A Look Back At The Deadly 2014 Czech Depot Blast That Prague Is Now Blaming On Russian Agents

A pyrotechnician inspects the site after the deadly blast in 2014. There is "reasonable suspicion regarding a role of members of Russian military intelligence…in the explosion," Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis said on April 17.

The blast set off 50 metric tons of stored ammunition. Two people died.

A drone inspects the blast site. Two months after the first explosion, another 13 tons of ammunition detonated at the same site.

The cause of the blasts has never been publicly revealed. It was unclear if there was new intelligence that prompted Czech authorities to make the announcement or why the government decided to move now against the Russians.

The Czech news magazine Respekt reported that the ammunition and weaponry that was destroyed was intended for Ukraine, which in 2014 was battling Russia-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine. The fighting in eastern Ukraine continues. More than 25 Ukrainian soldiers have been killed so far this year.

The president of the Czech Senate, Milos Vystrcil, a longtime critic of Babis, suggested that the explosion could be considered an act of "state terrorism."

"It is necessary to react clearly, confidently, and harshly on it," Vystrcil told reporters.

On December 6, 2014, pyrotechnicians managed to remove an artillery shell wedged in the roof of a damaged building near the depot.

Local residents were evacuated from around Vrbetice days after the blast due to dangers identified by pyrotechnicians.

Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis (right) and Interior Minister and acting Foreign Minister Jan Hamacek talk to reporters at an emergency press conference late on April 17. Babis blamed the blasts on the Russian military intelligence agency known as the GRU, and specifically on a secretive unit known as Unit 29155.

Unit 29155 has been linked to a series of attempted assassination plots and other sabotage across Europe, including the 2018 poisoning of Russian former double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter in England. Czech police also announced they were seeking two suspected Russian agents carrying passports in the names of Aleksandr Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov. The names match those of the two men Britain blamed for the Skripal poisonings. The suspects have been identified as Aleksandr Mishkin and Anatoly Chepiga, who both reportedly worked for Unit 29155.

The wall outside the Russian Embassy in Prague was sprayed with ketchup overnight on April 18 during a protest staged to call attention to the deaths of the two people in the 2014 explosion. Moscow warned about its response to the expulsions. "Prague is well aware of what comes after such hocus-pocus," Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said.

Czechs protested the news of the alleged Russian involvement in the 2014 arms depot blast outside the Russian Embassy in Prague on April 18. The sign reads: "For Your And Our Freedom."

Police detain a counterprotester outside the Russian Embassy in Prague during an anti-Russia protest on April 18.