Japan company denies making Hezbollah’s walkie-talkies that exploded in Lebanon - Hezbollah’s hand-held radios detonated in ...
The Japanese electronics manufacturer Icom said it stopped making the walkie-talkie model in 2014 and has warned about fake ...
The Japanese company, Icom, whose name was on handheld radios that exploded in Lebanon said it had discontinued the device a decade ago.
The walkie-talkies that exploded in Lebanon Wednesday have not been made for over a decade, according to Japan's Icom Inc.
The Japanese maker of the brand of walkie-talkies linked to explosions targeting the Hezbollah armed group that killed 20 people in Lebanon and injured hundreds of others said it could not have made ...
While Hezbollah aimed to secure itself by switching to pagers, little did it know that Israeli machinations, according to ...
Icom Inc., whose brand appears on devices that exploded in Lebanon, said it halted production a decade ago of the model ...
Japan’s Icom Inc., whose brand appears on walkie-talkies that exploded in Lebanon, said it discontinued production a decade ago of the model photographed in the attacks and is still investigating the ...
Japanese radio equipment maker Icom said it no longer produces or sells two-way radio devices which reportedly exploded in ...
Icom is looking into reports that its two-way radios were denotated in attacks across Lebanon Wednesday, which killed at ...
Japanese radio equipment maker Icom Inc said on Thursday that it was investigating the facts regarding news reports that ...