Call on the London Mayoral candidates to Stop DSEI
September 2021 will see the Defence and Security Equipment International, the world’s largest arms fair, return to London. This fair hosts military and security delegations from some of the world’s most repressive regimes and will enable weapons to be marketed to these regimes, fuelling more death and misery globally. DSEI 2019 featured over 1,700 exhibitors, including all of the biggest arms companies, marketing their wares to more than 36,000 attendees. But we can put pressure on the mayoral candidates to oppose this fair. In conjunction with the Palestine Solidarity Campaign, we are calling on the candidates to publicly say they oppose DSEI, recover the costs of policing the event from DSEI’s organisers and commit to doing everything they can to stop DSEI from returning to London.
If you are in London, please email the candidates here. If you are out of London, you can write to the Secretary of State for International Trade here. DSEI has darkened London’s boundaries for far too long and it must be banned from taking place ever again.
Holding the people of Yemen in the light
On the sixth anniversary of the start of the war on Yemen, we held a vigil for the people of Yemen, who have experienced so much suffering due to the Saudi-led coalition’s bombardment of their country. We played a video from the Yemeni journalist Ahmad Algohbary and read out a poem by the Yemeni–Scouse poet and activist Amina Atiq, which you can read on the last page of this fantastic CAAT zine. We then lit candles and stayed in silence as we held the people of Yemen in our thoughts. Our vigil was preceded by Stop the War Coalition’s rally, which you can watch here.
On a related note, CAAT have produced a new open letter to Boris Johnson calling on him to end UK arms sales for use in the war on Yemen. As the United States has frozen arms sales to Saudi Arabia and the UAE, this is a great opportunity to put pressure on the UK to do the same. You can sign the open letter here.
Support Bahrainis campaign for an inquiry into the Bahrain Grand Prix
24 human rights organisations, including our friends the Bahrain Institute for Rights and Democracy (BIRD), and 61 MPs have called for an independent inquiry into the Bahrain Grand Prix over human rights concerns in the country. The Bahraini regime brutally crushed the pro-democracy uprising during the Arab Spring of 2011 and the human rights situation has grown worse over the last decade. Democracy activists have been tortured and jailed and even children have been tortured and convicted. 51 individuals have been sentenced to death and over 900 people have had their citizenship revoked. This is a form of sportswashing and Formula 1 should abide by its own human rights policy.
Lewis Hamilton has responded for calls to take a stance, including from an 11 year old boy who’s father is on death row, and said Formula 1 cannot ignore concerns surrounding human rights in the countries it visits. He said “There are issues all around the world but I do not think we should be going to these countries and just ignoring what is happening in those places, arriving, having a great time and then leaving”. You can read more about his stance here. Check out BIRD’s website for more information on how to support their #Race4Rights campaign.