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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, July 28, 2016
UK approved £3.3bn of arms sales to Saudi Arabia in first year of Yemen war
The export of smart bombs and combat aircraft parts was approved in the face of civilian deaths and international condemnation
UK-manufactured cluster bomblets gathered by activists in northern Yemen earlier this year (Amnesty International)
The UK government licensed arms exports worth £3.3bn to Saudi Arabia
during the first 12 months of the Saudi-led conflict in Yemen, a
campaign group has revealed.
The Campaign Against Arms Trade's analysis of government figures, released this week, shows the total is at least £500m more than previously thought.
From April 2015, the UK approved exports including so-called smart
bombs, components for combat aircraft, armoured vehicles and
communications equipment.
The government in Riyadh is the UK arms industry’s biggest customer and
the figures show that the Middle East is the UK’s largest overall export
market for weapons, including Eurofighter Typhoon jets which have
dropped devastating 2,000-lb bombs in urban areas in Yemen.
More than 8,100 people are
thought to have been killed in the conflict and earlier this year the
UN decried the “carnage” caused by Saudi-led air strikes, saying the
alliance was responsible for the vast majority of the civilian deaths in
the conflict, although all armed groups have been accused of abuses.
Since the Saudi-led intervention, which includes support from Bahrain
and UAE, the UK government has faced intense criticism over its
willingness to approve arms exports.
Andrew Smith, of CAAT, which compiled the figures from official
statistics, said: “UK arms have been central to the humanitarian crisis
that has been unleashed on Yemen. If the new Prime Minister [Theresa
May] wants to help the people of Yemen then she needs to break with the
past, stop the arms sales and end the uncritical support for the Saudi
regime.”
The new figures also show that the UK licensed £538m of weapons,
including military training aircraft for the Royal Saudi Air Force, in
the first quarter of 2016 alone despite increasingly vocal international
condemnation of the country’s bombing campaign in Yemen.
The deal for additional Hawk jet trainers came after a UN expert panel
accused Saudi Arabia of violating international humanitarian law and a
January cross-party appeal in parliament for arms sales to the oil-rich kingdom to be suspended.
The European Parliament has also voted to support an EU-wide embargo against Saudi Arabia although the vote is not legally binding.
Smith added: “The UN has accused Saudi Arabian forces of violating
international humanitarian law, the European Parliament has calling for
an arms embargo, but, as usual when it comes to Saudi Arabia, the UK
government has focused on arms sale.”
Last month, CAAT won a legal challenge in the High Court in London to
allow it to being a judicial review over arms exports to Saudi Arabia.
Saudi Arabia has denied that its operations cause civilian casualties,
and in January announced that it was setting up a panel to investigate
the allegations. The UK has a long history of exporting arms to Saudi
Arabia, dating back to the 1980s, but the government has always insisted
it follows strict rules and monitors the use of the weapons.
However, this week Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson was left facing growing calls to
reverse UK policy after the government issued a correction, saying that
it could not prove that international law had not been violated,
despite earlier claims that no breaches had taken place.
The reversal followed pressure from opposition politicians and rights
groups, who challenged then Foreign Secretary Phillip Hammond's ruling
on Yemen and forced him to issue a statement retracting four written
answers given to MPs and deleting two speeches by ministers in the
Commons from the official record.
The new figures come after Middle East Eye revealed that Canadian and UK arms were
used to kill an unarmed man in police raids in Saudi Arabia earlier
this year. The UK government has refused to investigate whether UK arms
are being used for internal repression.
Rights clampdown
Human rights campaigners have been quick to point out that the new
figures have emerged as a prominent Bahrain activist faces 12 years in
prison for Tweets that criticized the Saudi Arabia-led military campaign
in Yemen.
The charges against Nabeel Rajab, the head of the Bahrain Centre for
Human Rights, are a serious violation of his right to freedom of
expression, Human Rights Watch said on Wednesday.
Bahrain has been taking part in the Saudi-led strikes, which has
included unlawful air attacks on markets, home, hospitals and schools,
according to the pressure group.
“Unlawful Saudi-led airstrikes bombed markets and hospitals, killing
hundreds of civilians, but the person facing prison time is the one who
criticized them,” said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East director at the
group.
“The US and the UK, which have assisted the coalition, have a particular
responsibility to insist that Bahrain drop the unlawful charges against
Nabeel Rajab and immediately free him.”
Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International have documented 69 unlawful
airstrikes by the coalition, some of which may amount to war crimes,
that had killed more than 900 civilians and hit homes, markets,
hospitals, schools, civilian businesses, and mosques. The UN Panel of
Experts on Yemen also reported in January that it had “documented 119
coalition sorties relating to violations” of the laws of war.
Rights groups, however, have also accused other armed factions on the ground of committing abuses, including torture, against opponents.
Eastern European arms pipeline
The extent of the UK’s exports to Saudi Arabia come after a year-long investigation by a team of reporters from the Balkan Investigative Reporting Network (BIRN) and the Organised Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) found
that eastern European countries have approved the sale of more than
£840m in weapons in the past four years to Middle Eastern countries that
are known to ship arms to Syria.
The arms includes assault rifles, such as AK-47s, mortar shells, rocket
launchers, anti-tank weapons and heavy machines, that the Guardian
reported had been routed through a new arms pipeline from the Balkans to
the Arabian peninsula and countries bordering Syria.
Bodil Valero, the European parliament’s rapporteur on arms, told the
Guardian that at least some of the transfers probably breached EU,
international and national laws on arms exports.
He told The Guardian:
“The evidence points towards systematic diversion of weapons to armed
groups accused of committing serious human rights violations. If this is
the case, the transfers are illegal under… international law and should
cease immediately.”