Trail of Exploding Pagers in Lebanon Runs to Taiwan, Hungary

Trail of Exploding Pagers in Lebanon Runs to Taiwan, Hungary · Bloomberg

(Bloomberg) -- The trail of the pagers that blew up in Lebanon around 3:30 p.m. Tuesday, killing or maiming thousands and sparking fears of a new Middle East war, leads to a small post-box office wedged between a highway and a dilapidated railway station in Budapest.

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That’s the official address for BAC Consulting Kft, which produced them under a commercial agreement, according to Gold Apollo Co., the Taiwanese company whose brand was on the exploding devices.

But a woman at the Budapest office said the only sign she’d seen of BAC was monthly visits from a representative to pick up the mail. A building in Paris listed as the address of BAC’s chief executive turned out to be a barracks for French Gendarmes. The company “is a trading intermediary with no manufacturing or operational site in Hungary,” according to the government in Budapest.

In Taiwan, Hsu Ching-Kuang, Gold Apollo’s chairman, said he was puzzled when BAC asked to license production of its AR-924 pager two years ago but went ahead with what seemed a routine deal.

“I have been doing this for so many years and now I have this stain,” he told reporters in Taiwan. “How did I get involved in this political terror incident?”

Lebanon pointed the finger at Israel’s Mossad spy service for what intelligence experts called one of the most audacious “supply-chain” operations in the history of spycraft. Israeli officials were studiously quiet, but analysts there hailed what they described as a covert operation that targeted members of Hezbollah, an Iran-backed group whose attacks have forced tens of thousands of Israelis to evacuate their homes in the north of the country.

But civilians also fell victim to the pager blasts, which killed at least 12, including two children. “The fear and terror unleashed is profound,” Volker Turk, the United Nations human rights chief, said, denouncing the civilian impact as “unacceptable” and calling for an independent investigation.

Reports of new explosions of devices including walkie-talkies Wednesday added to the impact of what appears to be one of the biggest targeted assassination attempts ever. There was no immediate word on how many Hezbollah officials had been killed or injured or how its security had been so compromised. Fears of a wider war grew as Hezbollah vowed retaliation, as did Iran, whose ambassador to Lebanon was injured.