Canada mulls cancelling Saudi arms deal over Yemen\, Khashoggi murder

Canada mulls cancelling Saudi arms deal over Yemen, Khashoggi murder

AFP  |  Montreal 

is looking into ways to cancel a giant 2014 weapons deal with Saudi Arabia, said Sunday, as criticism mounts over the kingdom's role in the murder of and the Riyadh-led war in

Trudeau had earlier said that it would be "extremely difficult" to withdraw from the contract, signed by the previous conservative administration, "without Canadians paying exorbitant penalties."

But as evidence emerged of direct Saudi involvement in Khashoggi's murder on October 2, in late November announced sanctions against 17 Saudi nationals linked to killing.

"The murder of a is absolutely unacceptable and that's why from the very beginning had been demanding answers and solutions on that," Trudeau said Sunday in an interview with

"We inherited actually a (Can) dollars 15 billion contract signed by (former prime minister) to export light-armored vehicles to Saudi Arabia," he said.

"We are engaged with the export permits to try and see if there is a way of no longer exporting these vehicles to Saudi Arabia," he added.

The penalty for breaking the contract could exceed Canadian dollar 1 billion, Trudeau said in an interview with in October.

Trudeau has been criticised by political opponents and Human Rights activists for failing to cancel the contract.

London, Ontario-based manufacturer Land Systems Canada inked the deal in 2014 to supply 928 LAV 6 armoured personnel carriers to

The deal, worth USD 11.5 billion, was the largest arms deal in Canadian history.

But the contract was scaled back earlier this year, amid protests, to 742, dropping heavy assault versions equipped with cannons that activists and opposition politicians warned could be used against civilians and to help wage war in

Khashoggi, a US resident who wrote for and had been a critic of Mohammed bin Salman, was lured to the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, killed and dismembered, according to Turkish officials.

After lengthy denials, Saudi authorities admitted responsibility for the murder and said 21 people had been taken into custody.

However, a CIA analysis leaked to the US media went further, pointing the finger at the crown prince, Saudi Arabia's de facto ruler.

In October, German said her country would suspend arms sales to over the murder.

Relations between Canada and the Saudi kingdom have been in crisis in recent months.

expelled Ottawa's and severed all trade and investment ties in August to protest Canada's rigorous demands that jailed human rights activists be released.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, December 17 2018. 14:15 IST