http://www.thepeninsulaqatar.com/Display_news.asp?section=World_News&subsection=India&month=November2006&file=World_News2006111091137.xml

Officials quiz crew of Iran-bound North Korean ship
Web posted at: 11/10/2006 9:11:37
Source ::: REUTERS

MUMBAI . India has detained an empty North Korean cargo ship bound for 
Iran after it strayed into Indian waters, baffling coast guard officials 
and police about the purpose of its voyage.

'MV Omrani-II' developed a snag and entered Indian waters on October 29 
and was towed to the Mumbai Port where the crew was being questioned by 
Indian intelligence and customs officials.

"The crew has not been able to explain why they were sailing an empty 
vessel to Iran," a senior coast guard official told Reuters on condition 
of anonymity yesterday. However a senior official at the Directorate 
General of Shipping said: "They have told us that because it is a new 
ship they were testing it. But it is strange that they should need to 
sail as far as Iran".

Officials said documents for the new 45-metre vessel were in order, 
although life-saving equipment was found to be deficient.

A UN Security Council resolution imposing sanctions on North Korea after 
its October 9 nuclear test calls on UN members to take steps, including 
"as necessary" the inspection of cargoes to and from North Korea to 
prevent illicit trafficking in nuclear, chemical and biological weapons.

But Indian officials said they were not acting at the behest of the UN 
but simply because a suspicious ship had entered the Indian waters.

"The investigations are part of standard procedures that are followed 
when a ship strays into our waters," A Banerjee, a top shipping official 
told Reuters.

In 1999, a North Korean ship was seized off western India after a search 
revealed it was carrying missile components, metal casings and technical 
manuals to Pakistan.

The ship's manifest had listed sugar and water purification equipment.

Indian officials said they wanted to ensure that the ship was not hiding 
any contraband or being used to ferry material related to North Korea or 
Iran's nuclear programmes. Pyongyang said last month that it had tested 
a nuclear device, while Iran says it is enriching its uranium to build 
nuclear power plants, rejecting Western concerns that it was planning to 
build a bomb.

Military experts say Iranian missile technology is partly based on 
modified versions of equipment from other countries, such as North Korea.

Along with Libya, the three countries are believed to have bought 
nuclear parts and know-how from the former head of Pakistan's nuclear 
programme, A Q Khan.

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