TAXPAYERS’ £ 6 MILLION TO SYRIA BOMB FIRM
Public cash goes to company kitting out F16 fighter jets
An arms company making lasers for Turkish jets bombing civilians in Syria has been given millions of pounds by Scottish Enterprise.
The Government’s business support agency has handed £ 6million to Leonardo, whose Edinburgh factory makes kit for Turkish F16s.
The jets have been bombing the city of Afrin, in Syria, as part of an aerial offensive against Kurdish militia branded a war crime by campaigners.
Scottish Enterprise deny money given to the multinational defence firm has been spent making arms. But an MSP said the grants undermined the Scottish Government’s opposition to Britain’s missile strikes against Syria last week. Yesterday, Ross Greer said: “This reeks of hypocrisy.”
An Italian arms firm making laser technology for the type of warplanes used by Turkey against the Kurds in Syria has been given £ 6 million by Scottish Enterprise, we can reveal.
The business support agency has handed millions to Leonardo MW, which has a factory in Edinburgh, and produces systems for F16 fighter jets.
The aircraft were used by the Turkish military to bomb the city of Afrin in north- east Syria, an offensive described by critics as ethnic cleansing.
The company received £ 6m from publicly- funded Scottish Enterprise despite being the ninth- largest arms multinational in the world, with sales worth nearly £7 billion in 2015.
The company’s products include military helicopters, fighter jets, drones, missiles, naval guns, artillery and armoured combat vehicles. It has produced laser targeting systems in Edinburgh for Turkey’s F16s.
Critics of the Afrin bombing have slammed Le on ardo’ sar ming of Turkey and accused both the Scottish and UK Governments of “complicity” in Turkey’s war on the Kurds, a new front in wartorn Syria.
Reports have detailed the company’s manufacturing of the laser systems in Scotland.
An executive told Defence Turkey magazine: “It’s a Leonardo product made and designed in Edinburgh.
“We build 50 lasers a month in Edinburgh for the F 16, F 18, F 35 for the target pods. We know how to build pointed trackers. We’re world-leading.”
Turkey launched an offensive against Afrin in north-east Syria, where the Kurdish militia is based. It claims the militia, the YPG, is a terrorist group with links to PKK, a banned group fighting for Kurdish autonomy inside Turkey.
In 2013 and 2014, Selex, a company merged into Leonardo, applied for export licences to Turkey covering countermeasures designed to destroy missiles before they hit targets.
Critics of the arms trade have called for a suspension of UK sales to Turkey and accused the Scottish Government of hypocrisy for questioning Britain’s involvement in last weekend’s missile strike on Syrian chemical weapon plants while allowing taxpayers’ money to support companies selling arms into the war zone.
After the strikes last week, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon challenged Theresa May’s decision, saying: “The question that the PM has not answered is how this action, taken without parliamentary approval, will halt their use or bring long-term peace (in Syria).”
But Ross Greer MSP, external affairs spokesperson for the Scottish Greens, said: “While the UK Government never hesitates to sell arms to the world’s most brutal regimes, the Scottish Government never cease to declare their moral superiority. Yet again this has been exposed as a sham.”
Andrew Smith of Campaign Against Arms
How will this action bring long-term peace in Syria? – First Minister on last week’s air strikes
Their moral superiority is exposed as a
sham – Ross Greer MSP on taxpayers’ support for arms firm