Final Word from Wednesday, June 10, 2020
When it came to Taiwan, Václav Havel would only take his Havelism so far. He was happy to meet with the island's prime minister in Prague in 1995, when Lien Chan made an unofficial visit to the city; he even declared that year at the U.N. that there are two Chinas and that it's a pity that Taiwan isn't a member of that international organization; and he was delighted to meet at the Lány retreat in 2001 with the wife of Taiwan's president. But not even Havel visited the country in his official capacity; he waited until 2004, a year after leaving office, to accept an invitation from the Taiwanese president. Václav Klaus's foreign minister in 1995, Josef Zieleniec, gently reproached Havel for his two-China comment. Twenty-five years later, ODS is solidly behind its Vice Chair and Senate Pres. Miloš Vystrčil, who will become the first top-level Czech official to do what not even Havel would do. Vystrčil quotes Havel and sees visiting Taiwan as a continuation of the values of the Velvet Revolution. ODS's epiphany will be complete when it supports Michael Žantovský, head of the Havel Library, as a candidate for the Senate. [ Czech Republic United Nations ]
Glossary of difficult words
to reproach - to express to someone one's disapproval of or disappointment in that person's actions;
epiphany - a moment of sudden and great revelation or realization.