
U105 Nozzle Boot
Materials:
Body: Body: Aluminum (Spray-Painted)
Package:
Product ID Net Weight Cross Weight Dimension
U105-A 1.5kg/case of1 1.6kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
U105-B 1.7kg/case of1 1.8kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
U105-C 1.1kg/case of1 1.2kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
U105-D 1.3kg/case of1 1.4kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
U105-E 1.5kg/case of1 1.6kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
U105-F 1.7kg/case of1 1.8kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
U105-G 1.7kg/case of1 1.8kg/case of1 8.9×7.7×41cm/case of1
we are committed to create the best workplace, encourage our staffs to put their own personalities into their jobs, and provide them a stage to show themselves.
eople may have already been killed and 2m made homeless.
Last week the UN Security Council voted to send in a more robust force of 20,000 blue-helmeted
peacekeepers (incorporating many of the AU s soldiers). Its job would be to hold the ring and to prevent
the Sudanese government and its noxious proxies, the mounted janjaweed militia, from once again
committing mass murder. But Sudan s Islamist government continues to refuse to let such a force into
Darfur on the flimsy ground that they would amount to a “conspiracy for conf fuel dispenser iscating the country s
sovereignty�
This is monstrous. Mr al-Bashir already accepts a 10,000-strong UN force in Sudan s southern region,
where a long civil war is now mercifully in abeyance. Unlike the southern rebels, who won a promise of
an eventual referendum on secession, those in Darfur want only a fairer share for their region of the oil
revenues that the central government reserves to itself.
Despite a notional ceasefire in 2004, violence in Darfur has continued and is now rising fast; a peace deal
signed in May has collapsed. A new round of attacks on the rebel groups by the Sudanese army, using
helicopter gunships and the janjaweed militia, would make thousands more homeless and make it almost
impossible for foreign aid-workers to supply even existing refugee camps.
If Sudan s government continues to block the deployment of peacekeepers, the UN should impose
targeted sanctions on the regime, as America already has. fuel dispenser The UN should also refer individuals in the
government responsible for atrocities to the international war-crimes court at The Hague. But if Sudan s
government seems unmoved by such threats, it is because thus far it has been able to fend off outside
pressure with help from China and Russia on the Security Council, and with the support of a dismally
supine Arab League.
Resoundingly silent about the fighting in Darfur, the Arab League presumably considers mass murder
committed by fellow Arabs to be outside its moral remit. China is a glu fuel dispenser