Home > Politics > Seized weapons 'may not be destroyed': Abhisit

  • Bookmark and Share
  • Print
  • Email
NORTH KOREAN WEAPONS

Seized weapons 'may not be destroyed': Abhisit


Thailand may make use of certain types of weapons seized from a Georgian-registered cargo plane instead of destroying them as required by a UN protocol, Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva said yesterday.

He said technical explanations regarding the matter would be given by officials responsible for the protocol process.

Asked by reporters to clarify his remarks on further on use of the weapons, he simply said: "If we don't need to demolish them, we can make use of them."

Asked if seizing the weapons would put the Kingdom at risk of terrorist attack, he said: "Thailand does not get itself involved at the centre of any conflict. We're just following a UN protocol, and all countries involved [in this operation] have a good understanding of it."

Asked what Thailand would gain from this action, the prime minister said: "Everyone benefits from us following a UN protocol. If we had failed to act, and these weapons were later found to have travelled through Thailand, we'd pay a price for that. What is needed is for us to prove to the world that we are a good member [of the UN] without getting ourselves into the centre of any conflict whatsoever."

Abhisit said it was not yet clear who the intended buyers of the weapons were and cited a Crime Suppression Division (CSD) report that English-language instructions found on the boxes meant the weapons could not have been sent from North Korea.

Asked if he could confirm weapons had not originated from North Korea, Abhisit said: "No one has confirmed that."

He also said he saw no links between arms dealer Viktor Bout and the seized arms despite, in his words, "efforts to link them together".

He also said: "To my understanding, demolition of the weapons may not happen, or maybe it will for a small number of weapons, because they are not the types that are required to be demolished."

Air Force commander Air Chief Marshall Itthiphorn Supphawong said the UN protocol would dictate what to do with the weapons and that Thailand would receive no reward or bounty for the seizure.

Meanwhile, a source with the CSD, which helped inspect the weapons cache, acknowledged reports that a box containing rocket tubes was possibly missing from the original number of 145 reported in media.

However, the source said there was no solid evidence of any box disappearing and that even if one were missing, there was no reason to believe it contained rocket tubes specifically.

"There is one metal box with one serial number missing," the source said.

The source declined to speculate on whether the alleged disappearance was merely a counting mistake or if there really was a box missing based on the original count.



receive The Nation's  Breaking News

Thailand Politics News Update , Hot Politics Issues , Politics Analysis : Free Delivery

Enter your email address:

Advertisement



Politics Blog

  • Sonthi VS Sondhi

    Junta chief Gen Sonthi Boonyaratglin is still optimistic about his ally Sondhi Limthongkul.
  • Who is the Client? Temasek or Thaksin

    Surin Upatkoon, the main shareholder in the controversial Kularb Kaew Co, was yesterday charged with a criminal offence for alleged illegal representation of a foreign company under the Foreign Business Act 1999.


Privacy Policy (c) 2007 NMG News Co., Ltd.
1854 Bangna-Trat Road, Bangna, Bangkok 10260 Thailand.
Tel 66-2-338-3000(Call Center), 66-2-338-3333, Fax 66-2-338-3334
Contact us: Nation Internet
File attachment not accepted!