Minister of Education and Youth Ondrej Liska of Czech Republic
Ondrej Liska was appointed the Czech Republic's minister of education two weeks ago, following the resignation of his Green Party colleague Dana Kucthova, who had failed to draw fully on all the available EU education funds.
Ondrej Liska was appointed new education minister of the Czech Republic on Tuesday, when about half of all schools in the country are on strike in protest against the sector's draft budget for next year.
Liska is the youngest member of the current center-right government of Mirek Topolanek and the second youngest minister in the history of Czech governments.
Anyway Ondrej Liska is one of our youngest ministers (appointed by Green party) and his reform will affect the RD infrastructure as never before.
Liska said he would wait with the ratification process since he is not convinced that the radar project enjoys support of both the Republicans and Democrats in the United States.
According to unofficial information, Liska was the only minister to abstain from the vote on the Czech-US.
Liska is the head of the lower house's Committee for European Affairs.
The decision to give a critical portfolio such as education to the 30-year-old Liska has raised questions whether the politician might be too young for the job.
Liška: Vzdělávání Romů lze zlepšit za tři roky Prague - The conditions of access to education for Czech Romanies can be improved in minimally three years, Education Minister Ondrej Liska said at the international conference.
The chair of the European affairs committee in the Czech Parliament Ondrej Liska says if the US.
Liska said the role of teachers in society has not been respected appropriately.
Liska said he offers the school trade unions discussion on a systemic and long-term solution that would prevent similar protests in the future.
Czech Education Minister Ondrej Liska said it could take three to five years to solve the problem but admitted that the children of Roma, or Gypsies, are not less talented and do not have fewer abilities than the others.
filling in a few more, but by no means all, of the missing pieces.
thought the universal Church should be like.
the Church which Davidek held in 1970.
efforts on the part of the Vatican authorities to contact Davidek at this time.
What do you think of it? Javorová: Liska is a young politology student.
Liska says that in the light of new revelations about the former underground Church, he has attempted to place Davidek and the clandestine circle he founded in a broader spectrum than previous publications were able to.
In this way Liska has indeed succeeded in filling in a few more, but by no means all, of the missing pieces.
Liska says his intellectual powers were extraordinary and âbordered on genius.
Liska says that from Davidekâs lectures and pastoral letters it is clear that he regarded the Koinotes community as a part of his vision of the Church of the future, a model on the local level of what he thought the universal Church should be like.
Liska says that it is ânot improbable that certain people in the Vatican indirectly supported Blahaâs consecration.
Liska devotes several pages to the synod on the position of women in the Church which Davidek held in 1970.
Liska describes in considerable detail various efforts on the part of the Vatican authorities to contact Davidek at this time.