Jaromír Štětina
Jaromír Štětina (born April 6, 1943 in Prague[1]) is Czech journalist, writer and politician. He is most known as war correspondent from conflict areas of former Soviet Union.
Štětina studied University of Economics, Prague (graduated in 1967). He started to work as journalist in newspaper Mladá Fronta but after Soviet occupation of Czechoslovakia in 1968 he was fired because of disagreement with the occupation and worked as geodesist. Later he started to study geology at Charles University in Prague and organized 25 geologic or sport tours to Siberia and Asia. Since 1989 he works in re-established newspaper Lidové noviny. In 1990 he moved as foreign correspondent into Moscow from where he covered numerous conflicts in former Soviet Union. During 1993-94 he was editor-in-chief of Lidové noviny. In 1994, together with journalist Petra Procházková, founded independent journalist agency Epicentrum dedicated to war reporting.
Štětina specialised on military conflicts in Europe, Asia and Africa and covered more than 20 of them. He published ten books, dozens of documentary movies and countless articles.
In 2004 elections into the Senate (upper chamber of the Czech parliament) Štětina become independent candidate under umbrella of Green Party (Strana Zelených) and was voted in because of his popularity.
He is a founding signatory of the Prague Declaration on European Conscience and Communism.[2]
Notes
- ↑ According to Štětina's website he was born in Prague, according to a media citing Štětina his birthplace was the now destroyed town Přísečnice, on place where a water reservoir of the same name has been built during the 1970s.
- ↑ "Prague Declaration - Declaration Text". 3 June 2008. Retrieved 28 January 2010.
External links
- Štětina's website (Czech)
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