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Czechia reviews temporary protection rules: risks for refugees and the issue of ammunition

In Prague, changes to the terms of temporary protection that will affect hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians are being prepared; at the same time, the coalition is debating funding for ammunition. Why this matters right now — brief and to the point.

Tetiana Suchkova-Ladik

By Tetiana Suchkova-Ladik

January 9, 2026 · 2 min read

Czechia reviews temporary protection rules: risks for refugees and the issue of ammunition

What it's about

The governing parties in the Czech Republic are preparing proposals to tighten the conditions of temporary protection for Ukrainian refugees. At the same time, the coalition is discussing its position on the Czech Republic’s participation in initiatives to supply ammunition to Ukraine. The information was made public by the Speaker of the Chamber of Deputies, Tomio Okamura, after a meeting of the coalition council, writes Epoch Times.

What Okamura said

According to him, "citizens complain that Ukrainians go on vacation while at the same time using the conditions of temporary protection here and receiving various forms of support and benefits." He promised to prepare the relevant initiatives by next week, but did not give details and said the orientation would be toward examples of other EU countries that have already tightened the rules.

"Citizens complain that Ukrainians go on vacation while at the same time using the conditions of temporary protection here and receiving various forms of support and benefits."

— Tomio Okamura, Speaker of the Chamber of Deputies

Positions in Prague

The coalition council also raised the question of spending on initiatives to supply ammunition to Ukraine. Okamura said that "not a single Czech crown will be spent on the ammunition initiative." At the same time, Prime Minister Andrej Babiš said he does not intend to wind down the "Czech initiative" to supply ammunition, and President Petr Pavel promised to discuss the speaker's statements with government officials.

"Turn the page"

— Andriy Sybiha, Minister of Foreign Affairs (after a phone conversation with his Czech colleague)

Who is at risk and why this is happening

Since the start of the full-scale invasion, the Czech Republic has taken in about 725,800 Ukrainian refugees, of whom about 215,000 are children. Political pressure and public fatigue from the prolonged reception of displaced people are pushing some Czech politicians toward tougher rhetoric. Practical changes could affect access to benefits, criteria for extending protection, or requirements for residence and employment.

Possible consequences for support to Ukraine

If political declarations turn into a ban on spending money on ammunition initiatives, this will complicate the logistics and financing of specific assistance, even where individual government institutions or partners are willing to help. At the same time, different branches of power in the Czech Republic are showing divergent positions — the opposition has already announced it will collect signatures to express a vote of no confidence in the speaker, while the president and prime minister are trying to distance themselves from radical measures.

What’s next

Concrete legislative initiatives are promised in Prague by next week. They will show whether pragmatism (control mechanisms without sharp restrictions) or populism (harsh restrictions that could harm people and undermine partners' trust) will dominate Czech politics. For Ukraine it is important to follow the details — the exact wording will determine how painful the consequences will be for displaced people and for bilateral cooperation on security assistance.

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