How can we defend human rights while selling arms to Saudi Arabia?

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How can we defend human rights while selling arms to Saudi Arabia?

Date: 9/29/2018 1:50:16 PM

How can we defend human rights while selling arms to Saudi Arabia?

 

NOHA ABOUELDAHAB

Noha Aboueldahab is a visiting fellow at the Brookings Doha Center, and theauthor of Transitional Justice and the Prosecution of Political Leaders in the Arab Region: A comparative study of Egypt, Libya, Tunisia and Yemen


Arms deals are not merely a financial transaction. They are a powerful expression of political support and partnership between two governments. When Stephen Harper signed the $15-billion arms deal with Saudi Arabia in 2014 – the largest contract in Canada’s history – he attempted to justify the controversial deal by pointing to Saudi Arabia as a partner in the fight against Islamic State. He also argued that cancelling the contract would unjustly punish the 3,000 Canadian workers who manufacture the weapons in London, Ont. Chrystia Freeland’s tweet last month, which called for the release of detained human-rights activists in Saudi Arabia, triggered a Canadian-Saudi spat in which Saudi Arabia abruptly cut diplomatic and new-trade ties with Canada. It also pulled thousands of Saudi scholarship students from Canadian universities.Ms. Freeland’s tweet and previous calls by the Canadian government for the release of arbitrarily detained activists and dissidents in Saudi Arabia are in line with Canada’s professed human-rights-conscious foreign policy. The continuation of its multibillion-dollar arms deal with Saudi Arabia is most definitely not. After Saudi Arabia’s punitive response to Ms. Freeland’s tweet, she stated that Canada would continue to stand up for human rights at home and around the world. But Canada’s so-called feminist and human-rights-oriented foreign policy rings hollow in the ever-expanding gravesites of Yemen.


The war in Yemen, fought between the rebel Houthis and the Saudi-led coalition, has caused one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises in which innocent Yemenis, especially children, continue to suffer death by air strikes, starvation and preventable disease. Canada has actively and rightly supported the establishment of United Nations inquiries into the extensive war crimes being committed against innocent Yemenis. The most recent report emphasizes that all parties to the conflict may be responsible for war crimes, but that the Saudi-led coalition’s actions have been the "leading direct cause of civilian deaths and destruction” in Yemen. Notably, the report calls for the halting of the provision of arms that may be used in the conflict in Yemen, highlighting the significance attached to the detrimental impact of such arms sales on the perpetration of crimes in Yemen. That Canada continues to supply Saudi Arabia with arms, despite the horrific atrocities being committed in Yemen on a daily basis by a military coalition led by Saudi Arabia, is puzzling – if not absurd.


Canada’s arms-control regulations prevent the export of arms in cases where there is a substantial risk that they will be used to commit human-rights violations. This stipulation was reiterated by Ms. Freeland herself earlier this year. Regardless of whether Canadian weapons are actually used in the war on Yemen or not, the fact that the Mr. Trudeau government continues to defendthis arms deal sends a very troubling message: Canada supports the protection of human rights, only insofar as it does not harm Canada’s business interests. One would be hard pressed to expect, then, that Saudi Arabia or any other country would take Canada’s statements regarding human rights seriously.In the growing list of countries that have decided to halt arms exports to Saudi Arabia, Spain is the most recent one, citing fears that its weapons could be used in Yemen. Spain’s decision, along with that of Germany, the Netherlands, and Norway, sends the important message that the risk alone that their weapons could be used in the war in Yemen is not worth the millions of Euros in arms sales to Saudi Arabia.


Canada’s arms deal with Saudi Arabia, signed by Mr. Harper and endorsed and defended by the Trudeau government, turns Canada’s human rights policy into a farce. Of course, the lucrative arms deals struck between the UK, the U.S. and Saudi Arabia provide the political support that the Saudi-led coalition needs to continue its ruthless military campaign in Yemen. Internal pressure to halt these exports has fallen on deaf ears. If Canada is to maintain any kind of credibility when it conducts its foreign policy and calls for the protection of human rights around the world, ending its arms sales to Saudi Arabia is a first and concrete step that must be taken. So far, Ms. Freeland seems quite comfortable in honouring this unjustifiable arms deal. It is difficult, then, to take seriously her outrage at the arbitrary arrests of Samar Badawi and others, while Yemeni lives are taken daily by a Saudi-led coalition that Canada actively supports.



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