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FACTBOX-Key figures in new Czech cabinet

Published 05/08/2009, 11:17 AM
Updated 05/08/2009, 11:32 AM
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PRAGUE, May 8 (Reuters) - Czech President Vaclav Klaus appointed an interim government on Friday that will lead the country to an early election, ending a political crisis that crippled its term as European Union president and hurt policymaking amid a sharp economic downturn.

The following are key figures in the new administration:

* PRIME MINISTER

Non-partisan Jan Fischer, 58, takes over after Mirek Topolanek.

He will govern for five months to complete the country's EU presidency ending in June, draw up the 2010 state budget, and prepare for an early election in October.

Fischer, who has worked at the Czech Statistical Bureau since the 1970s and has led it since 2003, plans to return to the bureau after his government job ends.

He has said his ministers were mainly going to do a "maintenance job" and added the administration had no political ambitions.

The government will continue the privatisation of Czech Airlines (CSA), estimated to fetch up to 5 billion crowns ($251.6 million).

It will continue a tender to sell Prague Airport worth up to 100 billion crowns, but the final decision is up to the next administration.

Like some of his key personnel, Fischer was a rank-and-file member of the then-ruling Communist Party in the 1980s, but has been politically unaffiliated for the past two decades.

* FINANCE MINISTER

Eduard Janota, 57, deputy finance minister, takes over from Miroslav Kalousek.

Janota, a respected budget expert, said his target was to put together a 2010 state budget with a deficit lower than this year's, and below 150 billion crowns. He said he would make 10 percent across the board cuts in government expenditures to avoid a collapse of public finances.

This year's total public sector gap could reach 4.6 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) but in the absence of saving measures the gap could hit 6.7 percent of total output.

Analysts warn Janota's job to keep the budget gap under control could be tough in the run-up to October elections as parties make large spending promises.

Janota had said the ballooning fiscal gap made talk of adopting the euro irrelevant now.

He started working at the ministry's state budget division in 1978 and has been there since. He is known to have had a hand in every state budget since 1992 when he became a director of the budget department.

Janota first became a deputy minister in 1999 and is not a member of any political party.

* EUROPEAN AFFAIRS MINISTER

Stefan Fuele, 46, the Czech ambassador to NATO, takes over from Alexandr Vondra.

Fuele is a long-serving diplomat. He was ambassador to Britain between 2003 and 2005. In 1990-1995 he was the first secretary of the permanent mission to the United Nations. He was a member of a Security Council delegation.

In the late 1990s he led the Czech Republic's NATO accession talks.

* FOREIGN MINISTER

Deputy Foreign Minister Jan Kohout, 48, replaces Karel Schwarzenberg.

Between May 2004 and September 2007 Kohout worked as permanent representative of the Czech Republic to the EU. Before that he worked at the Foreign Ministry as a secretary for European affairs and first deputy to the minister.

He was member of the leftist opposition Social Democrats but quit the party last month.

* Other ministers include Deputy Defence Minister Martin Bartak who takes over the Defence Ministry, and Deputy Transport Minister Gustav Slamecka takes the helm of the Transport Ministry. The head of electricity transmission operator CEPS, Vladimir Tosovsky, will lead the Industry and Trade Ministry.

For a story please click on [ID:nL81015812]

(Compiled by Jana Mlcochova and Jason Hovet)

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