The Star Malaysia

Czech PM draws ire as rapeseed blossoms

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PRAGUE: Shiny yellow rapeseed plants have sprung to life in the Czech Republic and angry residents blame their billionair­e leader for infesting the country with the lucrative plant.

“People say it stinks, it’s ugly yellow, looks invasive. But you can’t blame the plant – the problem is in the way we’re using it,” says natural scientist Jakub Hruska from the Czech Academy of Sciences.

“By growing rapeseed we ruin the countrysid­e, water, soil, biodiversi­ty,” he said, owing to the harmful effects of using too much fertiliser and herbicide.

With fields of rapeseed covering 16% of the Czech Republic’s arable land, it tops the charts as the European Union’s keenest grower.

Prime Minister Andrej Babis, who leads a minority centre-left Cabinet, is widely seen as the chief benefactor because he made his fortune as owner of the Agrofert group, which covers the entire rapeseed-processing cycle.

Agrofert’s units grow rapeseed, produce fertiliser­s and pesticides, sell farming technology and process rapeseed into fatty acid methyl ester (FAME), or biodiesel, which is added to diesel fuel under a Czech law inspired by an EU directive on biofuels.

“The fertiliser­s and herbicides business is flourishin­g and Agrofert is there as a very tough and able player,” says Hruska.

The second wealthiest Czech, Babis claims he has transferre­d Agrofert to a trust to avoid a conflict of interest as prime minister and tycoon.

But the European Union recently voiced doubts about the move and launched a probe into Babis’ dual role as politician earmarking subsidies and tycoon getting them.

 ?? — AFP ?? Sea of yellow: A file picture of a rapeseed field in full bloom next to solar panels near the Czech city of Prostejov.
— AFP Sea of yellow: A file picture of a rapeseed field in full bloom next to solar panels near the Czech city of Prostejov.

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