Wednesday, April 9, 2008

'Lord of War' faces extradition to U.S.


BANGKOK, Thailand (AP) -- Thai police will seek court approval to extradite a Russian man accused of being one of the world's most prolific black market arms dealers to the United States.

Thai authorities had lodged charges against Viktor Bout related to his alleged arms smuggling activities, but are dropping them to process the U.S. request to try him.

"We are working on the legal procedures to extradite him to face trial in United States as requested by America, so police and the attorney general decided to drop the related charges against him here," said Lt. Gen. Phongphan Chayaphan, chief of the Thai police's Crime Suppression Division, on Wednesday.

Bout, 41, faces several counts in the U.S. of "conspiracy to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization" for allegedly arranging to sell and transport weapons, including portable surface-to-air missiles to the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC).

Bout's lawyer in Thailand, Lak Nitiwatanavichan, said he would fight extradition.

Phongphan said Bout would remain detained pending the extradition hearings, which he estimated would take 60 days.

Bout, who has been called the "Merchant of Death," was arrested on March 6 at a Bangkok hotel after a sting operation in which undercover U.S. agents pretended to be arms buyers from the Colombian rebels.

He could face 15 years in prison on the U.S. charge.

Thai authorities had held him on a charge of using the country as a base to negotiate a weapons deal with terrorists, for which he could have been imprisoned for 10 years.

Regarded as one of the world's most wanted arms traffickers, Bout's alleged list of customers since the early 1990s includes African dictators and warlords, including former Liberian President Charles Taylor, Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi and both sides of the civil war in Angola.

In the process, he has been accused of breaking several U.N. arms embargoes.

Bout, who was purportedly the model for the arms dealer portrayed by Nicolas Cage in the 2005 movie "Lord of War," has denied the current allegations against him and any criminal activities in the past.

Bout's lawyer Lak said the U.S. charges were political in nature and did not represent a criminal case because the Colombian government is fighting the FARC rebels over differences of ideology. He also said the conflict in Colombia was outside of U.S. jurisdiction.

Extradition treaties between nations generally do not allow turning over suspects in cases of a political nature.

Lak said the Thai Attorney General's Office was awaiting more documents from the United States before officially forwarding the extradition case to court

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