First Published: 2012-07-13

 

UK urged to change arms policy in light of Arab Spring

 

British parliamentary report calls on Britain exercise more caution in granting licences for export of arms to authoritarian regimes.

 

Middle East Online

Around 100 licences were granted last year for sales to Bahrain for equipment

LONDON - Britain must exercise more caution in granting licences for the export of arms to authoritarian regimes such as Bahrain in light of the Arab Spring uprisings, a parliamentary report has urged.

A Commons select committee review of export controls also revealed that Britain's Foreign Office (FCO) is concerned about the sale of equipment to Argentina amid tensions over the Falkland Islands, the Guardian reported Friday.

Select committee chairman John Stanley said the government needed to make "significantly more cautious judgments on the export of arms."

"Bahrain is self-evidently a very sensitive country, given the very serious human rights violations that took place there," said Stanley. "There have been very serious human rights violations involving doctors and nurses."

Around 100 licences were granted last year for sales to Bahrain for equipment including rifles, body armour, shotguns, pistols and small arms ammunition.

Under British rules, licences should not be granted if there is a strong chance the arms will be used to provoke conflict or as instruments of internal repression.

The chairman said FCO unease about the sale of equipment to Argentina mirrored anxiety within the government triggered by "previous Falklands experience, where British ships were tragically sunk and many people lost their lives".

Alistair Burt, the minister for counter-proliferation, said Britain had behaved responsibly during the Middle East uprisings.

"The UK has a rigorous export licensing procedure," he said, according to the Guardian.

"We look at each application on a case-by-case basis. It is wrong to allege that in the runup to the Arab spring UK export controls were lax.

"When the licences in question were issued, they were properly assessed in the light of the prevailing circumstances. Once the circumstances changed, the risk was reassessed and licences were revoked," he stressed.


 

Strategic city of Qusayr falls into hands of Assad forces

Clashes in Tunisia as Ansar al-Sharia clings to escalation

Maliki chooses ‘cosmetic solution’ for Iraq sectarian wounds

Egypt's Morsi rejects negotiations with Sinai kidnappers

Saudi Arabia's first female director: There is room to women's rights in men’s Kingdom

UAE calls for political action to stop 'repressive Damascus’

Tough measures against expatriates raise concerns in Kuwait

Internet enters ‘coma’ ahead of Iran presidential election

Saudi Arabia vies to dissuade its nationals from joining ‘jihad’ in Syria

Assad, Hezbollah forces launch their promised assault on Qusayr

Iran unveils its ‘hostility’ towards Bahrain in unprecedented verbal salvo

Bouteflika’s ‘coma’ leads to censorship of two Algerian dailies

Tunisia Salafists change site of gathering in last minute maneuver

Assad casts doubt on US-Russian peace initiative

Confrontation with Salafists looms in Tunisia: Who will blink first?

Bomb explodes near three embassies in Tripoli amid growing security fears

Yemen blames jet crashes on ‘systematic sabotage' of air force

Qaeda takes no break in Yemen: Assassination of intelligence officer

Obama sways Erdogan on Russia-US brokered Syria conference

Absence of security as violence grips Libya’s Benghazi

‘People want to overthrow regime’ in Egypt

Russia gives Assad sophisticated missiles to repel enemies coming from afar

Attacks against mosques and husseiniyahs stoke Iraq fears of sectarian strife

Ban, Lavrov call for urgent Syria conference

Bahrain forces raid home of top Shiite cleric

Iraq sectarian violence reaches new highs

Gruesome videos put Syria opposition in dire straits

Egypt police shut Rafah crossing to protest kidnappings

Four Syrian ministers, Nusra leader on US blacklist

Untold stories of Iraq war photographers

Tunisia President urges Salafists to condemn terror

Humanitarian crisis threatens Yemen transition

Obama: Assad departure is only way to resolve Syria crisis

Showdown nears: Tunisia Salafists defy government ban

Iraq PM blames bloodshed on sectarianism

Top US general in Iraq for security talks

Kuwait Airways to acquire 25 Airbus planes

Egypt leader holds crisis talks with ministers over kidnappings

Peace Now: Israel wants to 'legalise' wildcat settler outposts

Expats barred from morning treatment at Kuwait hospitals

Five hostages released in Yemen

US-led navies flex muscles in Gulf manoeuvres

White House releases Benghazi talking points emails

UN assembly condemns Assad 'escalation' of Syria war

After more than eight hours, IAEA-Iran nuclear talks fail again