"Current in small numbers"@en . "yes"@en . "450.0"^^ . . "1995"^^ . . "2011"^^ . . . "3.8"^^ . . "5.56"^^ . . "980"^^ . . "Various Croatian forces; Libya"@en . . "The APS-95 was an assault rifle manufactured in Croatia by Kon\u010Dar-Arma d.o.o since 1995 and offered for export up to at least 2007 (the year when the Kon\u010Dar-Arma website, where the APS-95 had been featured, disappeared from the web). The manufacturing company, a subsidiary of the Croatian ARMA-GRUPA Corporation, has been manufacturing the ERO and Mini-ERO submachine guns (copies of the Israeli UZI and Mini-UZI respectively) since the mid-1990s. The APS-95 was developed under request of the Croatian Army, which wanted to shift as soon as possible from the then-issued Yugoslavian-made 7.62x39mm Zastava M70 assault rifles to a service rifle chambered for the NATO-standard 5.56x45mm cartridge. During the Croatian War of Independence, the Croatian side had been supplied by the Croatian business"@en . . . "APS-95"@en . "1.5"^^ . "650"^^ . . . "Unknown"@en . "Kon\u010Dar-Arma d.o.o"@en . "35"^^ . "The APS-95 was an assault rifle manufactured in Croatia by Kon\u010Dar-Arma d.o.o since 1995 and offered for export up to at least 2007 (the year when the Kon\u010Dar-Arma website, where the APS-95 had been featured, disappeared from the web). The manufacturing company, a subsidiary of the Croatian ARMA-GRUPA Corporation, has been manufacturing the ERO and Mini-ERO submachine guns (copies of the Israeli UZI and Mini-UZI respectively) since the mid-1990s. The APS-95 was developed under request of the Croatian Army, which wanted to shift as soon as possible from the then-issued Yugoslavian-made 7.62x39mm Zastava M70 assault rifles to a service rifle chambered for the NATO-standard 5.56x45mm cartridge. During the Croatian War of Independence, the Croatian side had been supplied by the Croatian businessman Antun Kika\u0161 of several batches of the Vektor R4, a South African copy of the Israeli IMI Galil assault rifle. The Croatian fighters appreciated the weapon and wanted a locally-manufactured version of it as the new standard Croatian Army rifle. The APS-95 was officially adopted by the Croatian Army around 1998, acquired and distributed in very small quantities before budgetary constraints stopped procurement. The manufacturer tried to push the APS-95 on the international market for several years, with no success. The number of rifles manufactured, and the quantity adopted by the Croatian Forces are unknown to date; so is the current status of the weapon. Photographs and video from the 2011 Libyan civil war show that some purchases were made by the Libyan Gaddafi regieme."@en . "APS-95"@en . "1972"^^ .