Belgium suspends arms exports to Saudi national guard

A complaint from human rights groups prompts Belgium to suspend arms export licences for some shipments.

Belgium''s FN Herstal weapons
FN Herstal, which makes rifles and machine guns, and John Cockerill (CMI), which specialises in gun turrets for armoured vehicles, employ 4,400 Belgians between them [File: Benoit Tessier/Reuters]

Belgium’s top legal authority has suspended arms export licences for shipments to Saudi Arabia’s National Guard after a complaint from human rights groups.

The Council of State granted an injunction on Friday as the contracts did not meet the standard for “human rights in the end-user country and its respect for international law”.

Nevertheless, the council decided not to block shipments to the Saudi Royal Guard, a separate unit.

In February, the southern Belgian region of Wallonia halted weapons sales to Saudi Arabia’s defence ministry and air force over concerns about the conduct of its war in Yemen.

But it said it would continue to supply the two Saudi guard units, arguing that they were more focused on legitimate internal security and bodyguard roles.

Civilian deaths

Saudi Arabia intervened in the almost five-year civil war in its southern neighbour to support the government side, but the conflict has killed tens of thousands of civilians.

The kingdom is one of the world’s biggest arms purchasers, spending billions with the United States and the United Kingdom, in particular.

Riyadh depends less on Belgian arms, but is nevertheless Wallonia’s number one customer, accounting for 225 million euros ($247m) in a 950-million-euro ($1.04bn) industry in 2018.

FN Herstal, which makes rifles and machine guns, and John Cockerill (CMI), which specialises in gun turrets for armoured vehicles, employ 4,400 Belgians between them.

The Wallonia regional government is FN Herstal’s sole shareholder.

Source: News Agencies