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Japan Arrests Five in Iran Missile Case (washingtonpost.com)

TOKYO, June 12 -- Japanese police today arrested five officials of a Tokyo company and charged them with illegally selling Iran machinery that can help manufacture solid rocket fuel, a key element in making long-range ballistic missiles.

The firm, Seishin Enterprise Co., allegedly sold the same machinery to North Korea in 1994, but the statute of limitations for that transaction has expired.

The arrests come as Japan tries to clamp down on the flow of technology and equipment to weapons programs in North Korea and other countries.

ARRESTS OVER ILLEGAL EXPORTS

Tokyo police have arrested five people on suspicion of illegally exporting machinery to Iran that could be used for missile development. The police are also looking into the suspected illegal export of similar machinery to North Korea aboard the North Korean ferry Mangyongbong. Among those arrested are Haruhiko Ueda, the president of a Tokyo machinery maker, Seishin Enterprise Company. Police say that Mr Ueda and the others are suspected of exporting two grinding machines, called "jet mills," to Iran between 1999 and 2000. This would violate the foreign exchange control law and other regulations. Jet mills can be used to grind materials to produce solid fuel for missiles. The police believe senior management authorised the exports. Seishin reportedly received an order for a jet mill in 1994 from a company related to the pro-Pyongyang General Association of Korean Residents in Japan. It is alleged that the jet mill was later exported to North Korea via the port of Niigata on the Japan Sea coast, aboard the Mangyongbong.

19 posted on 06/13/2003 12:30:17 AM PDT by TexKat
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Supporters throw stones at police behind garbage containers during riots near the home of war crimes suspect Veselin Sljivancanin, early Friday, June 13, 2003. Serbia's elite police arrested Veselin Sljivancanin, a former army officer and war crimes suspect who has been indicted by the Netherlands-based U.N. war crimes tribunal for the killing of more than 200 people in eastern Croatia in 1991.

Heavy Clashes as Serbia Arrests War Crimes Suspect

BELGRADE (Reuters) - Serbian police commandos stormed a Belgrade apartment early on Friday and arrested a top war crimes suspect amid fierce clashes with his hardline nationalist supporters in the street below.

A senior Interior Ministry source confirmed that former Yugoslav National Army Colonel Veselin Sljivancanin had been taken into custody, answering a U.S. request to seize him so that Washington could approve further aid to Serbia.

The arrest of Sljivancanin, who had been a fugitive since former president Slobodan Milosevic was toppled in October 2000, climaxed a tense 10-hour standoff outside the flat where he had apparently returned to celebrate his 50th birthday.

Sljivancanin was indicted in 1995 by the United Nations war crimes tribunal in The Hague for alleged complicity in the massacre of 200 Croat and other non-Serb civilians, after Yugoslav troops captured the Danube port of Vukovar in 1991.

Sljivancanin had threatened to blow himself up rather than hand himself over to international justice. His wife told local reporters he had in the end "surrendered voluntarily."

Several hundred diehard nationalists filled the street on Thursday afternoon when police entered the apartment block, throwing stones, setting fires and provoking clashes not seen even when Milosevic was himself arrested in an April 2001 drama.

Well over 100 riot police and camouflage-uniformed gendarmes fired tear gas and stun grenades at the hostile crowd before a commando squad began battering down the armored door of Sljivancanin's flat shortly before midnight.

Several police and demonstrators, who included football hooligans, were injured in the clashes which flared again briefly after he was driven off to a Belgrade jail.

Sljivancanin's two co-accused in the Vukovar massacre -- one of the most notorious war crimes of Croatia's 1991-95 independence war -- are already in detention at The Hague awaiting trial.

His arrest came two days before the United States government was to certify to Congress that Belgrade is cooperating with the tribunal on rounding up war crimes suspects, a step essential for the release of further economic aid worth a total of 110 millions dollars this year.

A senior U.S. official warned last week that without Sljivancanin in custody, certification would be "a difficult decision," and urged Serbian authorities to find him.

Three Serbian men indicted by The Hague have been transferred to the tribunal in the past month.

The latest arrest leaves former Bosnian Serb president Radovan Karadzic and army commander Ratko Mladic as the two remaining top fugitives indicted for war crimes committed during the violent breakup of Yugoslavia between 1991 and 1999.

Gendarmerie officers watch burning garbage containers during riots near the home of war crimes suspect Veselin Sljivancanin, early Friday, June 13, 2003. Serbia's elite police arrested Veselin Sljivancanin, a former army officer and war crimes suspect who has been indicted by the Netherlands-based U.N. war crimes tribunal for the killing of more than 200 people in eastern Croatia in 1991.

20 posted on 06/13/2003 12:49:07 AM PDT by TexKat
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