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Subject:
From:
A Jallow <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and Related Issues Mailing List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sat, 30 Oct 2010 16:15:58 +0400
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http://www.foxnews.com/world/2010/10/30/nigeria-shipper-confirms-weapons-came-iran/print

Nigeria: Shipper Confirms Weapons Came From Iran

LAGOS, Nigeria -- A weapons cache containing artillery rockets seized
by Nigerian security agents at the West African nation's busiest port
originally came from Iran, an international shipping company said
Saturday.

The confirmation by CMA CGM, an international cargo shipper based in
France, comes after Israeli officials accused Iran of trying to sneak
the shipment into the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip. By unloading the
weapons in Nigeria, it suggests Iran sought to perhaps truck the
weapons through Africa to slide around an embargo now in place in
Gaza.

The MV CMA CGM Everest picked up the 13 shipping containers from
Bandar Abbas, a port in southern Iran, the company said. The shipment
had been labeled as containing "packages of glass wool and pallets of
stone."

"The shipment in question was booked as a 'shippers-owned container'
and supplied, loaded and sealed by the shipper, an Iranian trader who
does not appear on any forbidden persons listing," CMA CGM's statement
read. "The containers were ... discharged in Lagos in July and
transferred to a customs-bonded depot where they have remained with
all seals untouched and unbroken."

The shipment sat untouched for weeks, a common occurrence in Lagos'
busy and chaotic Apapa Port. Last week, the Iranian shipper filed a
request for the containers to be picked up again and this time shipped
to the West African nation of Gambia, CMA CGM said.

Agents with Nigeria's State Security Service discovered the weapons
Tuesday. Journalists who were allowed to view the weapons on Wednesday
saw 107 mm rockets, rifle rounds and other items labeled in English.
Authorities said the shipment also contained grenades, explosives and
possibly rocket launchers, but journalists did not see them.

In the hands of highly trained troops, the 107 mm artillery rockets
can accurately hit targets more than 5 miles (8.5 kilometers) away,
killing everything within about 40 feet (12 meters). Fighters in
Afghanistan and Iraq have used similar rockets against U.S. troops.

China, the United States, and Russia manufacture versions of the
rocket, as does Iran -- which calls the weapon a Katyusha rocket. In
2006, the Islamic militant group Hezbollah fired nearly 4,000 Katyusha
rockets across Israel's northern border, some of which fell as far as
55 miles (90 kilometers) inside Israel.

The weapons seizure comes as Nigeria, an OPEC-member nation that is
one of the top crude oil suppliers to the U.S., approaches what could
be a highly contested presidential election next year. Security
remains a concern in Nigeria as it continues to see targeted killings
allegedly committed by a radical Islamic sect in the north and the
threat of new violence in its oil-rich southern delta.

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