Hungary-Made Pagers Used in Israeli-Hezbollah Attack
Pagers used by the militant group Hezbollah exploded near-simultaneously on Tuesday in Lebanon and Syria, killing at least nine people, including an 8-year-old girl, and wounding nearly 3,000
AP
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Hezbollah and the Lebanese government blamed Israel for what appeared to be a sophisticated remote attack.PHOTO:AP
Taipei, 18 Sept
Taiwanese
company Gold Apollo said on Wednesday that it authorised its brand on the
pagers that exploded in Lebanon and Syria in an apparent Israeli operation
targeting Hezbollah's communications network but that another company based in
Budapest manufactured them.
Pagers used
by the militant group Hezbollah exploded near-simultaneously on Tuesday in
Lebanon and Syria, killing at least nine people, including an 8-year-old girl,
and wounding nearly 3,000.
Hezbollah
and the Lebanese government blamed Israel for what appeared to be a
sophisticated remote attack.
An American
official said Israel briefed the United States on Tuesday after the conclusion
of the operation, in which small amounts of explosive secreted in the pagers
were detonated. The person spoke on the condition of anonymity because they
were not authorized to discuss the information publicly.
The AR-924
pagers were manufactured by BAC Consulting KFT, based in Hungary's capital,
according to a statement released on Wednesday by Gold Apollo.
“According
to the cooperation agreement, we authorise BAC to use our brand trademark for
product sales in designated regions, but the design and manufacturing of the
products are solely the responsibility of BAC,” the statement read.
Gold Apollo
chair Hsu Ching-kuang told journalists on Wednesday that his company has had a
licensing agreement with BAC for the past three years, but did not provide
evidence of the contract.
At about
3:30 p.m. on Tuesday, as people shopped for groceries, sat in cafes or drove
cars and motorcycles, the pagers in their hands or pockets started heating up
and then exploding — leaving blood-splattered scenes and panicking bystanders.
It appeared
that many of those hit were members of Hezbollah, but it was not immediately
clear if non-Hezbollah members also carried any of the exploding pagers.
The blasts
were mainly in areas where the group has a strong presence, particularly a
southern Beirut suburb and in the Beqaa region of eastern Lebanon, as well as
in Damascus, according to Lebanese security officials and a Hezbollah official.
The
Hezbollah official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not
authorised to talk to the media.
Hezbollah,
which has pointed the blame at Israel, said in a statement on Wednesday morning
that it would continue its normal strikes against Israel “as in all the past
days” as part of what it describes as a support front for its ally, Hamas, and
Palestinians in Gaza.
“This path
is continuous and separate from the difficult reckoning that the criminal enemy
must await for its massacre on Tuesday that it committed against our people,
our families and our fighters in Lebanon,” it said. “This is another reckoning
that will come, God willing.”
Hezbollah
began firing rockets over the border into Israel on October 8, the day after a
deadly Hamas-led attack in southern Israel triggered a massive Israeli
counteroffensive and the ongoing war in Gaza.
Since then,
Hezbollah and Israeli forces have exchanged strikes near-daily, killing
hundreds in Lebanon and dozens in Israel and displacing tens of thousands on
each side of the border.
At
hospitals in Beirut on Wednesday, the chaos of the night before had largely
subsided, but relatives of the wounded continued to wait.
Lebanon
Health Minister Firas Abiad told journalists during a tour on hospitals
Wednesday morning that many of the wounded had severe injuries to the eyes, and
others had limbs amputated. Journalists were not allowed to enter hospital
rooms or film patients.
The health
minister said that the wounded had been distributed among all the area
hospitals to avoid any single facility being overloaded and added that Turkiye,
Iraq, Iran, Syria and Egypt offered to help in treating the patients.
Earlier on
Wednesday, an Iraqi military plane landed in Beirut carrying medical equipment,
airport officials said. Abiad said the plane was carrying 15 tons of medicine
and medical equipment.
Experts
believe explosive material was put into the pagers prior to their delivery and
use in a sophisticated supply chain infiltration.
The AR-924
pager, advertised as being “rugged”, contains a rechargeable lithium battery,
according to specifications once advertised on Gold Apollo's website before it
was apparently taken down Tuesday after the sabotage attack. It could receive
texts of up to 100 characters.
It also
claimed to have up to 85 days of battery life. That would be crucial in
Lebanon, where electricity outages have been common after years of economic
collapse. Pagers also run on a different wireless network than mobile phones,
making them more resilient in emergencies — one of the reasons why many
hospitals worldwide still rely on them.
Taiwan's
Ministry of Economic Affairs said from the beginning of 2022 until August 2024,
Gold Apollo has exported 260,000 sets of pagers, including more than 40,000
sets between January and August of this year.
The
ministry said the pagers were exported mainly to European and American
countries and that it had no records of direct exports of Gold Apollo pagers to
Lebanon.
For
Hezbollah, the militants also looked at the pagers as a means to sidestep
what's believed to be intensive Israeli electronic surveillance on mobile phone
networks in Lebanon.
“The phone
that we have in our hands — I do not have a phone in my hand — is a listening
device,” warned Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah in a February speech.
He later added: “I tell you that the phone in your hands, in your wife's hands, and in your children's hands is the agent. It is a deadly agent, not a simple one. It is a deadly agent that provides specific and accurate information. Therefore, this requires great seriousness when confronting it.”-AP
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