The Japanese electronics manufacturer Icom said it stopped making the walkie-talkie model in 2014 and has warned about fake ...
Taiwan's government and Bulgarian authorities Friday both denied making the exploding pagers used by Hezbollah in Lebanon.
Questions raised about companies in several countries over alleged links to Israel's operation detonating communications ...
Hezbollah’s hand-held radios detonated in second attack killing 20 after 12 died in pager explosions day before ...
Amid fears of an expanding war in the Middle East following mass detentions of bombs surreptitiously planted in Hezbollah ...
The U.N. peacekeeping force in south Lebanon urged de-escalation on Friday after a big increase in hostilities at the ...
The attack on southern Lebanon on Thursday involved airstrikes and artillery, an Israeli official said, after two days of ...
The batteries of the walkie-talkies used by Lebanese armed group Hezbollah that blew up this week were laced with a highly ...
Taiwan's government and Bulgarian authorities Friday both denied making the exploding pagers used by Hezbollah in Lebanon.
The Japanese company, Icom, whose name was on handheld radios that exploded in Lebanon said it had discontinued the device a decade ago.
A preliminary investigation by Lebanese authorities into the communications devices that blew up in Lebanon this week found ...
Explosions across Lebanon over two days killed thirty-two people and injured thousands, with Hezbollah devices reportedly ...