Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
MAA-01 35 mm anti-aircraft gun [16] Myanmar: 10 (as of 2017) [16] Locally producing with the Chinese assistance. Similar to Chinese Type-90 35 mm twin AA gun. [16] 25 mm self-propelled anti-aircraft guns Myanmar: Unknown Chinese Type-87 25 mm twin AA guns, produced in local with TOT, are fitted on the Dongfeng EQ-2102 trucks. Each anti-aircraft ...
III is a family of bullpup assault rifles made by the Myanmar Directorate of Defence Industries, chambered for 5.56×45mm NATO, based on the QBZ-97s that were exported to Myanmar in 2009. [3] [4] The MA-1 Mk. IIIs were made without any licensing agreements with China, and Myanmar claimed that they were made without foreign assistance. [5] [6]
The DI MA-1 [c] is a family of Myanmar-made assault rifles chambered for 5.56×45mm NATO, produced by the Myanmar Directorate of Defence Industries.They are based on the IMI Galil with some localised modifications produced with assistance from Israel.
A report by the U.N. special rapporteur on the situation of human rights in Myanmar, Tom Andrews, found the value of weapons, dual-use technologies, manufacturing equipment and other materials ...
Weapons of war. Bullets aside, Myanmar is awash with arms, and the resistance fighters are well equipped with M16s and AK-47s, along with grenade and rocket launchers, mortars, machine guns and ...
In 2008, North Korea transferred Hwasong-5 (Scud-B) missile technology to Myanmar. In December 2006, South Korean press reported that Daewoo signed a deal with the Myanmar government in May 2002 to build an arms factory near Pyay, worth US$133.8 million. Some analysts believed that this deal included the supply of some parts for missile ...
The main guns were substituted with NG-18 around 2016. 561 2008 1 × NG-18 30 mm CIWS; 2 × 14.5 mm locally made Type 91 quad AA guns; 2 × C-802 anti-ship missiles; 1 × Gibka launcher for 4 × SA-N-5 Igla SAM (fitted behind the ship's mast.) The main guns were substituted with NG-18 around 2016. 562 2008
A U.N. expert's report last month said that companies registered in Thailand utilised Thai banks to transfer weapons and related materials worth $12 Thai banks admit lack of capacity to ...