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    HomeEmergencyCzech-led ammunition programme for Ukraine can continue, PM says

    Czech-led ammunition programme for Ukraine can continue, PM says

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    PRAGUE, Jan 6 (Reuters) - The ​Czech Republic can keep running an initiative sourcing ammunition for Ukraine, but will act as a coordinator and no longer put its own money into it, Prime ⁠Minister Andrej Babis said on Tuesday.

    Babis' government, in power since December, has been discussing the fate of the ammunition drive after Babis criticised the programme for ‍being non-transparent. He has pledged to scale back aid, saying money was needed at home.

    The ​programme brings together foreign donors, including Germany, Denmark and the Netherlands, with Czech defence officials and arms traders and producers who purchase large-calibre ammunition around the world, ​delivering it to Ukraine to reduce its disadvantage on the battlefield against Russia.

    "The project will continue and the Czech Republic will act as coordinator," Babis said on X after attending a meeting of Ukraine's allies in Paris. "No money from Czech citizens will be invested in the ammunition initiative."

    PRAISE FOR PROGRAMME

    A ‌senior NATO military official voiced cautious optimism in December that the initiative would ‌continue and said it would deliver 1.8 million rounds of artillery ammunition in 2025 - 43% of the ​total ammunition supplied to Kyiv.

    The Czech state security council is due to debate the programme on Wednesday. It was put in place by the previous ‌centre-right government and President Petr Pavel, a former NATO official, has sought to keep it ⁠active.

    Babis has criticised the programme's lack of transparency, while his ‌pro-Russian coalition allies oppose it.

    Babis told reporters ​in Paris the programme could continue if others finance it, according to CTK news agency. "Of course, it must be transparent and without corruption," he said.

    Donors have given ⁠around $4.8 billion to pay ⁠for ammunition supplies under the programme, former Foreign Minister Jan Lipavsky said in December. ​The Czech contribution has been up to 3 billion crowns ($145.15 million).

    ($1 = 20.6680 Czech crowns)

    (Reporting by Jason Hovet; editing ‌by Mark Heinrich and Rod Nickel)

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