech MP Writes To U.S Counterparts Over Work Conditions In RFE/RL

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  • Czech MP Writes To U.S Counterparts Over Work Conditions In RFE/RL

    CZECH MP WRITES TO US COUNTERPARTS OVER WORK CONDITIONS IN RFE/RL

    AZG DAILY
    16-02-2010

    Mass media

    Prague, Feb 12 (CTK) - Czech senator Jaromir Stetina has written
    a letter to his U.S. counterparts in which he complaints about
    discrimination against some foreign employees of the Prague-seated
    and U.S-financed Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL) and demands
    a remedy of the situation.

    In his letter, a copy of which CTK received, Stetina says the work
    contracts do not sufficiently protect the station's foreign employees.

    Due to the RFE/RL management's discriminatory labour policy,
    incompatible with Prague's international commitments, the Czech
    Republic has been accused of violating fundamental rights at the
    European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, Stetina writes.

    The employees who have complained in Strasbourg about discrimination
    include Croatian journalist Snjezana Pelivan, whom the RFE/RL sacked
    without giving any reason five years ago.

    The Czech Constitutional Court previously turned down Pelivan's
    complaint.

    According to Pelivan, the RFE/RL employees who come from neither the
    Czech Republic nor the U.S. are insufficiently protected against
    unfounded instant dismissal, which means they are discriminated
    against.

    Pelivan says the station's foreign staff are intentionally kept in
    a legal vacuum without court protection either in the U.S. or in the
    Czech Republic.

    Another foreigner to complain is Armenian Anna Karapetian who, too,
    was dismissed from the RFE/RL some time ago.

    The RFE/RL is a radio station broadcasting news and information in
    28 languages to countries where free press is banned or not enough
    developed.

    Stetina has recently been catapulted to the centre of media attention
    in connection with his announcement that he helps a man from Chechnya
    who was denied Czech asylum and had to leave the Czech Republic by
    February 7.

    According to Stetina, the Czech asylum policy fails to help people
    from the Caucasus region who are threatened with persecution or even
    death in Russia.

    Stetina, 69, was Czech Lidove noviny daily's correspondent in Moscow
    in the 1990s. He also covered the then Russia war against Chechnya. In
    December 1999 he and another eight journalists spent nine days in
    the besieged Chechen capital Grozny.
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