Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

U.K. dealer jailed for plan to sell missiles

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • U.K. dealer jailed for plan to sell missiles

    The Calgary Herald (Alberta)
    July 21, 2012 Saturday
    Final Edition


    U.K. dealer jailed for plan to sell missiles

    Reuters
    LONDON


    A British arms dealer was jailed on Friday for trying to buy
    surface-toair missiles from North Korea to sell them to the former
    Soviet republic of Azerbaijan.

    British prosecutors described Michael Ranger as an established
    international arms dealer who used a company registered in Hong Kong
    under the name of his girlfriend to organize illegal arms deals
    between the two countries.

    E-mail correspondence read out in court showed that Ranger had boasted
    to his arms supplier in North Korea that he had been a guest of the
    Azeri government and was chauffeured in a luxury limousine during a
    visit to the country to discuss arms sales.

    Azerbaijan, an oilproducing Caspian Sea nation bordering Iran, is
    under an international arms embargo following a 1990s ethnic conflict
    in the breakaway region of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    Britain's Crown Prosecution Service said Ranger intended to evade the
    embargo by promoting the supply of hand-held surface-to-air missiles
    from North Korea to Azerbaijan, as well as Beretta pistols from the
    United States.

    He was jailed for three and a half years.

    "Ranger's dealings with Azerbaijan were not only illegal, but
    potentially very dangerous," the state prosecuting service said in a
    statement.

    "Arms embargoes are in place for a reason and those who seek to ignore
    them in the hope of lining their own pocket should understand that
    they are liable to prosecution in the criminal courts."

    Armenian-backed forces wrested Nagorno-Karabakh, a mainly
    Armenianpopulated enclave inside Azerbaijan, from Azeri control after
    the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991.

    A ceasefire was reached in 1994 after an estimated 30,000 people had
    been killed and another one million had been driven from their homes.

Working...
X