Arms deals: NCACC's 2010 annual report reveals arms deals with Libya, Syria and Yemen
The Democratic Alliance (DA) believes that Jeff Radebe, Chairperson of the National Conventional Arms Control Committee (NCACC), should be summoned to appear before the Joint Standing Committee on Defence to explain how it is that conventional arms were exported to some of the most repressive regimes in the world in 2010.
The NCACC's 2010 annual report was finally tabled in Parliament, more than eight days after the deadline, following an attempt by the defence department to classify the report and submit it as a confidential document to the Joint Standing Committee on Defence.
Last year, according to the NCACC's 2010 annual report, conventional arms were exported to some of the most repressive regimes in the world, including:
- R68.9 million worth of conventional arms exported to Libya;
- R7.7 million worth of conventional arms exported to Syria; and
- R373.8 million worth of conventional arms exported to Yemen.
The report further reveals that conventional arms were exported to Equatorial Guinea (R5.8 million), the Congo (R112.8 million) and Swaziland (R1.1 million).
The NCACC now appears to be routinely authorising conventional arms sales to repressive regimes, despite the preamble to the legislation regulating conventional arms sales, which states that South Africa: