Doing Hilary Benn's job for him again, Diane Abbott writes:
The news from the UN last week that Saudi Arabia has been
indiscriminately targeting Yemini civilians and that 60 per cent of the
population (14.4 million people) are going hungry, marks only the latest
milestone to be roundly ignored by the British government since Saudi Arabia
intervened in Yemen’s civil war in March last year.
As these grim milestones are
passed, British-made bombs rain down from British-made planes on a terrified
and starving population.
In testimony bordering on the absurd, Desmond
Swayne, minister for the Department of International Development, pointedly
rejected the position of Save the Children, UNICEF, Oxfam and Saferworld: that
British arms sales to Saudi Arabia – £3 billion in the first six months of the
war alone –undermine the UK’s development efforts in Yemen.
“There is no evidence that I have
that that is the case,” he said. “I reject it.”
Mr Swayne’s faith that Britain’s
£100m of aid projects in Yemen can withstand several billion pounds of its own
ordnance is to be applauded.
Mr Swayne is not the only minister scrambling to defend
the indefensible.
Last month, Secretary of State for the Foreign Office Philip
Hammond, responded to a question by his Labour counterpart Hilary Benn on
whether British troops on the ground monitoring the bombing campaign had
reported “potential breaches of international humanitarian law”.
Mr Hammond
said that the troops had not reported any “deliberate” war crimes, implying
reports of accidental war crimes had been passed to him.
Mr Hammond is clearly unaware of the fact that Saudi
Arabia’s lack of intent to bomb civilian populations does not get him around
our own arms export laws, which state that we cannot sell arms to states who
pose a “clear risk” of breaking international humanitarian law.
Even worse, in
an answer to my parliamentary question, Mr
Hammond’s deputy Mr Tobias Ellwood demonstrated he believes that that Saudi
Arabia is not at risk of breaking international humanitarian law.
Perhaps he
has not read the UN’s report, which said Saudi
Arabia’s coalition had done just that – 119 times.
The Saudi intervention in Yemen’s
civil war must prompt us to ask ourselves searching questions about our arms
industry.
Namely, should the government be
promoting, subsidising and providing political cover for the arms industry?
Through the UK Trade and
Investment Defence & Security Organisation (UTI-DSO), part of the
Department for Business, Innovation and Skills, we pay 160 civil servants to promote British arms across the
world. Since 2012, companies have also received assistance from the MoD's
Defence Export Support Group.
Last November's Strategic Defence and Security Review
promised extra support for arms exports.
The promotion of arms is also on the
agenda of much of the diplomatic outreach work undertaken by the Foreign Office
and the Ministry of Defence.
In 2011, the Stockholm International Peace Research
Institute found that £699m was spent on UK arms subsidies in 2011,through both
the DSO and grants to university departments that train weapons engineers.
When
Labour councils last year backed policies to boycott UK arms sales to Israel,
the conservative government proposed laws banning such divestment.
Conservative
Communities Minister Greg Clarkeven equated such grass roots activism to an
apartheid state, adding that it would cost British jobs and “poison”community
relations.
Transparency International has calculated that 40 per
cent global corruption occurred in the arms trade.
Despite David Cameron’s
pledge to “break the taboo on talking about corruption”, when British alleged
corruption is investigated, the government steps in, quashing investigations to save blushes in both London and
Riyadh.
We must also acknowledge that
Britain sells arms to several other dubious regimes including Bahrain, Egypt,
Sri Lanka and Saudi Arabia.
In doing so, we must tighten up our arms export
licences and end-user certificates.
The government routinely claims
that Britain has “one of the most robust arms export control regimes in the
world” but this has been shown to be manifestly untrue.
If the UN, rights
groups and the international media are reporting of Saudi Arabian war crimes in
Yemen, why has the UK denied only eight out of well over 100 Saudi requests for
UK arms?
The answer is sadly clear for all: we are making a killing.
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