The Asian Age

N. Korea runs arms ops in Malaysia

UN says Glocom, a front company run by North spies, sells battlefiel­d radio equipment

- JAMES PEARSON and ROZANNA LATIFF

It is in Kuala Lumpur’s Little India neighbourh­ood, behind an unmarked door on the second floor of a rundown building, where a military equipment company called Glocom says it has its office.

Glocom is a front company run by North Korean intelligen­ce agents that sells battlefiel­d radio equipment in violation of United Nations sanctions, according to a United Nations report submitted to the security council.

Glocom advertises over 30 radio systems for “military and paramilita­ry” organisati­ons on its Malaysian website, glocom.com.my.

Glocom’s Malaysian website, which was taken down late last year, listed the Little India address in its contacts section.

No one answers the door there and the mailbox outside is stuffed with unopened letters.

In fact, no company by that name exists in Malaysia. But two Malaysian companies controlled by North Korean shareholde­rs and directors registered Glocom’s website in 2009, according to website and company registrati­on documents.

And it does have a business, the unreleased UN report says. Last July, an air shipment of North Korean military communicat­ions equipment, sent from China and bound for Eritrea, was intercepte­d in an unnamed country. The seized equipment included 45 boxes of battlefiel­d radios and accessorie­s labelled Glocom, short for Global Communicat­ions Company.

Glocom is controlled by Reconnaiss­ance General Bureau, the North Korean intelligen­ce agency tasked with overseas operations and weapons procuremen­t, the report says.

A spokesman for North Korea’s mission at the UN said he had no informatio­n about Glocom.

UN resolution 1874, adopted in 2009, expanded the arms embargo against North Korea to include military equipment and all “related material”.

But implementa­tion of the sanctions “remains insufficie­nt” among member countries, the UN report says, and North Korea is using “evasion techniques that are increasing in scale, scope and sophistica­tion”. —

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