Historians Péter Apor, Sándor Horváth and James Mark write that the institute is "closely tied to a right-wing anticommunist subculture".
Kundera controversy In 2008, the Institute for the Study of Totalitarian Regimes received media attention when a researcher published a controversial claim that the writer
Milan Kundera had been a
police informant who, in 1950, gave information leading to the arrest of a guest in a student hall of residence. The arrested man, Miroslav Dvořáček, was sentenced to 22 years imprisonment as a spy. He served 14 years of his sentence, which included hard labour in a
uranium mine. The Institute endorsed the authenticity of the 1950 police report on which the account was based, but indicated that it was not possible to establish some key facts. Kundera denied his involvement saying, "I object in the strongest manner to these accusations, which are pure lies".
Raymond Mawby In 2012, the
BBC reported that one of its researchers, who visited Prague in connection with a programme about a putative Czech attempt to compromise
Edward Heath, came across an extensive secret service file on Conservative MP
Raymond Mawby. There was evidence that Mawby sold information to the Czechs in the 1960s, although as Mawby was deceased it was not possible to hear "his side" of the story. ==Directors==