Rigged pagers carried by members of Lebanon-based Hezbollah had a "sinister feature" largely overlooked in the aftermath of the explosions last month, according to a new report. The exploding pagers ...
People gather outside a hospital, as more than 1,000 people, including Hezbollah fighters and medics, were wounded on Tuesday when the pagers they use to communicate exploded across Lebanon, according ...
Dubai-based Emirates airline banned pagers and walkie-talkies on all its flights — weeks after dozens of Hezbollah terrorists were killed and thousands more injured when their devices exploded in a ...
FILE - Lebanese soldiers and firefighters gather outside a mobile shop after what is believed to be the result of a walkie-talkie exploding inside it, in the southern port city of Sidon, Lebanon, ...
The Norwegian-Indian man allegedly tied to the company that helped supply the explosive pagers to Hezbollah has gone missing after traveling to the US, officials said. Rinson Jose, 39, disappeared ...
FILE - Three women hold the pager 'Quix' as they present it at CeBIT '97 in Hannover, Germany, Tuesday March 18, 1997. The beep-beep-beep of a small black box on your belt or in your pocket was ...
The puzzle of how thousands of pagers were sabotaged in an Israeli attack on Hezbollah this past week has sparked investigations into the supply chain behind them, leading investigators to a labyrinth ...
Today, pagers are only seen in hospitals or on our favorite medical dramas. However, at one point in time, they were used by millions on a daily basis. Invented in 1939 by Al Gross, the first pagers ...