One of the guns used by Islamist militants to attack locations in downtown Paris on November 13 was purchased legally through a dealer in the United States, according to a report by the Associated Press. Investigators have confirmed that several of the weapons used in the attack, which killed 130 and injured hundreds more, were manufactured in Serbia. Most are slightly modified versions of the Soviet-era AK-47, known in the West as “shortened Kalashnikov”. All were produced in a weapons factory called Zastava, which is located in the city of Kragujevac, in central Serbia. They were made in the 1980s and sold within the former Yugoslavia.
Last Thursday, however, the director of the Zastava factory, Milojko Brzakovic, told
the Associated Press that he had contacted authorities in France to
inform them that one of the weapons used in the Paris attacks was made
in his factory and sold to a US dealer. It was an M92 semi-automatic
pistol, which had been legally sold to an American online arms seller
called Century Arms in May 2013. The seller, based in the state of
Florida, is believed to import tens of thousands of weapons from the
Zastava factory each year. Brzakovic said the M92 could only fire single
shots, and was thus in accordance with American law. It sells for less
than $500 a piece in the US, he said.
When asked how the weapon got into the
hands of militants affiliated with the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria,
Brzakovic said he had no idea. He told the Associated Press that all
guns exports by Zastava to Century Arms and other American weapons
dealers are in strict compliance with US government regulations.
Someone, he said, must have illegally modified the weapon into an
automatic at a later stage. Brzakovic also said he had no idea how the
weapon left America and ended up in France. All weapons exports from the
US must be approved by the US Department of State, he said, so the M92
pistol must have made its way to Europe illegally.
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