Donors have given $4.5 billion to Czech ammunition scheme for Ukraine, minister says

Donors have given $4.5 billion to Czech ammunition scheme for Ukraine, minister says
Foreign donors have provided 93.3 billion crowns ($4.5 billion) to a Czech-led initiative to find and deliver large-calibre ammunition to Ukraine, and the Czech Republic has contributed 1.7 billion crowns, Defence Minister Jana Cernochova said on Wednesday. (Reuters/File)
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Updated 15 October 2025
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Donors have given $4.5 billion to Czech ammunition scheme for Ukraine, minister says

Donors have given $4.5 billion to Czech ammunition scheme for Ukraine, minister says
  • Increased ammunition supplies in 2024 and 2025 have helped reduce Ukraine’s disadvantage compared with Russia on the frontline
  • Fiala said this year’s supplies should reach 1.8 million shells

PRAGUE: Foreign donors have provided 93.3 billion crowns ($4.5 billion) to a Czech-led initiative to find and deliver large-calibre ammunition to Ukraine, and the Czech Republic has contributed 1.7 billion crowns, Defense Minister Jana Cernochova said on Wednesday.
Increased ammunition supplies in 2024 and 2025 have helped reduce Ukraine’s disadvantage compared with Russia on the frontline, although it is unclear whether the Czech action will continue under the next government.
Prime Minister Petr Fiala said at a news conference with Cernochova that the Czech Republic has arranged supplies of 3.7 million artillery rounds to Ukraine, including 1.3 million so far this year.
Funding for the supplies has come from the initiative, as well as the yield on frozen Russian assets, bilateral cooperation and direct Ukrainian purchases, he said.
Fiala said this year’s supplies should reach 1.8 million shells.
The program matches Czech arms producers and traders with potential sellers who often prefer to remain unnamed, and foreign donors.
Andrej Babis, whose ANO party won a parliamentary election on October 3-4 and is in talks to form a cabinet with two fringe parties, has criticized the initiative.
Before the election, Babis said he would bring it to an end, but he has been less clear since his victory and after President Petr Pavel called on parties to keep the program running.
Babis has, without giving any details, called the initiative non-transparent and overpriced, and said arms traders have made too much profit on it, while the outgoing government has said it is transparent to the donors providing the funding.
Babis said after the election that he would also stop any Czech budget-paid military aid to Ukraine.
The government said on Wednesday that total Czech military aid to Ukraine has reached 17.4 billion crowns, combining donations of 390 pieces of old equipment including tanks or helicopters, contributions to international funding schemes, the ammunition initiative and purchases of new equipment.
In return, the Czechs have received funds and equipment worth 25 billion crowns in back-fill schemes which included US helicopters and Leopard 2A4 tanks from Germany.


Greek coast guard head prosecuted over migrant tragedy: rights groups

Greek coast guard head prosecuted over migrant tragedy: rights groups
Updated 13 sec ago
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Greek coast guard head prosecuted over migrant tragedy: rights groups

Greek coast guard head prosecuted over migrant tragedy: rights groups
State security personnel are rarely sanctioned in Greece
Survivors on board the rusty and overloaded trawler Adriana said the coast guard failed to respond adequately when it capsized

ATEHNS: The head of Greece’s coast guard has been prosecuted over the country’s deadliest migrant shipwreck which claimed hundreds of lives, rights groups representing the survivors and victims said Friday.
“By order of the prosecutor of the court of appeal, criminal proceedings are to be brought against four senior officers of the coast guard, including its current chief,” Trifonas Kontizas, the groups said in a joint statement.
The move in connection to the 2023 sinking follows similar proceedings initiated for 17 members of the coast guard in May.
State security personnel are rarely sanctioned in Greece.
Survivors on board the rusty and overloaded trawler Adriana said the coast guard failed to respond adequately when it capsized and sank on the night of June 13, 2023 off Pylos, southern Greece, en route to Italy.
It was carrying more than 750 people, according to the United Nations, but only 82 bodies were found.
The felony charges include failure to rescue and assist persons in distress and manslaughter by negligence, the rights groups said Friday.
The latest case had originally been shelved by the prosecutor of the Piraeus Naval Court but survivors lodged an appeal.
Among the 104 survivors, dozens have filed a group criminal complaint, alleging the coast guard took hours to mount a response when the boat was in trouble, despite warnings from EU border agency Frontex and the NGO Alarm Phone.
The boat was sailing from Tobruk, Libya to Italy. As well as Syrians and Palestinians, it was carrying nearly 350 Pakistanis, according to the Pakistani government.
Survivors said the coast guard eventually responded and was towing the vessel when it finally capsized and sank 47 nautical miles off the coast of Pylos.
The prosecutor has said that “the sudden and powerful towing by the coast guard vessel appears to be the only possible and active cause” that led the trawler to capsize.
The coast guard has said it communicated with people on board who “refused any help,” rendering any rescue operation in high seas risky.
But lawyers for the survivors have said the coast guard chose to dispatch just a patrol boat from Crete — and not a larger rescue tugboat stationed closer by at the port of Gytheion in the Peloponnese region.
The patrol boat’s voyage data recorder was damaged and was only repaired two months after the accident, they said — nor was there any video footage from the patrol boat.