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5 held w/ plane full of heavy weapons from North Korea

CougarKing

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The 5 men held are from Kazakhstan and Belarus, even if the weapons are from North Korea, so I thought this deserved a seperate thread from the North Korea superthread.

http://ca.news.yahoo.com/s/afp/091212/world/thailand_nkorea_belarus_kazakhstan_airport_weapons_crime

BANGKOK (AFP) - Thailand Saturday detained five men after they made an emergency landing in Bangkok with a cargo plane from North Korea full of heavy weapons, ministers and officials said. The crew requested to land for refuelling at Don Mueang airport, where inspectors discovered a haul of weaponry including firearms and missiles, said deputy prime minister Suthep Thaungsuban. "They declared that the goods on board the flight were oil drilling equipment but when we examined we found it was all weaponry," Suthep, who is also in charge of national security, told reporters.
Police said four of the men are from Kazakhstan and one is from Belarus.
"There were a lot of weapons such as rocket-propelled grenades, missiles and other war weapons," said Lieutenant General Thangai Prasajaksattru, commander of Thailand's Central Investigation Bureau.
Air Force spokesman Captain Montol Suchookorn and special branch police said the chartered plane originated in North Korea's capital Pyongyang.

"According to my information, the flight originated from North Korea. It was a cargo flight that requested to land at the civilian side of the airport," Montol said, adding that the air force was guarding the aircraft.
Local media reported that the plane was carrying 40 tonnes of weaponry and was believed to be registered in Georgia.

Suthep told reporters the case would require careful examination as it involved several countries.
"This case will proceed carefully as there are many parties involved... everything must proceed transparently," Suthep said.
A translator from the Russian Embassy would visit the suspects on their request early Sunday, police said.
Prime minister Abhisit Vejjajiva confirmed the arrests came as a result of foreign intelligence.
National television channels reported that US officials had tipped off Thai authorities but a spokesman for the US Embassy in Bangkok, Michael Turner, said he was unaware of the incident.
"Officials will proceed according to the law. This is a case of a false declaration of goods," said Abhisit.
"It has no impact on Thailand's internal security. This is a joint collaboration of intelligence. We received a tip-off," he added.
Government spokesman Panitan Wattanayakorn said the weapons had been transferred to Takhli air force base in the central Thai province of Nakhon Sawan.
Thailand's airports authority said the domestic Don Mueang airport remained open to passengers.
 
I missed it: where were they heading before they declared the emergency?


EDIT:
Did a quick search on news.google. 
The flight schedule says the plane was headed for Colombo, Sri Lanka. Security authorities suspect the weapons could be destined for Sri Lanka or the Middle East.
From here
 
Technoviking said:
I missed it: where were they heading before they declared the emergency?


EDIT:
Did a quick search on news.google.  From here

More information with this update about the plane's Sri Lanka destination:



http://www.wtopnews.com/?nid=105&sid=1847576

Weapons-carrying cargo plane headed for Sri Lanka
December 23, 2009 - 11:05am

By DENIS D. GRAY
Associated Press Writer

BANGKOK (AP) - A plane seized in Bangkok with a cache of North Korean weapons wasn't headed to Iran, a senior Thai police official said Wednesday, contradicting a report from arms trafficking experts.

Separately, the five-man crew insisted their final destination was Sri Lanka and not Iran, their lawyer said after visiting the jailed men.

Defense attorney Somsak Saithong told The Associated Press the crew also denied any knowledge of accused international weapons trafficker Victor Bout, who is in the same prison battling extradition to the United States on terrorism charges.

There has been much speculation since the plane was impounded Dec. 12 about where it was headed and whether it was linked to Bout.

"They told me they don't know Victor Bout," Somsak said. He quoted the five men _ four from Kazakhstan and one from Belarus _ as saying their flight plan called for a refueling stop in Bangkok before flying on to Sri Lanka. They have been charged with illegal arms possession.

Police Col. Supisarn Bhaddinarinath said investigators have so far found no evidence that the aircraft was bound for Iran, or any link between Bout and the arms seizure.

But according to a flight plan seen by arms trafficking researchers, the aircraft was chartered by Hong Kong-based Union Top Management Ltd. to fly oil industry spare parts from Pyongyang to Tehran, Iran, with several other stops, including Bangkok, Colombo in Sri Lanka, Azerbaijan and Ukraine.

Union Top was set up by a company called R & G Management Consultancy, according to a woman who answered the door at Union Top's registered office. She said she didn't know a man called Dario Cabreros Garmendia, who signed Union Top's incorporation in Hong Kong on Nov. 2, and did not know how to reach anyone at the company.

After answering several questions she asked The Associated Press reporter to leave the office.

