Hezbollah, Lebanon

Japanese walkie talkie company: Models used to blow up Hezbollah terrorists likely counterfeit

A director at the Japanese company ICOM, where the walkie talkies were originally made, said that they had discontinued that particular model a decade ago.

Walkie talkies. Illustration. (Photo: LightField Studios/Shutterstock)

ICOM, the Japanese company which produced the model of walkie talkies used by Hezbollah and which were detonated en masse yesterday, told Reuters that the model of walkie talkie used had been discontinued a decade ago.

The company said that the manufacturing process was too fast to allow someone to plant explosives inside, and that it is likelier that Hezbollah ended up purchasing counterfeit models, which have been sold around the world for a while.

The Lebanese al-Akhbar reports 20 dead from the walkie talkie explosions, as well as 470 wounded, including 150 seriously. Adding the 300 reported seriously injured from the pager explosions, this means some 450 Hezbollah terrorists are seriously wounded.

A doctor from the American University in Lebanon said that the types of injuries many have suffered to their hands and eyes means they need to be treated in multiple departments of a hospital at once, doubling and even tripling the work burden.

2 Comments

Do not send comments that include inflammatory words, defamation, and content that exceeds the limit of good taste.

2
Whatever they are or aren't - they did their job.
Anonymous 19.09.24
1
Wonder where they got the counterfeits.
The Jewish Patriarch 19.09.24
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