Pelikán fully supported the Prague Spring and organized the first live debate in common with the Austrian television ORF. When the troops of the Warsaw Pact entered Prague on 20 August 1968, he organized the resistance among journalists. In 1969, he fled the Gustáv Husák regime and was given political asylum in Italy. He was elected to the European Parliament for the PSI in 1979 and again in 1984. After the Velvet Revolution of 1989, he became a member of the Consultative Council of the then Czech president Václav Havel from 1990 to 1991. He died in Rome in 1999 after a long battle with cancer.
Bibliography
F. Caccamo, Jiří Pelikán a jeho cesta socialismem 20. století, Praha 2008, ISBN978-80-7239-226-1
"Inventario del Fondo Jiri Pelikan", in: Quaderni dell’Archivio storico 8, Roma 2003
Jiří Pelikán, Io, esule indigesto. Il Pci e la lezione del ’68 di Praga, ed. Antonio Carioti, Milano 1998, ISBN978-88-317-0599-8
Jiří Pelikán (ed.), The Czechoslovak Political Trials, 1950-54: Suppressed Report of the Dubcek Government's Commission of Inquiry, 1968, Macdonald, 1971, ISBN978-0-356-03585-7 (2nd ed. Stanford University Press, 1975, ISBN978-0-8047-0769-5)
Jiří Pelikán (transl. by G. Theiner and D. Viney), The Secret Vysocany Congress: Proceedings and Documents of the Extraordinary Fourteenth Congress of the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia, 22 August 1968, A. Lane, 1971, ISBN978-0-7139-0156-6