Court extends detention of N Korea plane

A Thai court today extended the detention of the crew of a seized cargo aircraft loaded with 35 tonnes of arms from North Korea…

A Thai court today extended the detention of the crew of a seized cargo aircraft loaded with 35 tonnes of arms from North Korea as its unscheduled arrival in Bangkok stirred questions over illicit-weapons trade.

Bangkok Criminal Court approved a police request to extend the detention of four crew members from Kazakhstan and one from Belarus by 12 days, giving authorities more time to scrutinise the rocket-propelled grenades, surface-to-air missile launchers and other weapons found on board.

"They have initially been charged with possession of heavy weapons and misstated details of the cargo," said government spokesman Panitan Wattanayagorn.

The plane apparently made an emergency landing on Friday en route to other stops in Asia and the Middle East.

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The seizure of the cargo is the latest execution of rules imposed in June by the UN Security Council to try to stop Communist North Korea from selling weapons in response to its defiant nuclear and missile tests.

In September, South Korean authorities detained four cargo containers belonging to North Korea under the same UN resolution following Pyongyang's second nuclear test in May and claims to have made progress in enriching arms-grade uranium.

"There is little reliable information that comes out of North Korea," said Surachart Bamrungsuk, a security analyst at Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok. "The seizure may help put the pieces together and shed light on its arms trade, but there is still much that remains a mystery."

The crew have denied the charges, saying they thought the plane carried "oil-drilling equipment" and had no idea they were transporting arms, said police spokesman Pongsapat Pongcharoen.

"They thought it was a civilian freight flight, carrying oil-drilling pipes and other equipment for oil drilling. They have delivered such equipment a few times," said defence lawyer Somsak Saithong, adding that three of the crew were trained pilots.

The haul also included missile tubes, spare parts and other heavy weapons, a military source said.

Mr Panitan said weapon experts would be sent to a military base in Thailand's north where the plane has been relocated to examine still-sealed crates.

"We want to keep the cargo away from the public until we know what else might be in it," Mr Panitan said.

Pongsapat said information from the detained crew suggested the plane was initially scheduled to refuel in Sri Lanka after travelling from North Korea. It was unclear why the crew asked to make an emergency landing in Bangkok to refuel and check a wheel.

Panitan said the plane, an Ilyushin IL-76 aircraft registered in Georgia, was going to "a destination in the Middle East" to unload the weapons. After that, according to the crew, it had planned to refuel in the United Arab Emirates and Azerbaijan before flying to its final destination in the Ukraine.

"But we are taking all of this with a pinch of salt. We will have to verify all the claims, including whether the passports are real," Mr Panitan said, adding police still did not have information about who the crew members were, where they have been trained and whether they were linked to a terrorist organisation.

North Korea was hit in June with fresh United Nations sanctions to punish it for a nuclear test in May. These are aimed at cutting off its arms sales, a vital export item estimated to earn the destitute state more than $1 billion a year.

The North's biggest arms sales come from ballistic missiles, with Iran and other Middle Eastern states being customers, according to US government officials.

The UN sanctions and the cut-off of handouts from South Korea have dealt a heavy blow to the North, which has an estimated GDP of $17 billion, and may force it back into nuclear disarmament talks in the hopes of winning aid, analysts said.

Reuters