Private property
Politicians are scrambling to find a way to make sure
František Oldřich Kinský, a Czech citizen, can't reclaim
Kč 40bn in assets confiscated from him after World War
II. The case isn't comparable to restitution claims
involving assets of Czech-based noblemen who
collaborated with the Nazis, and it wouldn't command
so much attention if so much property weren't at stake.
It's showing a lot about how politicians think and act if
laws don't suit their needs. Suddenly, the
"independent" courts become an instrument for
mobilizing against the enemy, and laws that were once
considered just are hastily changed. Foreign Minister
Cyril Svoboda used the emotional atmosphere to
complain on F1 radio about Czechs who've been
leasing large sections of farmland to Germans. "We
can't forbid people to do what they want with their
assets," he said, with regret in his voice.
|