Privacy Policy
Home | Money | Entertainment | Links | Advertise | Search | Cartoons | Contact | Shop November 23, 2009
Web
NewsMax.com
Powered by
 
North Korea Makes Missile Deal With Nigeria
NewsMax.com Wires
Wednesday, Jan. 28, 2004
LAGOS, Nigeria – North Korea has agreed to share missile technology with Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation and a regional military giant, the government announced Wednesday.

Officials gave no details of Tuesday's deal, including whether Nigeria would receive assembled missiles or just technology to make them.

Nigeria said any missile help would be used for "peacekeeping" and to protect its territory.

Vice President Atiku Abubakar agreed to the "program of cooperation that includes missile technology" with Yang Hyong Sop, the visiting vice president of the North Korean presidium, Abubakar spokesman Onukaba Ojo told The Associated Press.

The North Korean was to be in Nigeria's capital, Abuja, through Saturday.

Weapons sales are a major revenue source for financially strapped North Korea.

The United States alleges that Pyongyang reaped about $560 million from missile sales in 2001.

In 2003, the United States imposed sanctions on a North Korean company, Changgwang Sinyong Corp., for selling missiles to Pakistan. A shipment of North Korean Scud missiles bound for Yemen was briefly stopped in December in the Arabian Sea.

A statement issued by Abubakar's office said the West African nation's "government would continue to cooperate with the Korean government in the defense sector, an area in which both Nigeria and North Korea had cooperated over the years."

Nigeria hoped the United States and other Western nations opposed to North Korean nuclear and weapons proliferation would respect the deal, Ojo said.

"We are a sovereign nation. We should be able to cooperate with any nation we wish to cooperate with as long as it is in the best interests of Nigeria," Ojo said, stressing the West African government "is not shopping around for nuclear technology or weapons of mass destruction."

"Whatever we are discussing with them is only to enhance the capability of our military for peacekeeping and to protect Nigeria's territorial integrity," Ojo said.

Nigeria, with 126 million people, is a political and military heavyweight on the continent and a frequent recipient of U.S. military and law enforcement assistance. Its military supplies much of the manpower of regional peace missions.

© 2003 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Editor's note:
NewsMax Reveals the real "Korean Monster" – click here now

Read more on this subject in related Hot Topics:
North Korea

Home | Money | Entertainment | Links | Advertise | Search | Cartoons | Contact | Shop
All Rights Reserved © 2009 NewsMax.Com

103