Singaporean accused of supplying arms to LTTE extradited to US
A Singapore Opposition party member has been extradited to the United
States where he stands accused of trying to supply arms to LTTE,
according to a report yesterday.
Balldev Naidu, 47, a businessman and co-founder of the Reform Party,
was extradited on December 18, the STRAITS TIMES newspaper said quoting
the Home Affairs Ministry. He is wanted on charges of acting as a broker
between firearms manufacturers and the LTTE between February and
September 2006, as well as seeking to export the arms illegally from the
United States to Sri Lanka.
His alleged accomplice, Singaporean Haniffa Osman, 57, had pleaded
guilty to the charges in 2008 and was sentenced to 37 months' jail by a
Baltimore court.
Naidu had been detained in Singapore prior to the extradition
following his arrest by local authorities in September.
He is a founding member of Singapore's opposition Reform Party.
The party's secretary-general Kenneth Jeyaretnam said last month that
the US charges involved activities alleged to have occurred before the
party was set up in 2008.
Jeyaretnam had described Naidu as "a gentle family man and someone
who would never intentionally become involved with terrorists or arms
dealers". SINGAPORE, Friday, AFP |