Malacañang on Monday joined the rest of the world in condoling with the Czech Republic following the death of its former president, Vaclav Havel, on Sunday.
“We mourn the loss of Mr. Vaclav Havel and we offer our condolences to the Czech people on his passing,” presidential spokesperson Edwin Lacierda said.
Lacierda hailed Havel, a dissident playwright in the 1970s, for being “a shining light in the fight against communism.”
“He was able to provide leadership during those troubled times and he was able to shepherd the Czech Republic,” Lacierda said.
Havel presided over then Czechoslovakia’s transition to democracy and a free market economy. He also oversaw Czechoslovakia’s peaceful split in 1993 into the Czech Republic and Slovakia.
On April 4, 1995, Havel and his wife, Olga, came to the Philippines for a four-day visit.
Havel met with then President Fidel V. Ramos and other key Edsa People Power personalities, such as Manila Archbishop Jaime Cardinal Sin and former President Corazon Aquino.
Havel also attended a staging of his 1965 play, “The Memorandum,” a satire on bureaucratic gibberish, at the Cultural Center of the Philippines.
In a press conference after the play, he addressed Filipino writers and intellectuals, telling them that they “should not fear to enter politics.” With Lawrence de Guzman, Inquirer Research