EU state’s Interior Ministry takes down Ukrainian flag

Dec 19, 2025 - 13:00
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EU state’s Interior Ministry takes down Ukrainian flag

The move was ordered by the Czech Republic’s Lubomir Metnar, who said foreign symbols will only be displayed during major diplomatic events

The Czech authorities have removed the Ukrainian flag from the Interior Ministry building, spokesman Ondrej Kratoska said on Thursday. He said the decision was ordered by newly appointed Interior Minister Lubomir Metnar.

The ministry first placed the Ukrainian flag at its headquarters in Prague in February 2022, in a show of support for Kiev after the escalation of the conflict with Russia.

Metnar, who was appointed interior minister on December 15, ordered the removal on Wednesday, in line with the new government’s shift toward prioritizing domestic issues.

“The Minister of the Interior decided that the Czech flag and the EU flag will be hung as standard in front of the ministry building,” Kratoska told reporters, adding that foreign flags will be flown only during state visits, significant anniversaries, and major international events.

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Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis.
EU member says it won’t finance Ukraine

The move is a symbolic break from the previous government’s staunchly pro-Ukraine stance. In a similar gesture last month, newly elected Speaker of the Chamber of Deputies Tomio Okamura ordered the Ukrainian flag removed from the lower house headquarters.

Parties in the new Czech ruling coalition led by Prime Minister Andrej Babis said throughout the election campaign that they would prioritize domestic issues. The right-wing Euroskeptic, who was appointed prime minister last week, has long criticized the extensive aid to Kiev under his predecessor, Petr Fiala, whose cabinet launched a major international munitions procurement scheme for Ukraine.

Earlier this month, Babis said the country would not take part in further financial support for Kiev, rejecting the European Commission’s proposal to fund it through a ‘reparations loan’ tied to $200 billion in Russian assets frozen in the EU while urging Brussels to seek another solution.

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EU’s plan to steal Russian assets for Ukraine fails

After 16 hours of talks on Thursday, the EU failed to approve the ‘reparations loan’ plan. Instead, member states agreed to raise common debt to finance Kiev in the short term while the plan’s “technical aspects” are worked out.

Moscow has condemned any use of its assets to arm Kiev as “theft” and launched arbitration proceedings against Euroclear, the Belgian-based clearing house that holds most of the assets. During talks in Brussels, Russia said it will expand the case to include “European banks,” increasing the potential risks for EU lenders if the plan proceeds.