<http://observer.guardian.co.uk/Guardian/1,,,00.html> Guardian Unlimited

 <http://observer.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,,2147178,00.html>
http://observer.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,,2147178,00.html


British firm under scrutiny for export of Bosnian guns to Iraq


MPs and Amnesty International demand to know if a Nottingham-based Company
has breached the United Nations arms embargo 

Jamie Doward and Johnny McDevitt


Sunday August 12, 2007


 <http://www.observer.co.uk/> The Observer 


The government was facing awkward questions last night over an arms deal
involving a British company licensed by the Department of Trade and Industry
to import weapons but which was also selling machine guns to an Iraqi
official later implicated in an alleged $1.1bn (£545m) corruption scandal. 

A committee of MPs and Amnesty International have both demanded to know
whether the deal breaches either the UN arms embargo on Iraq or British
government export laws. They want to know who was involved in the deal and
what safeguards are in place to ensure arms exports negotiated by British
companies through foreign intermediaries reach their intended destination.

Documents obtained by The Observer show Procurement Management Services
(PMS) had a contract to provide assault rifles to Ziad Cattan, the former
head of military procurement at the Iraq Defence Ministry. 

PMS was licensed by the DTI, now known as the Department for Business
Enterprise and Regulatory Reform (BERR), to import at least 40,000 assault
rifles and AK-47s to Britain from the former Yugoslavia. 

Last night the department declined to shed light on whether it knew that, in
2005, PMS also had at least one contract to supply some 300 7.62mm
light-machineguns from the former Yugoslavia to Cattan at the Iraq Defence
Ministry. Until mid-2005, Cattan, who used to run a pizza parlour in Poland,
was responsible for overseeing the importation of weapons into Iraq. A
warrant has been issued for his arrest amid allegations he illegally made
millions of dollars in corrupt deals. 

Supplying weapons to the Iraq government is legitimate through the correct
channels and it is not alleged that the PMS deal is being investigated by
the Iraqi government as part of the corruption scandal. But by law a British
company wanting to export equipment from one overseas country to another
must be licensed. In addition, an arms broker needs a licence to export
weapons to Iraq because it is subject to an arms embargo. There is no
Foreign Office record of any British company being granted a licence to
transport guns between Bosnia and Baghdad. 

'If a UK company did supply machineguns to Iraq from Bosnia in 2005, then
such a transaction would require a UK brokering licence,' said Oliver
Sprague, director of Amnesty International's Arms Programme. 'If one was
issued, then questions need to be asked about what steps were taken to
ensure the weapons were accounted for; if one wasn't, then the UK
authorities must investigate this matter fully. Enforcement of our own
export controls has been shown time and time again to be worryingly weak.' 

Roger Berry, chairman of the influential parliamentary Quadripartite
Committee that monitors arms exports, suggested an export licence might not
have been required if the entire deal took place overseas. 

'British arms brokers are completely out of control when they are operating
outside the UK,' said Berry. 'If no part of the transaction takes place in
the UK they don't need a licence. This is precisely the loophole that my
committee argues needs to be plugged.' 

The documents show in February 2005 the machineguns were shipped out of
Bosnia-Herzegovina on behalf of PMS, a small company based on an industrial
estate in Nottingham, and on to Baghdad. The final intended recipient of the
weapons was the 'Republic of Iraq Ministry of Defence, Dr Ziad Cattan,
Deputy Secretary General.' 

The weapons were transported by rail and air by a little-known
Croatian-registered company, Scout, which is run from a fifth-floor flat in
Zagreb by Ivan Peranec, a publicity-shy travel agent turned arms dealer with
links to former leading figures in the Bosnian army. Over the past five
years Peranec's company has shipped thousands of weapons to registered arms
dealers including the Alabama-based Taos Industries which has a $34m
contract from the Pentagon to supply the Iraqi military. 

The government has resisted demands from MPs and pressure groups to explain
what has happened to the weapons brought back to Britain from the former
Yugoslavia, many of which are believed to have found their way to Iraq. 

'Our own investigations into weapons being supplied to Iraq have revealed
shocking failures in the export controls process,' Sprague said. 'As a
result, some of these arms are being used to commit atrocities - and no one
has been held to account.' 

Last week the Quadripartite Committee, which normally focuses on arms
exports, took the unusual step of demanding the government explain what had
happened to the weapons imported to Britain from the former Yugoslavia. The
committee fears that as many as 200,000 weapons - mainly light machine guns
and AK-47s - have come back to Britain without correct oversight. 

'Given the volume of assault weapons coming into the country, we consider
that there must be adequate monitoring arrangements to ensure none of these
weapons leaks on to the streets of the UK and that, if they are part of a
weapons destruction programme, they are made unusable,' the committee said
in a scathing report. 

PMS did not return calls made to the mobile phone or landline of one of its
directors last week. A BERR spokesman said: 'We can neither confirm nor deny
if Procurement Management Services of Nottingham have a licence to export or
trade in weapons either directly from the UK or otherwise.' 

The PMS deal may be above board, but highlights the difficulties in tracing
weapons. Monitoring the vast amount of arms that have entered Iraq from a
variety of countries has become an urgent priority for allied forces. Last
week the US government admitted some 190,000 weapons flown into Iraq to
equip its military and police forces were unaccounted for, raising concerns
that they had fallen into the hands of insurgents.





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