All parties must listen to the public and pledge to end arms sales to Saudi Arabia

Leaked draft Labour manifesto includes pledge to end arms exports to Saudi Arabia.

  • Leaked draft Labour manifesto includes pledge to end arms exports to Saudi Arabia
  • UK has licensed over £3.3 billion worth of arms to Saudi Arabia since it began bombing Yemen in March 2015
  • Polling shows that almost two thirds of UK adults oppose arms sales to Saudi Arabia, with only 11% supporting them

The draft Labour Party manifesto, which was leaked to the national media last night, includes a commitment to end arms exports to Saudi Arabia. Over recent months the front benches of the Liberal Democrats, Greens, Plaid Cyrmu and SNP have also opposed arms sales to the regime.

For decades now Saudi Arabia has been by far the largest buyer of UK arms. Saudi forces are using UK licensed fighter jets, bombs and missiles in its ongoing bombardment of Yemen.

Since the bombing of Yemen began in March 2015, the UK has licensed £3.3 billion worth of arms to the Saudi regime, including:

  • £2.2 billion worth of ML10 licences (Aircraft, helicopters, drones)
  • £1.1 billion worth of ML4 licences (Grenades, bombs, missiles, countermeasures)
  • £430,000 worth of ML6 licences (Armoured vehicles, tanks)

Andrew Smith of Campaign Against Arms Trade said:

Arms sales and the UK’s long history of support for human rights abusers have not been election issues in the past – primarily because the main parties have pledged to maintain them.

This time there is a growing opposition from across the political spectrum, with the draft Labour manifesto being the first to commit to ending them – we hope to see the same from commitment from other parties in the days ahead.

If politicians want to do what is in the interest of people in Saudi Arabia and Yemen, they must commit to ending the arms sales and the unequivocal political support that has gone with it.

A recent poll by Opinium (published 05 February) found that:

  • 71% of UK adults oppose arms exports to countries that have been accused of violating international humanitarian law, with only 5% supporting them.
  • 71% of UK adults oppose arms exports to countries with poor human rights records, with only 6% supporting them.
  • 62% of UK adults oppose arms exports to Saudi Arabia, with only 11% supporting them.

Andrew continued:

The UK public is rightly opposed to the UK’s unbending and uncritical political and military support for the Saudi regime. It has one of the most brutal and repressive human rights records in the world. UK arms have been central to its terrible bombardment of Yemen.

The legality of UK arms sales is currently the subject of a Judicial Review, following an application by Campaign Against Arms Trade. The claim calls on the government to suspend all extant licences and stop issuing further arms export licences to Saudi Arabia for use in Yemen while it holds a full review into if the exports are compatible with UK and EU legislation. The verdict is still pending.

ENDS

For further information please contact Andrew at media(at)caat·org·uk or call 020 7281 0297 or 07990 673232.

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