Garmendia listed Barcelona, Spain, as his address on another document related to the set up of the company.

Thai authorities, acting on a U.S. tip, impounded the Ilyushin Il-76 cargo plane after uncovering 35 tons of weapons, reportedly including explosives, rocket-propelled grenades and components for surface-to-air missiles.

"They always deny any involvement with the weapons or any charges they are accused of. They told me that their job was just to fly the cargo plane to its destination. They don't know about or had anything to do with the cargo itself," said Somsak.

The U.N. imposed sanctions in June banning North Korea from exporting any arms after the communist regime conducted a nuclear test and test-fired missiles. Impoverished North Korea is believed to earn hundreds of millions of dollars every year by selling missiles, missile parts and other weapons to countries such as Iran, Syria and Myanmar.

Daniel Pinkston, a Seoul-based North Korea watcher for the International Crisis Group think tank, said while the incident remains murky, it was clear that U.N. sanctions have not stopped North Korea from trying to engage in arms sales.

"It's a major source of foreign exchange and earnings for the Korean People's Army," Pinkston said. "I don't think anyone believed they were going to desist or just say, 'OK, well, you guys wrote up a tough resolution so we're gonna get out of this business now.'"

But he said cases such as the Bangkok seizure will likely have an impact on those willing to purchase North Korean weapons.

"It's very clear that if you are a buyer you run a risk of losing your cargo or getting intercepted," he said.

The Thai government has been investigating the arms cache and says it will send the results to the United Nations.

Somsak said the five men complained that they had been forced by police investigators into signing documents written in Thai. They asked to be provided with a translator.

The report on the flight plan from the nonprofit groups TransArms in the United States and IPIS of Belgium was funded by the Belgian government and Amnesty International. It could not be independently verified.

The report says the plane was registered to Air West, a cargo transport company in the former Soviet republic of Georgia. Asked to comment on whether the plane was bound for Tehran, company owner Levan Kakabadze told The Associated Press he was unaware of the plane's final destination.

Speaking by telephone from Batumi, Georgia, Kakabadze said he leased the plane to the SP Trading company and could bear no responsibility for what happened next.

Researchers say the plane's previous registration documents link it to Air Cess and Centrafrican Airlines, which are allegedly connected to Bout, who has been in prison in Thailand since he was arrested March 6, 2008.

But the report, which was released Monday, said there was not enough evidence to link the plan definitively to Bout.

___

Associated Press writers Deborah Seward in Paris, Aoife White in Brussels, Aida Sultanova in Baku, Azerbaijan, Misha Dzhindzhikhashvili in Tbilisi, Georgia, Kelly Olsen in Seoul, and Min Lee in Hong Kong contributed to this report.
[
 
An update:

Associated Press report link

SHYMKENT, Kazakhstan – The trail of the plane busted in Thailand last month for allegedly smuggling North Korean weapons to Iran leads back to a small air freight company housed near an old Soviet airfield on the edge of the Kazakh steppe.
The aging Russian plane's odyssey took it through a web of companies, financiers and air cargo carriers with addresses stretching from New York through the Persian Gulf to New Zealand, an Associated Press investigation has found.

The persistence of carriers willing to ship anything anywhere for a price — even to countries under international sanctions like Iran and North Korea — has frustrated global efforts to stem the flow of illegal arms.

Alexander Zykov, whose crew was flying the plane grounded in Bangkok, denies he had anything to do with the seized shipment of 35 tons of explosives, rocket-propelled grenades, surface-to-air missiles and other weaponry.But family members say the plane's pilot and crew were working for Zykov's East Wing air freight company when they were taken into custody. And crewmen who have worked for Zykov told The Associated Press that they have flown cargo on rattletrap Russian planes into conflict zones such as Sudan and Somalia.
(...)
 
Thailand now will deport the crew of the said plane.

Associated Press link

BANGKOK – Thai authorities dropped charges Thursday against a foreign plane crew accused of smuggling arms from North Korea, easing a diplomatic jam but leaving open the vexing question of where the multimillion dollar illicit arms shipment was headed.

The five-member crew from Kazakhstan and Belarus was arrested Dec. 12 when the Ilyushin Il-76 cargo plane they were flying from the North Korean capital Pyongyang landed in Bangkok.
Thai authorities, acting on a tip from the United States, found 35 tons of weapons on board — a violation of U.N. sanctions against North Korea.

The crew were released from prison and handed over to immigration police Thursday evening for deportation.
Thailand and some independent arms trafficking experts say flight documents indicated the plane's cargo — listed as oil drilling equipment — was headed for the Iranian capital Tehran. The crew claimed they were ignorant of what they were really carrying.

Iran's Foreign Ministry has denied the weapons were destined for its shores.
(...)
 
 
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