Japan's ICOM denies manufacturing explosive Hezbollah walkie talkies

Icom refutes claims that its walkie-talkies were used in recent Hezbollah bombings in Lebanon, stating that manufacturing processes make such tampering impossible.

 Japanese radio equipment maker Icom Inc director Yoshiki Enomoto shows its model IC-V82 device at its headquarters in Osaka (photo credit: REUTERS)
Japanese radio equipment maker Icom Inc director Yoshiki Enomoto shows its model IC-V82 device at its headquarters in Osaka
(photo credit: REUTERS)

The walkie-talkies linked to explosions targeting the Hezbollah terrorist group that killed 20 people in Lebanon and injured hundreds of others could not have made the exploding devices, the Japanese company said on Thursday. 

"There’s no way a bomb could have been integrated into one of our devices during manufacturing. The process is highly automated and fast-paced, so there’s no time for such things," Yoshiki Enomoto, a director at ICOM, told Reuters outside the company's headquarters in Osaka, Japan, on Thursday.

The detonation of hand-held radios used by Hezbollah on Wednesday in Beirut's suburbs and the Bekaa Valley followed a series of electronic pager explosions on Tuesday that killed at least 12 people, including two children, and injured 3,000 others.

Old or fake

ICOM has said it halted production of the radio models identified in the attack a decade ago and that most of those still on sale were counterfeit.

 ICOM IC-V82 radio at a store in Manila. (credit: REUTERS)
ICOM IC-V82 radio at a store in Manila. (credit: REUTERS)

"If it turns out to be counterfeit, then we'll have to investigate how someone created a bomb that looks like our product. If it's genuine, we'll have to trace its distribution to figure out how it ended up there," Enomoto said.