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UAE Air Force plane bound for China detained at Kolkata airport

Updated at: 1050 PST, Monday, September 07, 2009
KOLKATA: An aircraft belonging to the United Arab Emirates Air Force was found carrying a large cache of arms and ammunition and detained along with its nine crew members here last night.

The plane, bound for Hanyang in China from Abu Dhabi, landed at the NSC Bose International airport here for refueling last night.

Airport sources said that while customary checking of the plane by customs officials it was found that a large cache of arms and ammunition were stockpiled inside the flight.

The airport authority of India was informed and as the plane's crew did not inform the authorities here that the aircraft was carrying arms, its return flight order was cancelled and nine crewmembers were detained.

Late in the night, a meeting was held with the airport authorities, customs officials, senior Air Force officers and the UAE crew about the entire matter.

Finally, permission was granted to the plane to resume its flight this morning, sources said.
 
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Dear Genius:


Why is a UAE air force plane transporting weapons to China, and not from China????
 
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I'm sorry (mostly for myself) that you have not followed what happened. The aircraft was loaded with weapons and landed to refuel in KolKotta enroute to China.

Maybe you could help us understand more details -- the landing, Overflight clearance was obtained by a US company - which company?? The Ground handling and refueling was arranged by a US company, Which company??

Why was a search necessitated, on the advise from which quarters?? Which weapons was the aircraft carrying? Was the Aircraft a C130? or IL76?
 
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As the flight was given facilities from US..it might be carrying weapons for terrorists in China and for insurgetns such as Ugh and Tibetans..
 
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not necessarily -- The clearances are applied for by international companies, they cannot actually issue clearances on behalf of local CAA
 
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As the flight was given facilities from US..it might be carrying weapons for terrorists in China and for insurgetns such as Ugh and Tibetans..

maybe right.. another conspiracy you think off.. Then why would India ..acc to you ally of USA and enemy of China stop/Seize it?

Mujhe lagta hai ..they were sending the weapons so that copy can be made of same in China..reverse engineering. of weapons of the west
 
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US did send weapons the same way to Pakistan during Operation Cyclone...So anything can happen..I don't think China would be stupid enough to get the arms transferred via dangerous route.
 
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In a number of threads on the subject we suggested that it was important to learn why this happened and that the enquiry or investigation started from a tip off from someone in Abu Dhabi and we even asked if the acft was a c130, though the article below is an example of a particular kind of journalism (mixed with nationalism and Jingoism) practised by some media in India:


UAE aircraft stirs turbulence in China-India relations
By Saurav Jha
September 15, 2009

Kolkata, India — The five-day detention by Indian authorities of a United Arab Emirates Air Force plane, impounded at Kolkata Airport on Sept.6, has created another ripple in Sino-Indian relations and embarrassed the UAE into the bargain. The aircraft, bound for China, was found to be carrying weapons that had not been declared to customs officials.

The UAEAF C-130 Hercules had made a routine refueling stop at Kolkata Airport en route to the city of Xianyang in central China. When Indian customs officers conducted an equally routine inspection of the plane’s cargo hold, they found weapons in crates marked “combat missiles.” Worse, the crew had failed to declare the cargo to authorities in the mandatory customs declaration form.

The crew was detained for interrogation by Air Intelligence in India, where one of the crewmembers reportedly confessed to failing to notify authorities of the presence of weapons on board.

The aircraft was released on Sept.10 after the UAE government said that the act of omission happened due to a “technical error,” and apologized.

Initial reports had suggested that the plane’s undeclared cargo, marked as combat missiles, contained U.S.-origin weapons. Other reports later hinted that harpoon anti-ship missiles procured by the UAE and Egypt were being moved to China secretly.

This speculation of course sits well with the long-held belief that certain Middle Eastern countries act as procurement fronts for China with respect to Western equipment, as China has faced an arms embargo by Western countries since the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre.

The arms embargo forced China to rely increasingly on Russian imports and their subsequent reverse engineering to keep its arsenal contemporary. However, China’s interest in Western advances in weaponry did not diminish, and clandestine methods for sourcing such arms were resorted to.

Indeed, prima facie, the quantum of arms purchased by states such as UAE, Egypt and Pakistan seems disproportionate to their requirements and financial capability. This leads one to suspect the presence of an offshore entity for their grand arms purchases from Western suppliers. The needle of suspicion points rather strongly to China, given the special relationship it shares with each of these states.

However, the Chinese themselves seem to have declared that the arms being ferried on the UAE plane were of Chinese origin and were exhibits at a recent arms show in Abu Dhabi. Furthermore, a Chinese analyst, piqued at the prospect of Indian authorities examining their military equipment, declared it an act of wanton espionage.

China’s Global Times quotes Dai Xu, described as a Chinese military expert, saying, “The actions by Indian authorities violated diplomatic rights as the cargo on board belongs to China. Any inspection on board, which may have violated China’s property rights and constituted spying on its military secrets, should be approved by both the UAE and China.”

It must be noted that of late several articles taunting India on its relative position vis-à-vis China have appeared in the Chinese media. There has even been “an Internet paper” – really a diatribe – written by another elusive Chinese analyst calling for the balkanization of India.


It seems Beijing has taken Track II diplomacy to a whole new level by carefully choosing its words at the official level while simultaneously allowing state-run mouthpieces to let it rip on India. However, Indian media have raised grave concerns and the Indian public has not taken very kindly to these musings by unofficial Chinese commentators.

The UAE could certainly have done without the incident, especially at a time when the crown prince of Abu Dhabi, Mohammed bin Zayed, is doing the rounds of Washington, lobbying for legislative approval of a 123 agreement on civilian nuclear cooperation with the United States. Signed at the end of former U.S. President George W. Bush’s administration, the nuclear agreement is slated to pass around Oct. 17, unless there is Congressional action blocking it.

Several U.S. lawmakers have expressed concerns over the UAE’s lack of export controls. Lawmakers in the United States are more concerned about weapons proliferation to Iran. There have been instances in the past where China and Iran have collaborated in clandestinely obtaining banned systems, like the secret procurement of AS-15 Kent cruise missiles from the Ukraine. This has subsequently been reverse engineered by the Chinese in the form of the DH-10 land attack cruise missile
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China’s dealings with India seem to be a mix of diplomatic hectoring and force posturing along the disputed border. The Indian establishment so far seems to have maintained its equanimity in diplomatic terms because China policy in India continues to be guided essentially by a politico-bureaucratic set up.

The Chinese government would do well to note that any further escalation, at least in the perception of the Indian establishment, may lead to the Indian military being given a far greater say in Sino-Indian relations. That may not look good on the curriculum vitae of a “peacefully rising” power.

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(Saurav Jha works as an independent consultant in the energy sector in India. He is consulting editor of India Power magazine and author of a forthcoming book on nuclear power. He can be contacted at sjha1618***********
 
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