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News ID: 37121
Publish Date : 24 February 2017 - 20:27

UAE Signs Arms Deals Worth $5bn at Abu Dhabi Exhibition




ABU DHABI (Dispatches) – The United Arab Emirates has signed contracts worth a total of more than $5bn for weapons displayed at its international arms fair in Abu Dhabi.
The four-day International Defense Exhibition and Conference (IDEX), which began Sunday and concluded on Thursday, is one of the largest arms fairs in the Middle East and is held every two years.
The UAE, a key partner in the bloody Saudi war on Yemen, signed an order with Raytheon of the United States worth more than $740m but also with Russian arms exporter Rosoboronexport for anti-tank missiles valued at $710m.
The final day on Wednesday resulted in contracts worth $930m, organizers said, raising the total for the four days to $5.2bn.
About 100 British companies, including the BAE Systems, Raytheon’s UK chapter, and the European missile manufacturer MBDA’s British branch, were in the show.
During the event, the American and British companies displayed some of their weapons which have been used in the Saudi war on Yemen with the permission of their respective governments since March 2015.
Raytheon showcased its Paveway IV guided bombs. British Defense Secretary Michael Fallon confirmed last year that the Saudi air force had used the Scottish-built bombs and British-supplied missiles in Yemen.
The BAE Systems displayed its Hawk Advanced Trainer aircraft, 30 of which Saudi Arabia bought last February, amid reports that Riyadh widely uses the aircraft to train its pilots, who carry out sorties over Yemen.
Among the data-x-items on display was the Eurofighter warplane, which has been jointly developed by the BAE Systems, France’s Airbus and Italian aeronautics company Alenia Aermacchi.
London sent an official to the event, sparking criticism from human rights activists and some opposition figures.
MP Tom Brake, Liberal Democrats’ foreign affairs spokesman, said, "The weapons on display at IDEX, many of which have been deployed by the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen to murderous effect, must serve as a chilling reminder to the UK government of their obligation to suspend arms sales to Saudi.”
The UK’s Minister for Defense Procurement, MP Harriett Baldwin, who had joined the exhibition on the British government’s orders, however, said "It is wonderful to be celebrating the ties that we have between our two countries and the important role that UK firms play in terms of security and prosperity of the [Persian] Gulf states.”
The U.S. and the UK have on several occasions come under fire for their arms sales to the parties involved in the Saudi military campaign in Yemen.
In its annual 2016 report released last month, Human Rights Watch slammed Riyadh’s military and the countries assisting it in the war for using internationally-banned weapons in their attacks against civilian targets.