Sunday 18 December 2011

Czech Republic's first president

Vaclav Havel, the Czech Republic's first president after the Velvet Revolution against communist rule, has died at the age of 75.

The former dissident playwright, who suffered from prolonged ill-health, died on Sunday morning, his secretary Sabina Tancecova said.

As president, he presided over Czechoslovakia's transition to democracy and a free-market economy.

He oversaw its peaceful 1993 split into the Czech Republic and Slovakia.

Havel first came to international fame as a dissident playwright in the 1970s through his involvement with the human rights manifesto Charter 77.
'Great European'

A black flag has been flying over Prague Castle, the presidential seat, and people have been gathering in Wenceslas Square, scene of anti-communist protests in 1989, to light candles in honour of Havel.

The Czech cabinet is to meet for a special session on Monday to consider arrangements for national mourning.

Tributes have been pouring in for the man many consider a driving force in the overthrow of communist rule in eastern Europe.

"His peaceful resistance shook the foundations of an empire, exposed the emptiness of a repressive ideology, and proved that moral leadership is more powerful than any weapon," said US President Barack Obama.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel hailed Havel as a "great European" in a letter of condolence to Czech President Vaclav Klaus.
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Analysis
Rob Cameron BBC News, Prague

It was clear to all who saw him in recent months that Vaclav Havel was not in the best of health.

He cut a gaunt, shrunken figure at the handful of public appearances he attended in Prague, most recently a meeting with the Tibetan spiritual leader the Dalai Lama.

Nonetheless his death has come as a shock, and politicians and many others have been paying their respects to the man who, in the words of his successor, Vaclav Klaus, "was a symbol of the Czech state".

Miroslava Nemcova, speaker of the lower house, said her country had "lost its moral authority." Similar tributes have been pouring in from all over the world. For once, those words do not sound like cliches.

Within hours of the announcement of his death people began lighting candles and laying flowers at the statue of St Wenceslas on Wenceslas Square, where Havel addressed huge crowds of demonstrators in November 1989.

A black flag has been raised in mourning above Prague Castle. Church bells across the country will ring out to mark the death of a man who lived by a naive, but simple motto - "truth and love will prevail over lies and hatred".

"His fight for freedom and democracy was as unforgettable as his great humanity," wrote Mrs Merkel, who grew up in communist East Germany.

"We Germans in particular have much for which we are grateful to him. We mourn this loss of a great European with you," she wrote.

British Prime Minister David Cameron said he was "deeply saddened" and that Europe owed Havel a "profound debt".

"Havel devoted his life to the cause of human freedom. For years, Communism tried to crush him, and to extinguish his voice. But Havel could not be silenced.

Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt wrote on Twitter: "Vaclav Havel was one of the greatest Europeans of our age. His voice for freedom paved way for a Europe whole and free."
Chronic ill-health

Havel died at his country home north-east of Prague.

In his final moments, he was comforted by his wife Dagmar and several nuns, his secretary was quoted as saying by Reuters news agency.

A former heavy smoker, Havel had a history of chronic respiratory problems dating back to his years in communist prisons.

He had part of a lung removed during surgery for cancer in the 1990s.

He was taken to hospital in Prague on 12 January 2009, with an unspecified inflammation, and developed breathing difficulties after undergoing minor throat surgery.
Satirist

Havel began co-writing plays during his military service in the 1950s and his first solo play, The Garden Party, was staged in 1963.
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Vaclav Havel

* Born in 1936 to a wealthy family in Czechoslovakia
* Considered "too bourgeois" by communist government, studied at night school
* Writing banned and plays forced underground after the 1968 Prague Spring
* In 1977, co-authored the Charter 77 movement for democratic change
* Faced constant harassment and imprisonment as Czechoslovakia's most famous dissident
* Czechoslovakia's first post-communist president in December 1989
* Oversaw transition to democracy, and 1993 division into the Czech Republic and Slovakia
* Left office in 2003 and continued writing, publishing a new play in 2008 and directing first film in 2011

* Life of Vaclav Havel in pictures

His plays satirised the absurdities of life under communist rule, but his work was banned after the reformist Prague Spring of 1968 was crushed by a Soviet-led invasion.

After that his plays were banned and he was imprisoned several times.

By the late 1970s he had become Czechoslovakia's best-known dissident. He helped found the Charter 77 movement for democratic change.

When communist rule unravelled in late 1989, he was elected president by the interim coalition cabinet. He resigned in 1992 after Slovak nationalists successfully campaigned for the break-up of Czechoslovakia.

He was elected first president of the Czech Republic in January 1993, serving until 2003 when he resigned as his health deteriorated.

Havel returned to literature and to supporting human rights activists around the world.
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43 Minutes ago

A great philosopher-president and a sad loss. Unlike many of the career-politicians that are frequently given to self-serving their own causes and cynicism, Havel was a exemplary example of a man of the opposite. He didn't court power. If there is to be an example of an head of state, he represents it.

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I admired his honesty, and trust in love, peace and humanity. I was inspired by his environmental attitude and fight for human rights. Some people said Vaclav Havel was just a dreamer who did not understand the reality. I do believe in his dreams... as they proved to come true in many cases.

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Comment number 179.
brucke
2 Hours ago

I admit I didn't know much about Vaclav Havel before reading this. Seems to me he was a very genuine man. No pretense. I have always liked people who seem uncomfortable with adulation. It shows humility and a mature perspective.

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