SANAA, April 04 (YPA) – Experts have questioned how New Zealand can be sure its military exports are not being used in Yemen, the Guardian newspaper reported.
New Zealand’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade (MFAT) approved export permits for military equipment that was sent to the United Arab Emirates (UAE), one of Saudi Arabia’s partners in the war against Yemen, in 2018 and 2019, RNZ has reported.
According to the paper, experts told the national broadcaster the information added to concerns that New Zealand may have contributed to war crimes in Yemen.
Tuesday’s revelation came a month after a separate report that the ministry had approved export permits of military equipment to Saudi Arabia in 2016 and 2018 and after the prime minister, Jacinda Ardern, ordered an investigation when it emerged that an Air New Zealand company had worked on the engine of a Saudi Arabian navy ship.
RNZ said it had obtained documents under the Official Information Act that showed a permit was granted in 2018 allowing for the export of weapons suppressors to the UAE’s land forces. Further permits allowed the export in 2018 and 2019 of artillery control systems used by the land forces for training.
A Saudi-led offensive into Yemen has resulted in hundreds of thousands of civilian deaths, as well as widespread malnutrition and a refugee crisis. The years-long war has been described by the UN as the world’s worst humanitarian crisis, and the Red Cross has warned for three years in a row Yemen is the country most at risk of humanitarian catastrophe.
Experts have questioned how New Zealand could be sure its exports were not being used in Yemen, where the Saudi-led coalition has been accused of committing human rights abuses.
A former New Zealand foreign ministry official who had direct knowledge of its export controls regime in the early to mid-2000s told RNZ its justification for sending military equipment to Saudi Arabia and the UAE was “bullshit” and that the ministry could not know where it would end up.
E.M