Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta museo. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta museo. Mostrar todas las entradas

lunes, 14 de enero de 2019

Laos transfiere 30 T-34s a Rusia para museos y desfiles

30 T-34 Tanks Transferred by Laos Arrived in Russia



Laos T-34 tanks (photo : dambiev)

TSAMTO - As part of military-technical cooperation, the Lao Ministry of Defense transferred 30 T-34 tanks to the military department of the Russian Federation in fully operational condition. Until recently, armored vehicles were in service with the army of Laos.

During the visit of Russian Defense Minister General of the Army Sergei Shoigu to Laos, held in January last year, agreements were reached on the return of T-34 tanks to Russia.

The equipment by sea transport has already overcome more than 4,500 thousand km and arrived in Vladivostok. Further, it will be delivered by rail to the Moscow region (Naro-Fominsk).

The T-34 tank was a technological breakthrough for its time, it has a dozen records, which, apparently, will never be able to surpass, including as the most massively produced tank in the world. In the period from 1940 to 1946, more than 58 thousand units were produced. T-34.

However, after more than 70 years there are very few active samples. The equipment transferred by the Lao side is planned to be used during the Victory Parades in various cities of Russia, for updating museum exhibits, as well as for filming historical films about the Great Patriotic War, according to the Department of Information and Mass Communications of the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation.


ArmsTrade

martes, 2 de junio de 2015

Irlanda del Norte: Museo exhibía fusil de asalto usado en atentados

Murder weapon discovered in Imperial War Museum display

BBC


  The VZ58 rifle had been on display in this cabinet at the Imperial War Museum

An assault rifle used in seven unsolved murders has been discovered on public display at the Imperial War Museum.
BBC Panorama has learned that investigators re-examining paramilitary murders in Northern Ireland found the gun on display in an exhibit on the Troubles.
The families of the murder victims had previously been told by the police that they had disposed of the weapon.
A senior officer says the Police Service of Northern Ireland fully supports an investigation into its history.
Forensic tests conducted in the 1990s showed the rifle was one of two weapons used in an attack on a Belfast betting shop in 1992.
Five Catholics, including a 15-year-old boy, were killed in the attack on the Ormeau Road by Protestant paramilitaries.

'Disposed of'

The rifle has also been linked to the unsolved murders of two other men in 1988.
The weapon was originally recovered by the police in 1992, but officers from the Historical Enquiries Team (HET) were unable to locate the gun when they reopened the unsolved murder cases.
Families were told that the VZ58 rifle had been officially "disposed of", but investigators from Northern Ireland's Police Ombudsman's team found the gun at the museum and have sent it for further tests.
Assistant Chief Constable Will Kerr said the Police Service of Northern Ireland would fully support the ombudsman investigation.
"I have been made aware that investigators from the Police Ombudsman's office have recovered a weapon on loan from police in Northern Ireland to the Imperial War Museum in London as part of a permanent exhibition relating to 'the Troubles'. In the interests of public confidence and transparency, I accept that it merits further investigation."

A sign explains that items have been removed from display

The rifle has now been removed from display and is undergoing further tests
A spokeswoman for the Imperial War Museum (IWM) said it was given the gun by the Royal Ulster Constabulary Weapons and Explosives Research Centre.
"IWM believes that we provide an appropriate context for the display of items used in conflict. This object has always been displayed in the context of a wider story which sets it against other items from both sides of the Northern Ireland conflict."
She said the museum was told that the weapons it received could have been used in "specific events", but it wasn't given any details of what those events were.
The museum is now working with the police ombudsman to try to work out whether there are any other weapons from unsolved murders in its collection.
Billy McManus, whose father Willie was killed in the betting shop shooting, says the murder weapon should never have been treated as a museum exhibit.

'Just don't care'

He said: "I am absolutely shocked that a gun connected with so many deaths was there on display for anyone to come and see at the Imperial War Museum in London. It should be here in a secure place so that it can be used for ballistics.
"Why would somebody let something so important be shipped to England to be put on display? What does that say about their treatment of the case? They just don't care."
The families of those killed at the bookmakers have long believed that the security forces colluded in the attack.
Earlier police investigations have already established that the second murder weapon - a hand gun - was given to the paramilitaries by a soldier at an army barracks.
An informant in the terror group later handed the gun in to his police handlers. The police claim they deactivated it before giving it back to their agent, but the pistol was working when it was used in the attack on the Belfast betting shop.

martes, 13 de mayo de 2014

A-4C restaurado en exposición en USA

Restored Douglas A-4C Skyhawk now on display in Titusville

A historic Douglas A-4C Skyhawk plane is now on display at the Valiant Air Command Warbird Museum in Titusville after more than seven years of restoration.


By Greg Pallone, Reporter
Restored historic plane on display

Valiant Air Command Warbird Museum
TITUSVILLE --
Another historic plane is now on display at Brevard County's Valiant Air Command Warbird Museum after more than seven years of restoration.

Windy conditions kept the Douglas A-4C Skyhawk from taking to the skies over Titusville Thursday for a training flight.

The Vietnam-era Navy attack jet was hit during the war and the pilot was able to get back to an aircraft carrier.

The airplane was reassembled using spare parts. It now looks as it did when it was built in 1962 and was able to reach speeds of up to 600 miles per hour.

"I flew the A-4 in the Navy," said Capt. Dave Dollarhide, a pilot. "That was 40 years ago. And it's a thrill for me to be back flying this airplane."

Dollarhide said people are intrigued by this airplane because it's been obsolete for quite some time.

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