is coming from Czech Republic. More exactly from Uherský Brod, the Česká Zbrojovka (CZUB) factory, where 80,000 pieces of the 9 mm CZ P-07 Duty are produced to be delivered to Egyptian police in 2014.
Janes reported that "Ceská zbrojovka (CZ) plans to launch its new 9 mm P-09 pistol onto the export market at the IWA arms fair in early March 2014." On 17 February 2014, Radio Prague announced: 'The Egyptian interior ministry has asked the Czech arms producer Česká zbrojovka Uherský Brod to supply the Egyptian police with another 80,000 pistols, following a delivery of 50,000 pistols last year. The request for a new delivery was made several days ago, according to the E15 daily. The orders are worth hundreds of millions of crowns. Česka zbrojovka is one of the biggest Czech arms manufacturers. The company produced 181,000 arms in 2012 and its sales reached 2.1 billion crowns.'The CZ has won the international tender to supply 50,000 pistols to the Egyptian interior ministry in May last year. The planned delivery consisted of 50,000 9 mm CZ P-07 Duty, several hundred 9 mm Scorpion EVO III submachine guns and 'some' CZ 805 BREN A1 assault rifles, according to the firearmblog.
The exports had to be suspended then due to the clashes between the government forces and the pro-Morsi protesters. Now, increasing the quantity, first CZ received an order for extra 29,000 9 mm CZ P-07 Duty.
Then for another 50,000 pistols that another European firm was to supply.
This year the 1600 workers of the czech firearm company are to manufacture 223,000 pieces of weapons, according to E15.
Egypt has announced that it purchased 50,000 9mm CZ P-07 Duty, “several hundred” 9mm Scorpion EVO III submachine guns and an unspecified number of CZ 805 BREN A1 assault rifles from Ceska Zbrojovka.
The CZ P-09 pistol, called the Duty is one of the most reliable and most wanted service arm beating competitors like the western Glock or Sigsauer and its price reflects its undoubtedly good rename.