Full disclosure
2010-03-15
The push by the American Chamber of Commerce to improve
the public-procurement law met with positive reactions from
some quarters last week but suspicion from others. Vice Chair
Petr Nečas of ODS told TV Prima that it might be an effort to
divert attention from all the recent corruption scandals involving
U.S. companies. It's a legitimate question, and it's one
journalists should ask. In general, reporters should be more
demanding in requiring influential people who have easy access
to the media to say whom they are representing and what their
clients' interests are. When Vladimír Dlouhý and Luděk
Niedermayer appeared on Czech TV yesterday, they were
introduced only by their "former" positions. The same usually
applies to lobbyists Pavel Bratinka and Pavel Telička. Likewise,
when Karel Kříž, Jan Ondřich or Miroslav Zajíček write about
energy, no one asks them who is funding them. Sometimes,
whom these pundits are working for might go a long way in
explaining their particular views on the topic at hand.
[Czech Republic Television Goldman Sachs Deloitte EuroOffice
BXL Consulting ValueAdded Candole Partners VŠE university]
|