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Arms Export Vote Reflects History Of Scandals

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Tuesday, 13 October 2009

Oerlikon-Bührle, Pilatus, Ruag – Swiss weapons manufacturers have often made the headlines, but rarely for the right reasons.

On November 29 the Swiss will vote, for the third time since 1972, on banning the export of weapons and other military materiel. The government has recommended voters reject the initiative.

The first of many arms scandals to rock Switzerland occurred in 1968, when during the Nigerian Civil War it turned out that planes belonging to the International Committee of the Red Cross had been hit by rockets made in... Switzerland. By Zurich's Oerlikon-Bührle to be precise.

The public were shocked by the images – after all Swiss law banned the export of arms to warring countries. But Oerlikon got round this by simply using fake export certificates. In 1970 Dieter Bührle, the company's German president, was given a suspended sentence and a small fine.

But questions were raised over the responsibility of the government, which since 1938 had had the power to monitor arms exports. What's more, press investigations subsequently revealed that Oerlikon-Bührle had been illegally exporting arms to apartheid South Africa as early as 1963.

In an attempt to clear the fog hanging over the government's relations with the arms industry, pacifist groups launched an initiative to ban the export of arms. In 1972, during the Vietnam War, the initiative was narrowly rejected by 50.3 per cent of voters.

« Switzerland contributed significantly less to Germany's secret rearmament than Sweden and the Netherlands, or even the Soviet Union. » 2002 Bergier commission report

German savoir faire

In fact, the question of arms exports is nothing new in Switzerland. During the two world wars the Swiss authorities worked hard to attract German arms manufacturers who were prevented by the 1919 Treaty of Versailles from manufacturing, importing or exporting weapons.

In 2002 the Bergier commission presented its final report on Switzerland's activities during the Second World War. In its volume devoted to arms exports the historians concluded that "Switzerland contributed significantly less to Germany's secret rearmament than Sweden and the Netherlands, or even the Soviet Union".

It added however that arms manufacturers in Switzerland "had repeatedly violated the country's law on neutrality" while at the same time making "exorbitant profits".

While it's true that immediately after the war Bern decided to suspend the export of arms, this stance didn't last long and in 1949, much to the disapproval of the left and pacifists, Switzerland started exporting again.

With the Cold War in full swing, most Swiss exports headed to non-Communist countries.

"Poor man's bombers"

This was the backdrop for the first scandal involving Pilatus, a maker of single-engine aircraft based in central Switzerland, which counted among its founders Emil Georg Bührle, father of Dieter.

In 1978 an anti-establishment magazine revealed that the company's PC-7 training aircraft could be easily adapted to carry bombs.

"At first the government denied this," said Jean-Marie Pellaux, author of a book on the affair. "Then, following various media revelations, it claimed this didn't violate Swiss law as the planes hadn't been modified in Switzerland."

Nicknamed the "poor man's bombers" because of their relatively modest cost, PC-7s are said to have been used by the CIA in Laos in 1962, in Myanmar, Guatemala, Mexico, Chile, Bolivia and Nigeria. More recently Pilatus products have been spotted in Iraq, South Africa and Darfur.

Continuing offences

The many scandals surrounding Pilatus have generated several parliamentary inquiries and initiatives.

But in December 2008 the House of Representatives refused to categorise Pilatus planes as war materiel and therefore didn't ban their export to conflict zones.

Yet many recent reports indicate that such offences continue to be committed. For example in 2000 hand grenades made by state-owned arms manufacturer Ruag were sold to Britain and used in Iraq.

And then there were the tanks exported by Swiss firm Mowag to the United Arab Emirates in 2004 and Romania in 2007 and used in Morocco, Iraq and Afghanistan.

The supporters of the initiative list a hundred such scandals on their site, but they admit that the "grey zone" between the law and practice is problematic.

In the most recent vote on the issue, 12 years ago, the Swiss refused to ban the export of arms by 77.5 per cent.

Carole Wälti, swissinfo.ch (Adapted from French by Thomas Stephens)


Tuesday, 13 October 2009

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