GETTY / EPA Protestors take to the streets in Prague, Czech Republic, this evening

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Photos show thousands of people waving Czech and EU flags and anti-Communist banners in Prague and other cities in the country this evening. The Czech Republic’s lower house of parliament today narrowly backed Zdenek Ondracek to head its police oversight committee - the first time a Communist lawmaker has held such a post since the fall of communism nearly three decades ago. Mr Ondracek was supported by Prime Minister Andrej Babis and his ANO party, who are already facing police charges of illegally obtaining European Union funds a decade ago.

EPA Protestors have flooded the streets of Prague in a demonstration against Prime Minister Andrej Babis

Protestors have flooded the streets of Prague chanting “we’ve had enough”, with citizens blaming both Mr Ondracek and Mr Babis for the civil unrest. One protestor said: “I am here because of Ondracek, who was a member of a police force that beat demonstrators in the Velvet Revolution. “In the wider context, it is the election of Babis."

EPA Thousands of protestors chanted 'we've had enough' in demonstrations in Prague this evening

Mr Babis has had trouble installing a government despite being the runaway winner of an election last October. His single-party cabinet lost a confidence vote in January. He is reliant upon Mr Ondracek, who was involved in the Communism-era police service and also fought to clear his name following links with the brutal Communist-era secret police. In 1989, Mr Ondracek's police unit used water cannon, clubs and dogs to disperse anti-regime protests.