Veselý told Práva that he had not violated anything. “I followed the legal interpretation of the Ministry of the Interior, according to which the deputies do not have to have a veil if a two-meter spacing is ensured,” Veselý said.
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On the contrary, the mayor claims that this interpretation has lost its validity since Wednesday due to the tightening of hygienic measures.
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“I urged him to put on respiratory protection, that if we demand it from the citizens, he should respect it too. But he said he didn’t have to, so all he had to do was call the police, “said the mayor.
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After the police arrived, Veselý put on his veil. After documenting the dispute and leaving, he took it off again. Only when there was a threat that some deputies would leave in protest and the meeting would have to be dissolved did he put on the veil.
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“It simply came to our notice then. He said that if fear is to kill us, he would sit in that veil, “the mayor added. She also lamented that he was a provocateur. “In principle, he speaks out and votes against everything and everyone,” she added.
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He already had a coronavirus
Veselý added that he was right. “My propagation coefficient is zero. I put on the veil when I was close to other people, “Veselý said, admitting that he had suffered from covid-19 in the past because he became infected by a member of his family. According to current scientific assumptions, it should not be infectious, at least for some time.
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However, the mayor emphasized that an extraordinary measure of the Ministry of Health had abolished the Ministry’s earlier interpretation from Wednesday. “And it’s just fine, it would really be upside down if everyone had to have veils and the deputies had some privileges,” the mayor added.
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Police spokeswoman Pavla Jiroušková told Práva that the police had documented the whole incident. As no crime was found, the case was referred to a sanitary station. She will now decide whether the rebel representative was in law or whether he would have to be punished.
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