The National (Scotland)

How Sunak’s family is profiting from ties to major weapons firms

Campaigner­s condemn PM’s links to the arms trade

- BY JAMES WALKER

RISHI Sunak’s family is profiting from strong links to the arms industry including a firm that provides parts for Israeli military helicopter­s, The National can reveal.

The multinatio­nal IT firm Infosys – which is part-owned by the Prime Minister’s wife Akshata Murty with shares worth around £700 million and dividend payouts of over £50m since 2020 – counts several of the UK’s largest weapons firms as longstandi­ng clients and partners.

It came after Sunak announced last week that weapons firms are to be considered “ethical” under newly altered criteria to encourage private sector investment.

He also promised an extra £75 billion in defence spending by 2030 amid increased pressure on the UK Government to halt arms sales to Israel amid its brutal war on Gaza.

Infosys – which was founded by Murty’s father – has a consulting arm for the aerospace and defence industry and counts one of the UK’s largest arms manufactur­ers in Rolls-Royce as one of its major clients.

Rolls-Royce is the world’s 25th largest arms company according to the Stockholm Internatio­nal Peace Reto search Institute, producing military aircraft engines, naval engines, power supplies for military vehicles, and cores for nuclear submarines.

Rolls-Royce and Infosys entered into a strategic partnershi­p together in 2020, opening up a joint aerospace engineerin­g centre in India in an effort to yield “mutual benefits to both organisati­ons”.

It came after Rolls-Royce recently announced its submarines division would open a new office in Cardiff and Glasgow funded by the UK Ministry of Defence (MoD).

The firm’s CEO, Tufan Erginbilgi­c, also sits on Rishi Sunak’s exclusive business council for 2024, which advises the Prime Minister on ways

“grow the UK economy”. RollsRoyce didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Infosys has also worked with Spirit Aerosystem­s for more than 18 years, an aerostruct­ures manufactur­er that builds the composite fuselage for CH-53K King Stallion heavy-lift helicopter­s 12 of which were sold to the Israeli military in 2021.

More recently, Infosys and Spirit Aerosystem­s opened a joint aerospace engineerin­g centre in Texas to enable the two companies to “work more closely” together and build upon a partnershi­p in which Infosys has reportedly “provided innovative design solutions” for some of the firm’s aerostruct­ure programs.

Spirit Aerosystem­s also has an office in Scotland’s Prestwick Airport.

When asked for comment, a company spokespers­on said: “Our supplier, Infosys, supports us on some of our commercial and aftermarke­t programmes.

“We build the fuselage for the Sikorsky CH-53K King Stallion helicopter at our Wichita, US facility.”

Infosys also counts Bell Helicopter, a leading manufactur­er of military and commercial helicopter­s, as another one of its clients.

The SNP’s defence spokespers­on in Westminste­r, Martin DochertyHu­ghes told The National that “noone should be surprised”. The MP added: “While it may not break any laws, the invidious nature of the Prime Minister’s familial investment­s highlights a clear lack of transparen­cy at the heart of the Westminste­r system.

“With a defence ministry that now seeks to spend an extra £75bn on defence, the Westminste­r’s political masters will no doubt dumb down on openness and transparen­cy no matter who sits in 10 Downing Street.

“Scotland needs a defence structure based on Scotland and our allies needs, not those of a political elite wedded to personal and familial gain at any cost.”

Emily Apple from Campaign Against Arms Trade, meanwhile, said that Sunak’s connection to the arms trade demonstrat­es a larger issue.

“Too many of our political elite are in the pocket of the arms trade, profiting from this vile trade in death and destructio­n and promoting the interests of these death merchants in their parliament­ary work,” she added.

“Rishi Sunak is profiting from genocide. Despite immense pressure for the UK to uphold internatio­nal law and suspend arms sales to Israel, Sunak has refused to act.

“Instead he is actively praising the UK arms trade, and promoting his own self-interest. He is complicit in

 ?? ?? Stephen Flynn is said to be part of a ‘succession plan’
Stephen Flynn is said to be part of a ‘succession plan’
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 ?? ?? SNP MP Martin Docherty-Hughes said ‘no-one should be surprised’
SNP MP Martin Docherty-Hughes said ‘no-one should be surprised’

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