(Ahlul Bayt News Agency) - Canadian arms companies were given free rein last year as the federal government tripled the amount of military weapons and ammunition licensed for export to foreign countries to more than $12 billion.
The largest benefactor at $4 billion was Saudi Arabia, which is believed to have used Canadian-made armoured vehicles to help put down antigovernment protests in neighbouring Bahrain during the early days of the Arab Spring.
The government figures, tabled in the House of Commons a few weeks ago, do not say exactly what Canadian-made arms the government approved for export or how much was actually delivered.
But the total in government-approved arms export licences for Saudi Arabia was more than 100 times the $35 million approved in 2010.
The Middle Eastern kingdom also has quietly purchased hundreds of LAV-3s from General Dynamics Land Systems in London, Ont., over the years and was expected to receive more than 700 last year.
The LAVS are synonymous in Canada with this country's combat mission to Afghanistan, where the wheeled, armoured vehicles earned their stripes as the military's main workhorse.
Video and photos shot by protesters and media outlets in March 2011 showed Saudi troops using LAV-3s to suppress an uprising inspired by events in Egypt, Tunisia and Libya and opposed to Bahrain's ruling Khalifa family.
More than 30 protesters were killed, hundreds wounded and nearly 3,000 arrested in the joint Saudi-Bahraini crackdown, which was largely ignored by Canada and other Western states because of Bahrain's strategic relationship with the U.S.
In announcing this past June that General Dynamics Land Systems had been awarded a contract to provide up to 82 more LAV-3s to Saudi Arabia, the U.S. Defense Co-operation Agency wrote the deal would "serve to make a key strategic partner . . . more capable of defeating those who would threaten regional stability and less reliant on the deployment of U.S. forces to maintain or restore stability in the Middle East."
Saudi Arabia also has a poor human-rights record, with laws discriminating against women and religious minorities as well as bans on public protests and free speech.
"Saudi Arabia responded with unflinching repression to demands by citizens for greater democracy in the wake of the pro-democracy Arab Spring movements," reads a recent Human Rights Watch report.
The United Kingdom and Australia were second and third after Saudi Arabia in approved export licences for weapons and ammunition at $3.5 billion and $1 billion, respectively. The government also approved $58 million in arms exports to Afghanistan — bring the total since 2006 to more than $500 million — as well as $20 million to Egypt, $60 million to Jamaica and $149 million to South Africa.
The figures do not include exports to Canada's largest arms customer, the U.S., because arms companies do not require licences to move most weapons and ammunition back and forth across the border.
The government also has approved more than $44 billion in so-called "dual-use" exports to China, which include any goods or technology that can be used for both peaceful and military purposes. This is believed to be primarily uranium and other nuclear-related products.
Arms control activist Ken Epps said that while the Conservative government has ended the practice of tabling annual reports on Canadian arms sales, the country has consistently ranked among the top 15 countries, and often breaks into the top 10.
Epps acknowledged the apparent increase will be a boon for some segments of the Canadian economy, particularly the manufacturing industry, which has been hit hard by layoffs and plant closures in recent years.
But Canada also has an obligation to ensure it doesn't sell arms to countries with poor human-rights records, he said, or governments that will use the weapons against civilians.
"The LAV-3 and other similar vehicles that Canada has supplied to the Saudi Arabian National Guard are exactly the kind of equipment that would be used to put down demonstrations and used against civilian populations," he said.
"I think this is an example of where economic expediency has overridden the guidelines."
Given the involvement of SNC Lavalin and other Canadian firms in Libya and across the Middle East, Parliament needs to take a serious look at what the country's companies are around the world, said Steven Staples, president of the Ottawa-based Rideau Institute, which sounded the alarm about the LAV exports to Saudi Arabia last year.
"People (are) upset with Canadian companies that are involved in aiding dictatorships," he said. "It's pretty clear that these exports are going to pernicious human-rights violators. They're being used with very clear evidence to suppress this Arab Spring uprising that we're all celebrating in the West."
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