In the Czech Republic, a teacher was convicted for spreading fake news about "Ukrainian Nazis" in her lessons.


In Prague, a teacher was convicted for justifying Russian aggression
In Prague, a former Czech language teacher, Martina Bednarzova, was sentenced to seven months of probation for publicly justifying Russian aggression against Ukraine. She was also banned from teaching for three years and required to undergo a media literacy course. This was reported by 'Glavcom' citing the Czech publication 'iRozhlas'.
Her controversial statements were made in April 2022 during a stylistics lesson at the Prague primary school Na Dlouhém lán. Bednarzova claimed that 'for the Russians, it was a justified way to resolve the situation,' denied the fighting in Kyiv, and described Czech television news as 'propaganda linked to billionaire Soros.'
This was harmful precisely because she imposed her beliefs on 13-14 year old children, who could not provide a decent counter-argument- explained Judge Eliska Matyashova. She emphasized that if Bednarzova had expressed these thoughts among friends, she would likely not have been punished. 'But as a teacher, she abused her position,' the judge added.
During the lesson, the woman also spread fakes about 'Ukrainian Nazis' who 'killed children' and 'skinned people alive.' She claimed that 'Russians have been killed in Donbas since 2014.' Students tried to argue against, but the teacher defended her position. She was dismissed from the school in May 2022.
The court held the teacher accountable
In Prague, the former Czech language teacher was convicted for justifying Russian aggression against Ukraine. The woman was sentenced to probation, banned from teaching for three years, and forced to take a media literacy course. During the lesson, she spread fake news about events in Donbas, causing outrage among students and leading to her dismissal.
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