MPs berate UK’s weapons exports

Men holding guns in LibyaThe UK has exported arms to countries which have seen mass protests, such as Egypt and Libya
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Ministers past and present have been criticised over the UK’s export of weapons to regimes in Africa and the Middle East.

The cross-party committee on arms exports controls accused ministers of “misjudging” the risk that the weapons might be used for internal repression.

Countries recently sold UK arms include Libya, Egypt and Bahrain.

The government, which recently revoked arms licences to many of the countries mentioned, welcomed the findings.

As recently as last year, Britain approved arms exports to regimes that have used force to confront popular uprisings.

Ammunition and tear gas were sold to Libya, with sniper rifles, sub-machine guns and CS grenades exported to Bahrain. Parts for armoured vehicles and weapons also went to Egypt.

The cross-party group of MPs noted that since January the government has “been vigorously backpedalling”, revoking a total of 160 arms export licences.

In February, dozens of licences for the export of arms to Bahrain were revoked after a Foreign Office review amid fears over the suppression of protests there.

Some 24 individual licences and 20 open licences for Bahrain were revoked and eight individual licences for Libya.

Following the move, the Foreign Office said there was no evidence UK equipment had been used in the military crackdown on protesters.

The MPs said the current government and the previous Labour administration misjudged the risk that these exports might be used for internal repression.

Shadow business secretary John Denham responded to the criticism by insisting that export controls were “significantly tightened” under the last Labour government, creating “one of the most rigorous control systems in the world”.

He said: “In government we merged the UK criteria list with that of the EU to strengthen oversight, restricted the sale of defence goods to a third party after incorporation with the buyer’s own technology and required government to produce a quarterly report on export licence approvals and refusals for that period.”

The group of cross-party MPs also called for stricter controls and urged the government to set out how it can reconcile the potential conflict of interest between promoting arms exports while upholding human rights.

Their criticism was not confined to the sale of arms to authoritarian regimes.

The MPs said they were deeply disturbed that, until recently, a British company had been allowed to export chemicals to the US which were used to execute prisoners on death row.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

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