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South Africa: Semi-automatic pistol: 9×19mm Parabellum: 15-round magazine. License-built Beretta 92F. Standard issue side arm since 1989 alongside the SP1. Vektor SP1 South Africa: Semi-automatic pistol: 9×19mm Parabellum: 15-round magazine. Standard issue side arm alongside the Z88 since 1992. Submachine guns Milkor BXP [8] South Africa ...
Rhodesia: Bought as surplus from Germany and South Africa, because of trade embargo in the country in the 1960s and 1970s. [127] South Africa: [54] Kept in reserve [128] Turkey: Used by Turkish Land Forces as G1 between 1960s – 1980s. [129] United Kingdom: Used some Belgian-made FN FALs. [46]
South Africa: Transport: Mk. II 1990 39 [12] AH-2 Rooivalk: South Africa: Attack: Mk. I 1999 11 [13] 11 helicopters are currently in service, they have been grounded since August 2022 due to budget cuts. MBB/Kawasaki BK 117: Japan. Germany. Utility: 1994 6 [14] Westland AW109: Italy: Utility / SAR: 2003 30 [15] Westland Super Lynx: United ...
An SKS with a blade-type bayonet in its closed (folded back) and open positions. A field-stripped SKS carbine (disassembled into major components for cleaning). The SKS is a gas-operated carbine with a conventional wooden stock and a fixed ten-round box magazine enclosed inside the receiver. [7]
Denel Land Systems is a division of the Denel group.. It was formerly Lyttelton Engineering Works (LIW—from Afrikaans: Lyttelton Ingenieurswerke), a subsidiary part of the commercial network from Armscor.
Category: Rolling stock of South Africa. 5 languages. ... Electric multiple units of South Africa (4 P) L. Locomotives of South Africa (11 C, 4 P) R.
On November 27-28 1987, a South African Airways Boeing 747-244BM Combi operating as Flight 295 was flying from Taipei, Taiwan to Johannesburg, South Africa with a stopover in Mauritius carrying 140 passengers, 14 flight attendants, 3 pilots, and 2 flight engineers along with 6 pallets of cargo in the rear when an in-flight fire lead to the ...
The Zastava M59/66 PAP is a Yugoslavian licensed derivative of the Soviet SKS semi-automatic rifle.In Yugoslavia, it received the popular nickname "papovka" derived from PAP, the abbreviation for poluautomatska puška, or Serb for "semi-automatic rifle". [4]