In Prague, thousands are celebrating the Velvet Revolution’s 25th anniversary. The event is also an appeal for Czech President Zeman to resign. An egg thrown at Zeman hit Germany’s president instead.

via @piterino90

via @piterino90

DW-DE  Thousands gathered Monday on Prague’s Wenceslas Square, where, exactly 25 years ago, police assaulted protesters, precipitating the Velvet Revolution a week after demonstrators toppled the Berlin Wall 315 kilometers (190 miles) north.

Preceded by a November 16 protest in Bratislava, the capital of Slovakia, the demonstrations of November 17, 1989, had begun on the campus of Charles University with fiery speeches against the Soviet-style communist regime.

Downtown, police blocked the street from both sides, squeezing the protesters with armed vehicles before attacking them with truncheons, injuring hundreds but breaking the spirits of few. The crowds grew in the days that followed, culminating with the resignation of the entire leadership of the Czechoslovak Communist Party on November 27, 1989 (pictured).

On December 29, the Federal Assembly made playwright Vaclav Havel Czechoslovakia’s first democratic president since Stalin-approved Klement Gottwald took office in 1948. Havel helped Czechoslovakia – and, from 1993, following the Velvet Divorce, the Czech Republic – become a champion of human rights.

Many Czechs believe that the current president, Milos Zeman, has betrayed the legacy of the playwright-president, who died in 2011.

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Zeman has supported Russia on Ukraine, praised China and downplayed Soviet-era police brutality. In a recent radio interview, he called Pussy Riot a pornographic band and used a vulgar term to describe their name, concluding that the artists, sentenced to Russian labor camps for their protests, were not political prisoners. Critics call these missteps proof that Zeman has worn out his welcome in Prague castle.