The Jerusalem Post Internet Edition
Tuesday, July 28, 1998 - 5 Av 5758
Report: Israelis Helping to Produce Arms in Burma
By Arieh O'Sullivan and news agencies
JERUSALEM (July 28) - Israeli consultants are helping Myanmar, formerly Burma, produce small arms and ordnance in a prefabricated factory built in Singapore, the London-based Jane's Defense Weekly said yesterday.
The report comes amid renewed denouncings of the military-ruled government of Myanmar for the arrest of Nobel Peace Prize winner Suu Kyi, head of the National League for Democracy.
According to the latest issue of Jane's, the Israelis are connected with TAAS-Israel Industries, but it is unclear whether they are current or former employees.
The factory was designed and built by Chartered Industries of Singapore and shipped to Yangon, formerly Rangoon, in mid-February. The factory is most likely producing the EMERK-1, a local assault rifle, the weekly said.
"They rebuilt the whole factory in Burma with assistance from Israeli military experts. We still don't know exactly whether these experts are active officers of the Israeli military or former officers," said a journalist from Radio-Free Burma interviewed on Israel Radio yesterday.
The Defense Ministry in Tel Aviv issued a reaction to the report which was neither a confirmation nor a denial.
"The Defense Ministry has a clear policy anchored in the practices of the office which determines the security links and their scope and character. It is a policy which is in line with the foreign policy of Israel and coordinated with the Foreign Ministry," the statement said.
"We do not elaborate on this policy regarding each specific nation," the statement added.
A TAAS spokesman said he was looking into the report and could not comment otherwise about it.
In the sharpest condemnation yet by the United States of the government of Myanmar, US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright said that Washington "deplores the government of Burma's refusal to allow members of the National League for Democracy, a legal political party, to travel freely."
Kyi was stopped by police on Friday while driving to meet with NLD members and, as Albright spoke in Manila, was preparing to spend her third night in her car.
Albright said that conditions in Myanmar have worsened during the past year, despite progress on political reforms in other parts of Asia.
"With each passing day," she said, "the likelihood of social breakdown or explosion that would undermine regional stability grows higher."
Myanmar's junta rose to power after crushing pro-democracy demonstrations in 1988. It recently has clamped down on opponents since Kyi set an August 21 deadline for the government to allow the national assembly, elected in 1990, to convene. Kyi's National League for Democracy swept the election, but the military refused to recognize the results.