In 1969, the order came to use live ammunition
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Petr Arnet was born on June 23, 1947 in Prague. His father Emil Arnet was an employee of the Czechoslovak Sugar Industry Council, after February 1948 the communists nationalized the company and his father worked in the working professions for the rest of his life. His grandfather, Augustýn Bouška, lost his dairy and the house he owned. Petr Arnet grew up in the Lesser Town, graduated from the Smíchov Secondary Industrial School and in 1967 joined the army. There he lived through the occupation by the Warsaw Pact troops. As a soldier he was on standby and in the weeks after the occupation he helped the Public Security forces to maintain order in the country. A year later, in August 1969, he was deployed in the forces cracking down on demonstrators. According to his testimony, an order came to distribute live ammunition to the soldiers, which, as a platoon commander, he refused to do despite the threat of the prosecutor. He was investigated over the incident. After the war he worked at the OPBH and later at Tuzex. He studied law during the socialist era and took up the field after the Velvet Revolution. In 2009, he suffered a stroke that left him paralysed in part of his body and he stopped working. In 2025 he was living in Prague.