Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

South Africa Plan To Sell Arms To Libya

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • South Africa Plan To Sell Arms To Libya

    SOUTH AFRICA PLAN TO SELL ARMS TO LIBYA
    Nic Dawes

    Mail & Guardian Online, South Africa
    May 19 2006

    Denel CEO Shaun Liebenberg hopes to provide Libya and Turkey with
    Rooivalk helicopters

    Planned weapons sales to previously taboo customers, such as Libya and
    Turkey, are part of the package of measures adopted by the troubled
    parastatal defence conglomerate Denel to turn around persistent losses
    and declining sales.

    Briefing Parliament's portfolio committee on public enterprises on the
    status of his turnaround plans for the company, CEO Shaun Liebenberg
    said new markets were opening up as the company won improved political
    backing for its marketing efforts and sought more flexibility from the
    National Conventional Arms Control Committee (NCACC), which regulates
    arms exports, ostensibly limiting sales to repressive regimes and
    conflict zones.

    The company will record a loss of about R1billion for the 2005
    financial year, he said. "There are markets where I can go right now
    and get R1billion worth of business, but those markets are closed
    to us for very good reasons," he said. Other markets, however, were
    closed for what he described as "legacy" reasons. Libya, which is
    enjoying dramatically improved diplomatic relations with the West
    as its dictator Moammar Gadaffi opens it borders and oil fields to
    foreign investment, is one potential customer.

    A more immediate prospect, however, is Turkey, where Denel hopes to
    conclude the first major sale of its hi-tech attack helicopter, the
    Rooivalk, despite persistent concerns from human rights organisations
    over the use of helicopters by Turkish forces in suppressing internal
    dissent. This deal, worth between R12billion and R15billion, would
    rescue the Rooi-valk programme from commercial oblivion. Despite
    its impressive capabilities, the helicopter has been unable to find
    international customers in competition with European and United
    States alternatives.

    "Technically, we are looking very good," Liebenberg told the committee,
    but he warned that Turkey might feel constrained to buy from a European
    country, given the support it needs in its quest for European Union
    accession. The deal is already being used to apply political leverage
    in the increasingly bitter stand-off between Turkey and France.

    Denel is competing against the Franco-German firm Eurocopter, which
    manufactures the Tiger, Italian firm Augusta with its a-129 Mangusta
    and Russia's MI-28 havoc. It narrowly lost out to Eurocopter in a
    bid to sell the Rooivalk to Australia, but has been in talks with
    the firm over a strategic equity partnership for aspects of its
    helicopter business.

    According to French and Turkish media reports, Eurocopter has sent a
    strongly worded letter to French Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin,
    protesting at proposed legis-lation that would make it a crime to
    deny the "genocide" of Armenians at the hands of Turkish troops during
    World War I.

    The Bill exacerbated tensions between the two countries, which are
    already at odds over French opposition to Turkish entry into the EU.

    Some Turkish newspapers have said that the contract will most likely
    go to Denel if the French Parliament passes the Bill, which was due
    to be debated as the Mail & Guardian went to press.

    Liebenberg said Turkey had traditionally been off limits because of
    sensitivities about its internal situation, but the Rooivalk deal
    now had backing at presidential and Cabinet level, and two ministers
    would soon visit Ankara to press for a deal.

    NCACC approval for this transaction, should it happen, has not yet
    been sought, said Liebenberg, but he is confident that the political
    backing of the Presidency and Public Enterprises Minister Alec Erwin,
    who sits on the committee, is in place.

    Turkey has, since 1996, sought to conclude a major helicopter
    purchase to assist in its crackdown on the activities of Kurdish
    separatist rebels in the east of the country. A previous deal to buy
    145 King Cobra helicopters from the American firm Bell Textron ran
    into intense international opposition over human rights concerns,
    and the US ultimately withdrew its bid on the grounds that it was
    dissatisfied with the tender conditions.

    Amnesty International has been protesting since the mid-1990s about
    the use of military helicopters for both transport and attack purposes
    in operations that have apparently targeted civilians in remote parts
    of the country. It has repeatedly said helicopter exports under these
    circumstances violate international law.

    South Africa's National Conventional Arms Control Act prohibits the
    export of military equipment if there is a risk it will be used in the
    violation of human rights. Sales to Libya, where economic opening has
    not been accompanied by democratic reforms, may also attract scrutiny.

    Denel has often expressed frustration in the past with the approvals
    process at the NCACC, which is charged with applying the provisions
    of the Act, but Liebenberg says the company is working much better
    with the committee now as government support for his restructuring
    plan becomes more coordinated.

    The committee, chaired by Minister of Provincial and Local Government
    Sydney Mufamadi, is supposed to report annually to Parliament on
    weapons exports. Its 2004 report is more than a year overdue and
    2005 statistics, which were due at the end of March, have yet to
    be tabled. It has been criticised in the past for allowing sales to
    countries with poor human rights records or messy internal conflicts.

    Denel is restructuring into a holding company with focused subsidiaries
    working in areas such as missile technology, aircraft components,
    optical systems and artillery. Equity in each of these is likely to
    be sold to international partners with the heft to assist in market
    access and the capital to help scale up production.

    As the M&G has previously reported, the government has agreed to
    provide about R5,1billion to recapitalise Denel and rescue it from
    bankruptcy over the next three years.

    http://www.mg.co.za/articlePage.aspx?artic leid=272200&area=/insight/insight__national/
Working...
X