Norway issues global search request for man linked to exploding Hezbollah pagers
Rinson Jose, founder of Bulgarian company that was said to be part of pager supply chain, has been missing since Sept. 18
Norwegian police have issued an international search request for Rinson Jose, a Norwegian-Indian man linked to the sale of pagers to the Iran-backed Hezbollah terror group that exploded last week, they said on Thursday.
Jose, 39, disappeared while on a work trip to the US last week. He is a founder of a Bulgarian company that was reportedly part of the pager supply chain.
Asked what they were doing to find Jose, police said in an email to Reuters: “Yesterday, September 25, the Oslo police district received a missing person report in connection with the pager case.”
“A missing persons case has been opened, and we have sent out an international warrant for the person,” it added.
The Norwegian criminal police, Kripos, which handles international requests, confirmed to Reuters that the request had been sent, declining to elaborate.
When a person is missing abroad, Kripos would normally issue a global alert, or so-called “yellow notice,” but could also contact its foreign counterparts directly depending on circumstances, its spokesperson told Reuters earlier.
Norway issues international warrant for Rinson Jose, Indian-born entrepreneur behind Bulgarian-shell company that sold exploding Israeli pagers to Hezbollah.
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Interpol was not immediately available for comment.
Jose declined to comment on the pagers when reached by phone last Wednesday, September 18 and hung up when asked about the Bulgarian business. He did not return repeated calls and text messages.
Jose’s Norwegian employer, DN Media Group, said he left for a conference in Boston on September 17, and the company has not been able to reach him since September 18. He works in the group’s sales department.
In 2022, Jose founded Sofia-based company Norta Global Ltd, Bulgaria’s corporate registry shows.
Bulgaria has investigated the company’s role in the supply of booby-trapped pagers but has found no evidence that they were made or exported from the country.
Norway’s security police also launched a preliminary investigation earlier this week into reports that a Norwegian-owned company was linked to the sale of the pagers.
Over a two-day period last week, thousands of pages, as well as walkie-talkies, used by Hezbollah operatives, blew up in Lebanon, killing at least 39 people and wounding thousands.
The attacks were widely believed to have been carried out by Israel, which has neither confirmed nor denied its involvement. They were closely followed by IDF aerial assaults over the past week targeting the terror group’s top commanders and missile arsenal.