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Czech Prez taken to hospital shortly after meeting PM Andrej Babis

Babis won the previous general election in 2017, but it took him nine months to put together a minority government with Zeman giving him all the time he wanted
Last Updated 10 October 2021, 12:15 IST

Czech President Milos Zeman was taken to a Prague hospital on Sunday, shortly after meeting Prime Minister Andrej Babis following a general election in which the billionaire populist was narrowly defeated by a centre-right alliance.

Babis met Zeman, his long-time political ally, a day after his ANO party lost to the Together alliance, which said it was ready to form a majority government with another grouping.

But Zeman had made it clear earlier that he would appoint the head of a party, not an alliance, following the election, suggesting Babis would get the first attempt at negotiating a viable cabinet.

"I can't see many reasons why he would do something else," Tomas Lebeda, an analyst at Palacky University in the eastern Czech city of Olomouc, told AFP.

After the talks at Zeman's residence outside Prague, the president, who has been grappling with liver problems according to local media and politicians, ended up in Prague's Military University Hospital.

"Yes, I can confirm this information," hospital spokeswoman Jitka Zinke told AFP, adding Zeman's doctor would comment later on Sunday.

The president cast his ballot in the residence because of poor health, less than a month after he spent eight nights at the military hospital.

Zeman's office has been secretive about his illness, giving no details for weeks.

The Together alliance of the right-wing Civic Democrats, the centre-right TOP 09 and the centrist Christian Democrats won 27.79 per cent of the vote, while Babis' ANO party earned 27.12 per cent.

The alliance would have a majority of 108 seats in the 200-seat parliament together with another grouping comprising the anti-establishment Pirate Party and the centrist Mayors and Independents.

Together leader Petr Fiala said on Saturday that the two alliances would only talk about a government with each other and ask Zeman to tap him to form the government.

"It seems that both democratic coalitions will manage to get a parliamentary majority, which most likely means Babis will have to go," said Otto Eibl, head of the political science department at Masaryk University in Brno.

Lebeda said that given Zeman's health problems, "he may reconsider the situation and arrive at a different conclusion, but I wouldn't bet much on that as things are."

The two alliances and ANO will be joined in parliament by the far-right, anti-Muslim Freedom and Direct Democracy (SPD) movement led by Tokyo-born entrepreneur Tomio Okamura which scored almost 10 per cent.

Babis currently leads a minority government with the left-wing Social Democrats, which was until recently tacitly backed by the Communist Party that ruled former totalitarian Czechoslovakia from 1948 to 1989.

But the Communists were ousted from parliament at the polls for the first time since World War II, failing to meet the five per cent threshold for any party to enter the assembly.

The 67-year-old Babis, a food, chemicals and media mogul, is facing police charges over an alleged EU subsidy fraud and the bloc's dismay over his conflict of interest as a businessman and a politician.

Last weekend, the Pandora Papers investigation showed he had used money from his offshore firms to finance the purchase of property in southern France in 2009, including a chateau.

He has denied any wrongdoing and slammed the allegations as a smear campaign.

Babis won the previous general election in 2017, but it took him nine months to put together a minority government with Zeman giving him all the time he wanted.

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(Published 10 October 2021, 12:15 IST)

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