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Africa North
SA sold R70m (approx $ 10m USD) worth of weapons to Libya
2011-04-10
Johannesburg - The National Conventional Arms Control Committee (NCACC) annual report for 2010
entitled "It's Now Our Turn"
showed that South Africa sold weapons to Libya
gaaaaasp!
worth about R70m last year, the Sunday Independent reported.

This included Category A weapons worth R1.9m, Category B weapons worth R10.7m and Category C weapons worth R56.2m.
Category D weapons from Koeberg and Pelindaba cannot be discussed in this forum.
NCACC chairperson and Justice Minister Jeff Radebe said South Africa exported arms worth R80.9m to Libya between 2003 and 2009.

He refused to say whether more weapons went to Libya last year ahead of that country's civil unrest.
He also refused to comment on 100 peace keeping sniper rifles and 50,000 rounds of ammunition provided to Libya.
South African law prohibited the sale of weapons to countries where they may contribute to international repression, human rights violations or were likely to escalate regional military conflicts, endanger peace or threaten regional stability.
As rigidly defined by the ANC.
The NCACC was supposed to oversee weapons and military equipment transactions to ensure this did not happen.
Or did it?
Last year government approved the sale of more than R35bn of military hardware to 78 of the world's most repressive regimes according to the report.
Which is quite alright as long as repressive white apartheid regimes are not involved.
In addition, it approved 345 weapons contracts with 83 countries to the value of R27.7bn as well as 3 536 arms export permits worth R8.3bn and allowed imports from 69 countries valued at R3.9bn.

Officially sanctioned weapons exports included
paragons of humans rights such as
Algeria (R158.3m), Azerbaijan (R119.1m), Burundi's (R119.1m), Equatorial Guinea (R5.8m), Pakistan (R34.6m), China (R60.5m)
and everyone's old oil pal
Saudi Arabia (R68.2m).
What goes around, comes around.
Posted by:Besoeker

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