UK Politics

Mother-of-four's warning to holidaymakers after husband is jailed for 10 YEARS after visiting popular tourist destination​

Overview of UK Arms Exports to Saudi Arabia​

The United Kingdom is one of Saudi Arabia’s primary arms suppliers, alongside the United States. UK arms exports to Saudi Arabia have been extensive and controversial, especially since the onset of the Saudi-led intervention in Yemen in March 2015136.

Scale and Value of Exports
  • Since March 2015, the UK has licensed at least £9.7 billion worth of arms to the Saudi-led coalition, with £8.2 billion going directly to Saudi Arabia1. Some estimates, accounting for ongoing maintenance and support, place the real value of UK arms exports to Saudi Arabia at over £29 billion17.
  • Over the decade from 2012 to 2022, Saudi Arabia purchased approximately £10 billion in UK armaments7.
  • Major deals include the Al-Yamamah arms agreements, the largest export contracts in British history, which began in 1985 and have involved tens of billions of pounds in aircraft, weapons, and services4.
Types of Arms Supplied
  • The UK has supplied advanced military aircraft (Typhoon and Tornado jets), missiles (Brimstone, Storm Shadow), bombs (Paveway), and other munitions136.
  • Over half of Saudi Arabia’s combat aircraft used in the Yemen conflict are UK-supplied6.
  • UK companies, notably BAE Systems, have provided not only hardware but also essential maintenance, training, and technical support to the Royal Saudi Air Force16.
Use in Yemen and Humanitarian Concerns
  • UK-made weapons have played a central role in Saudi Arabia’s bombing campaign in Yemen, which has resulted in thousands of civilian deaths and contributed to what the UN describes as the world’s largest humanitarian crisis168.
  • There is substantial evidence that UK-supplied arms have been used in attacks on civilian targets, including homes, schools, and hospitals6.
  • Multiple reports and investigations have found repeated breaches of international humanitarian law by the Saudi-led coalition, raising significant ethical and legal questions about continued UK arms sales1257.
Legal and Political Developments
  • In 2019, the UK Court of Appeal ruled that the government’s decision to continue licensing arms exports to Saudi Arabia was unlawful due to failure to properly assess the risk of humanitarian law violations5.
  • The UK government temporarily paused new arms export licenses but resumed them in 2020, claiming violations were “isolated incidents”2.
  • Legal challenges and public scrutiny continue, with ongoing debates in Parliament and the courts over the legality and morality of UK arms sales to Saudi Arabia28.
Screenshot from 2025-06-07 05-45-26.png

Key Points

  • The UK is a leading arms supplier to Saudi Arabia, with billions of pounds in sales and ongoing support.
  • UK arms have been used extensively in Yemen, contributing to significant civilian harm.
  • The legality and ethics of these exports are hotly contested, with ongoing legal actions and calls for greater scrutiny and restraint12567.
 

From the industrial age to the imbecilic age
Screenshot from 2025-06-16 02-09-22.png

A businessman found himself at the centre of a year-long nightmare at the hands of the Metropolitan Police after tapping a male waiter on the back for a second to avoid a collision in a hotel bar.

Father-of-two Simon Correia was hauled before the courts after being falsely accused of intimately groping and touching the waiter’s bottom following a black-tie awards ceremony held at London’s Park Plaza Riverbank hotel.

CCTV footage clearly shows, from multiple angles, that Mr Correia, 48, momentarily placed his hand on the back of the man – who was holding a tray of drinks – to warn him not to step backwards.

But even after viewing the footage and admitting it did not show what the accuser had described, a Met Police officer arrested the married company director, threw him in a cell for 15 hours and charged him with sexual assault.

The false allegation triggered a horrific year-long legal saga which cost Mr Correia £10,000 in fees and devastated his family.

His nightmare only came to an end on February 6 this year when, after seeing the CCTV footage, a judge threw the case out of court, saying it ‘wholly contradicted’ the waiter’s account.

Yet despite being cleared of any wrongdoing, Mr Correia, from Liverpool, and his wife Clare, 45, say they are yet to receive an apology from either the Met or the Crown Prosecution Service – or an explanation for why the case was ever allowed to proceed to trial.


Last night, speaking exclusively to The Mail on Sunday, Mr Correia, who feared he would be placed on the sex offenders register, broke down while describing his ordeal.
 

Similar threads

Back
Top