Jaromír Štětina is a Czechoslovakian journalist, writer and politician.
Education
During 1961-1967, Štětina studied at the University of Economics, Prague. After being fired from Mladá Fronta, Štětina worked as a geodesist, and while working, studied geology long-distance at Charles University in Prague, during which he organised 25 geologic or sport tours to Siberia and Asia.
Career
He is known to most as a war correspondent from the conflict areas of the former Soviet Union. In 1968, Štětina started working as a journalist for the newspaper Mladá Fronta, his work there coincided with the soviet occupation of Czechoslovakia, during which the Soviet army seized control of Mladá Fronta. Štětina was subsequently fired due to his disagreement over the Warsaw Pact armies entering Czechoslovakia.
During the same years, Štětina wrote his most famous book, "South matyldou po Indu", on the topic of rafting.
In 1987 Štětina started engaging in public speakings. and In 1989, co-founded the syndicate of journalists, ultimately resuming his work as a journalist, at the re-established newspaper Lidové noviny. In 1990 Štětina started working as a foreign correspondent in Moscow, where he covered numerous conflicts in the former Soviet Union.
In 1992, he founded the foundation Lidových novin. During 1993-1994 he was editor-in-chief of Lidové noviny.
In 1994, he founded the independent journalist agency Epicentrum, dedicated to war reporting, with fellow journalist Petra Procházková.
Štětina has specialised in military conflicts in Europe, Asia and Africa of which he has covered more than 20. Furthermore, Stetina is a prolific author, having published 10 books, as well as dozens of documentaries, and countless articles
Politics
Štětina is a founding signatory of the Prague Declaration on European Conscience and Communism.
Membership
Since 2014, Štětina has served as a member of the European Parliament for the Czechoslovakian Republic.