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Officials at Heathrow seize missile parts being sent to Iran

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British officials seized components destined for Iran’s missile industry at the country’s biggest airport Heathrow as part of counter-proliferat­ion operations.

Officials said the seizure had now become part of a sanctions enforcemen­t investigat­ion and they hoped to prosecute people or companies involved for suspected violations of the UN sanctions regime.

Iran’s long and medium-range missile programme has undergone rapid expansion, attracting UN sanctions designed to thwart the growth of its ballistic missile arsenal. UN reports have verified the use of Iranian-made missiles in the Yemen conflict, in which Riyadh airport and other parts of Saudi Arabia have been targeted.

The spread of Iranian missiles is not confined to Yemen but also includes other fragile states in the region, including Lebanon.

Officials speaking to the

London Evening Standard said the Heathrow bust was of a shipment of rubber O-rings ostensibly bound for an Iranian oil industry facility. Monique Wrench, the UK Border Force’s deputy director at Heathrow, said the shipment was stopped when staff became suspicious the rings could be used for making missiles. “We had a couple of O-rings that we identified. O-rings are pieces of rubber that go between tubes to stop leakage and seal them.

“They can be used in oil, but they can also be used for warheads and the like. Our staff stopped them from going to Iran,” she said.

“It is a component part. It looked like it was going to an oil refinery. But the dots don’t quite join up here.”

A spokesman told the newspaper British Customs investigat­ors worked “with partner agencies to enforce trade sanctions [on] exports of strategic goods [with] robust enforcemen­t activity against breaches and attempted breaches of trade and export controls”. Britain has fought a long-running battle against Iranian-controlled networks set up to procure highly engineered materials that can be used in the manufactur­e of weapons. Andrew Faulkner, a former Royal Marine, was jailed in 2010 for the supply of sniper rifles.

A UN panel last week pointed the finger at Iran as the source of missiles fired from Yemen after inspecting debris from 10 missiles. The team found markings that suggested an Iranian origin.

“It seems that despite the targeted arms embargo, the Houthis continue to have access to ballistic missiles and UAVs to continue and possibly intensify their campaign against targets in [Saudi Arabia],” the report said.

The panel said there was a “high probabilit­y” that the missiles were manufactur­ed outside of Yemen, shipped in sections and reassemble­d by the Houthis.

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