| WHERE ARE THEY
NOW? >
Jan Koukal: Back on the scene
Written by: Monika Mudranincová
 |
 |
|
Photo: Jana Labuťová
|
In the nineties, Jan Koukal (52)
was one of the most influential men in local politics, serving
longer than anyone to date as the Lord Mayor of Prague. This
long-standing member of the ODS party ran Prague from 1993 to
1998, and then, after two years in the Senate, he departed from
the main political stage. He now divides his time between Pražská
plynárenská, where he chairs the board of directors, and his
family's business firm. In addition, he is striving to be named
chief of Prague House in Brussels.
HE WAS NAMED Lord Mayor after a fifteen-year career as a scientist.
He achieved the position of chairman of the scientific council
of the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences Institute of Physics, but
after the regime change he couldn't resist the attraction of politics
and started his career in that field, first as a Prague councilman,
later becoming the City Hall boss. As Lord Mayor, Koukal received
varying marks - some said his reign was one of pandering to clients,
while others stress his vigor in pressing the war on criminality
and the scandalous practices of taxi drivers. He himself describes
the situation of that time as a complex period in Prague's transformation
from post-communism to an entirely new system. He thinks he did
well, although he acknowledges that the best choices were not always
made. "I think we were overly ambitious and hasty, perhaps
forgetting about communicating with the public," he explains.
He often neglected his media image, especially in connection with
the První městská banka affair, when it collapsed under debts of
many millions of crowns, but also with respect to his membership
in several supervisory boards.
From 1996 to 1998 he served as a senator, but he wasn't reelected.
Since 2002 he has been the chairman of the board of Pražská plynárenská,
but his main source of income comes from his family firm, Katres,
which focuses on chemicals and the sale of engineering equipment.
Katres has 80 employees and enjoys annual sales of around CZK 250
million, and Koukal is the financial director. There has recently
been talk of his appointment to director of Prague House in Brussels.
His appointment was supposed to be announced by the end of February,
but it was not officially confirmed before this issue's deadline.
He says that if selected he would leave his position in Pražská
plynárenská and cut down on his work for Katres. He wouldn't take
his wife or his three daughters to Brussels, but says that he would
visit them as often as his job allowed.
|