Czech Republic expels 18 Russian envoys over 2014 ammunition depot explosion

Czech police searching for two men suspected of carrying out Salisbury nerve agent poisoning in 2018

A police car at the Russian Federation embassy building  in Prague, Czech Republic. Photograph: Gabriel Kuchta/Getty Images
A police car at the Russian Federation embassy building in Prague, Czech Republic. Photograph: Gabriel Kuchta/Getty Images

The Czech Republic is expelling 18 Russian diplomats over suspicions that Russian intelligence services were involved in an ammunition depot explosion in 2014, its government said on Saturday.

Acting Czech foreign minister Jan Hamacek said the 18 Russian embassy staff identified as secret service personnel would be ordered to leave within 48 hours.

The central European country is a Nato and EU member state, and the expulsions and allegations have triggered its biggest row with Russia since the end of the communist era in 1989.

Its actions could prompt Russia to consider closing the Czech Republic’s embassy in Moscow, a diplomatic source cited by Russian news agency Interfax suggested.

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Czech prime minister Andrej Babis said in a briefing shown live on television that there was “well-grounded suspicion about the involvement of officers of the Russian intelligence service GRU . . . in the explosion of an ammunitions depot in the Vrbetice area.”

Several explosions shook the Vrbetice depot, 330 km (205 miles) southeast of Prague, in October 2014, killing two employees of a private company that was renting the site from a state military organisation.

Mr Babis called the circumstances “unprecedented and scandalous”, while a Russian legislator cited by Interfax described his allegation as absurd.

The US embassy in Prague said on Twitter that Washington “stands with its steadfast ally, the Czech Republic. We appreciate their significant action to impose costs on Russia for its dangerous actions on Czech soil.”

Mr Hamacek drew a parallel with the poisoning of Russian spy Sergei Skripal in Britain in 2018, and Czech police said separately they were searching for two men carrying Russian passports in connection with serious criminal activity in the names of Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov.

Those were the aliases used by two Russian military intelligence officers who British prosecutors charged with Mr Skripal’s attempted murder. They and Moscow both denied involvement.

Mr Skripal and his daughter Yulia were poisoned with a nerve agent in the English city of Salisbury in March 2018.

The attack prompted the biggest wave of diplomatic expulsions between Moscow and the West since the Cold War.

Czech police said Mr Petrov and Mr Boshirov, whose whose birth names British government documents have given as Alexander Mishkin and Anatoly Chepigas, had also used a Moldovan passport in the name of Nicolai Popa and a Tajik one issued in the name of Ruslan Tabarov.

Police said both men were believed to have been in the Czech Republic from October 11th until October 16th, 2014, the day of the explosion. They were first in Prague and later in the eastern regions, which is where the depot is based. – Reuters