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Thailand will not charge 'Merchant of Death' - lawyer

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Thailand will not bring charges against a suspected Russian arms dealer arrested in Bangkok on March 6, Viktor Bout's lawyer said on Wednesday.
MOSCOW, April 9 (RIA Novosti) - Thailand will not bring charges against a suspected Russian arms dealer arrested in Bangkok on March 6, Viktor Bout's lawyer said on Wednesday.

Viktor Bout, 41, was arrested in March in a joint police operation led by the U.S. Washington is seeking Bout's extradition on charges of illegal weapons deals with militant groups, including the Taliban and al-Qaeda, in Middle East and African countries.

His arrest came as part of a sting operation involving a 'deal' to sell and deliver surface-to-air missiles, helicopters and rocket launchers to the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). The group is listed as a terrorist organization in the U.S.

"A Thai prosecutor decided today not to charge Viktor Bout in Thailand. After that he [Bout] was rearrested at the request of the U.S.," Yan Dasgupta said.

He said Bout was arrested pending a United States extradition request. Bout could face 15 years in prison on the U.S. charges.

Washington has not yet filed the request and has 60 days to do so, the lawyer added.

"We are expecting that a Thai court will authorize his [Bout's] detention for another 60 days," Dasgupta said.

Bout is a former lieutenant in the Russian military who quit the armed forces in 1991. He then allegedly transformed himself into an international arms dealer, earning the nickname 'the Merchant of Death.' The Western media has consistently referred to him as a "former KGB officer."

Western law enforcement agencies consider him to be "the most prominent foreign businessman" involved in trafficking arms to UN-embargoed destinations.

U.N. reports say Bout set up a network of more than 50 cargo aircraft around the world to facilitate his arms shipments.

U.S. authorities took measures against Bout in 2005, freezing his bank accounts and submitting a list of 30 companies linked to Bout to the UN Security Council Sanctions Committee.

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