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PEOPLE >
UP&DOWN
Written by: Monika Mudranincová
PEOPLE UP

Photo: Vlad. Weiss |
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Michal Horáček
Together with his associates, the head of Fortuna sold the
second biggest local betting company to a Czech-Slovak financial
group Penta. The sale will earn Horáček roughly CZK 2 billion. |
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Photo: ČTK |
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Martin Bednár
The director of the Czech branch of the software company SAP
became the head of SAP for the entire central European Region.
Bednár's responsibility will now include not only the Czech
market, but also the Slovak, Polish and Hungarian markets. |
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Photo: Jan Wágner |
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Valdemar Walach
The Walach brothers (owners of the Walmark pharmaceutical brand)
bought ProFitness, a company that owns Vitaland, a chain
of health food/vitamin shops. At the same time, they stopped
production of beverages and sold nearly the whole division
to the food company Maspex. They will keep only the beverage
plant in Český Těšín. |
PEOPLE DOWN

Photo: míča – mafa |
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Dušan Kubíček
This entrepreneur who attempted to barter with state subsidies
from the ministry for local development is now being investigated
for corruption. The minister for local development also sued
him for slander for saying that subsidies can be obtained
for a bribe. |
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Photo: ČTK |
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Petr Kousal
České dráhy had losses of around CZK 750 million in 2004, despite
long-term attempts to recover the state transporter. According
to its CEO, there is fierce competition among private railway
transporters and trucks, due to Czech EU entry. |
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Photo: ČTK |
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Luboš Sotona
The entrepreneur who contributed to the arrest of former chief
of the Centrum kuponové privatizace (The Voucher Privatization
Center), Jaroslav Lizner, is now facing police accusations
of fraud and tax evasion worth CZK 9 million. Due to his
failure to appear in court, he is being prosecuted as a fugitive.
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| Photo: Vojtěch Vlk |
Miroslav Řihák: Freestyling entrepreneur
MIROSLAV ŘIHÁK (42), the general director and chairman of the board of ANECT,
a company that supplies goods and services for large communication and information
systems, was named Entrepreneur of the Year 2004. In the competition, which
Ernst & Young organizes annually, the panel rated entrepreneurial spirit,
economic results, corporate strategy, and the contestants' personal profiles.
The judges unanimously chose Řihák, whose colleagues entered him in the competition. "Winning
surprised me a bit, since I saw it more as a game, but of course I'm very pleased,“
says the winner with genuine modesty. ANECT employs 180 workers and boasts
CZK 500 million in annual revenues, as well as customers like DHL and Česká
pojišťovna.
Řihák claims that people are his firm's main competitive weapon. "We sell
team know-how, and our strength lies in our being able to create solutions for
clients that no one else offers,“ he says. A technically-trained cyberneticist,
Řihák's greatest enjoyment comes from dreaming up new projects. But he doesn't
have much time these days for creative work, as he spends a lot of time with
managerial work and traveling from Brno to the Prague and Bratislava offices.
He travels up to 50,000 kilometers a year, so he wants to find a successor to
take over his directorship. "But he'd have to lead the firm in the same
spirit that I established,“ chuckles this native of Brno and father of two sons.
In the winter he clears his head on ski slopes - "I snowboard with abandon“
- and in the summer on a yacht off Croatia. "When I'm surrounded by the
sea I can feel the energy flooding into me from every direction!“ Řihák exclaims.
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Photo: Vojtěch
Vlk |
Pavel Hroch: A mayor who cares
THE MAYOR OF the southern Bohemian settlement of Kovářov, Pavel Hroch (42), has
reason to be happy. The place he's mayor of was named Village of the Year 2004,
winning over 238 other municipalities from the whole republic. "I immediately
called all my colleagues, representatives, and friends, and I received many
congratulations,“ he laughs. "We won in the regional and national rounds,
and I sincerely thank all those who did something for the village,“ this Kovářov
native says.
The parties that called the competition - the Regional Development Ministry,
the Association of Towns and Municipalities, and the Union for Countryside Renewal
emphasized the preservation of traditions, various association activities, work
with youth, care of the elderly, and maintenance of public spaces. Until 2000,
Hroch was a sales deputy for Motor Písek and later engaged in the truck repair
business. In 2002 he turned his attention wholly to office work.
Besides his feeling of triumph, he has lots to think about: the village will
receive CZK 1 million for the national victory and a half a million for the regional
win. Kovářov must add the same amount from its coffers and invest it in a project
to develop the village. Hroch is considering whether it's better to invest in
a new bus stop or repair the school playground or buildings the village owns. "We
have lots of plans, but it will all depend on the money - nothing's decided yet,“
explains the mayor. A father of two teenagers, Hroch devoted his free time to
training young soccer players ten years ago, but due to his current work load,
he now simply enjoys the sporting life as a fan.
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