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France Faces Legal Risks For Saudi, Emirate Arms Sales

France Faces Legal Risks For Saudi, Emirate Arms Sales
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A new report commissioned by human rights groups said the French government may have breached international law by supplying Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates weapons that could be used in their war on Yemen.

France Faces Legal Risks For Saudi, Emirate Arms Sales

The report by French law firm Ancile Avocat asserts that Fran
ce's arms exports to the two Gulf countries could be in contravention of its international commitments.

"The French government has authorized exports of military equipment to Saudi Arabia and the UAE in circumstances where these weapons can be used in the conflict in Yemen and could be used to carry out war crimes", the report's authors said.

France is a signatory to the Arms Trade Treaty, which it ratified in 2014, making it legally binding on the country to prevent arms sales where it is deemed these will be used to violate international humanitarian law.

In this regard, Philippe Edouard, France's prime minister, claimed that recent sales are for purely defensive purposes.

Meanwhile, Amnesty International, who commissioned the report alongside French rights group ACAT, issued a statement on Tuesday in which it decried the French government's lack of transparency.

"There exists a lack of considerable transparency on the part of French authorities in its arms exports and sales ... deliberations by the inter-ministerial commission for the study of war equipment exports, charged with examining license requests, are absolutely confidential," the report said.

Relatively, data from the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute [SIPRI] indicates that France, the world's fourth-largest arms exporter, was respectively Saudi Arabia and the UAE's third and second-biggest weapons supplier in the years between 2013 and 2017.

Norway, for its part, announced in early January that it would suspend arms sales to the UAE, followed a few days later by Germany's suspension of arms export to countries that "are involved in the Yemeni war"
.
Elsewhere, Belgium's majority Flemish regional authority said in 2016 it would cease providing licenses for arms exports to Saudi Arabia.

In the UK, the Campaign against Arms Trade [CAAT] has sought to challenge Britain's arms exports to Saudi Arabia on the grounds that these did not comply with national guidelines.

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team

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