Armoured car sale to South Sudan should be investigated, rights groups say - Action News
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Armoured car sale to South Sudan should be investigated, rights groups say

Permits approving the sale of a Canadian-owned company's armoured vehicles to war-torn South Sudan were signed off by a military official, and not the African country's Interior Ministry, raising questions about whether the vehicles were intentionally diverted to the military.

Watchdogs say Canadian company's sale of armoured vehicles contributed to the war in South Sudan

Photos given to CBC news show Streit vehicles in South Sudan outfitted with heavy duty machine guns and painted with camouflage in areas such as Unity State, where violence against civilians has been intense. (Obtained by CBC)

A Canadian-owned company may haveengaged in some dodgydocumentationin order to sell dozens of armoured vehicles to the military in war-torn South Sudan, CBC News has learned.

The Streit Group, through its factory in the United Arab Emirates, exported 173 Cougar and Typhoon armoured troop carriers to South Sudan in 2014, in a deal recently criticised by a United Nations panel that's monitoring weapons sanctions against individuals in the central African nation.

Leaked documents obtained by CBC, which include internalshipping records and certifications, show the unarmed vehicles, which are basically SUVs on steroids, were officially destined for police use in South Sudan's Interior Ministry.

Streit exported 173 Cougar and Typhoon armoured troop carriers to South Sudan in 2014. (Obtained by CBC News)
But leaked photos, which are also in the possession ofUN investigators, show the camouflage-painted vehicleswereoutfitted with heavy machine-guns and used bythe army.

The practice ofdiversion in the arms tradeinvolves selling equipment for a benign purpose, but thenitendsup beingused for fighting.

It's aviolation of international law, whichhuman rights groups sayCanada is obligated to uphold.

The federal government acknowledges one of the key considerations of its overall arms export policy is the end use of equipment being sold abroad, according to arms control reports prepared by Global Affairs Canada.

Those reports say"careful attention" must bebepaid to "end-use documentation" and that "the export is intended for a legitimate end-user and will not be diverted."

Most often the focus is on military-grade goods manufactured in Canada, but the export law issilent when those homegrown systems are built abroad.

Military approved the permits

An expert in human rights law says, in the case of Streit,it'slegitimate toask whether this 2014 deal violated sanctions.

Depending on when the armoured cars were delivered in South Sudan, the sale could breach Canadian and United Nations sanctions imposed almost two years ago as the country'svicious civil war raged.

The fighting, which has been punctuated with reports of atrocities against civilians, began as a power struggle between the country'spresidentand his deputy in 2013.The warhas proceeded in fits and starts amid international attempts to broker peace agreements.

The arms diversion issuehas the potential along with the separate $15-billion light armoured vehicle sale to Saudi Arabia to tarnish Canada's reputation ahead of the Trudeau government'sbidfor a seat on the UN Security Council.

A look at the Cougar armoured carrier, one of two types of vehicles exported to South Sudan for police use in the Interior Ministry. (CBC News)
The records, leaked to CBC, raise serious questions about who Streit was dealing with in South Sudan between 2012 and 2014.

The sale was approved in three separate batchesin January, March and August 2014 by Maj.-Gen. Akol Koor Kuc, who is responsible for the Defence Department, and not by the country's Interior Ministry.

Luukvan deVondervoort, aformer UN officialwho last winter helped write the organization'sreport critical of Streit, says thedeal should have raised alarm bells aboutthe Canadian company, which has a manufacturing plant in Innisfil, Ont., north of Toronto.

He saysStreit, which is owned by Canadian businessman Guerman Goutorov, hada responsibility to ensure that the vehicles weren'tsold if there was the possibility of their usein potential human rights abuses.

"It's very clear that these vehicles have contributed to the war," van de Vondervoort told CBC News in a recent interview.

Photos show vehicles in combat

While the UN panel didn't formally comment on the use of the vehicles in its report, CBC has obtained exclusive photographs of their service during combat in placessuch as Unity State, where the fighting has been the most intense.
A Streit-manufactured vehicle is seen repainted in camouflage in this image given to CBC News. The vehicles were officially destined for police use. (Obtained by CBC News)

The Sudan People's Liberation Army has been accused of horrific abuses and conducting a "scorched earth" campaign that has slaughtered and terrorised civilians since 2013.

Two ceasefires were brokered and broken in 2014, and in thespring of that year the massacre of more than 200 civilians was reported inBentiu.

A shaky peace deal was signed a year ago, but fighting erupted againlast month in the capital of Juba, where at least 300 civilians were killed.

The UN also reported just days ago that as many as 900,000 people have fled the country since the war first began.

The Streit Group did not answer repeated requests for comment.

Vehicles built, shipped out of UAE

In its initial response to the UN's report, Global Affairs Canada said Streit didn't break Canadian law because the armoured vehicles were manufactured and shipped by the company's branch in the United Arab Emirates, and therefore the sale is outside of the federal government's arms export regulatory regime.

It took the department almost a week to respond to CBC's questions.
A look at the Typhoon armoured carrier. (CBC)

"We take this issue very seriously," said spokesmanFrancois Lasalle, who went on to note the government's recent decision to ratify the Arms Trade Treaty means there will be "more rigour and transparency for Canada's export controls system," and that legislation will be coming this fall.

The department didn't saywhatCanadaknew about the Streit deal and when, nor did officials respond to the allegation that the deal may have violated sanctions.

Cesar Jaramillo, executive director of the peace research group Project Ploughshares, says the government is trying to wash its hands of responsibility because the vehicles weren'tbuilt in Canada or exported directly from here.

Themessage it sends, he says,is Canadian companies can behave however they want once overseas.

Close arms export loophole, group says

He says there should be a federal investigation intotheStreitdealand theLiberal government should close the loophole that allows Canadian companies to get around arms export restrictions by setting up foreign entities.

"It's high time that Western governments, which tend to be the biggest arms exporters in the world, own up to that responsibility ...for the impact these arms exports are having in countries engulfed in conflict, or that are undergoing situations of mass violations of human rights," Jaramillo said.

Van de Vondervoot also doesn't accept the federal government's argument. He saysif it were Europe, Streit's owner would be considered liable for at the very least violating sanctions.

South Sudanese rebel soldiers raise their weapons at a military camp in the capital Juba in April. As many as 900,000 people have fled the country since the onset of the civil war. (Jason Patinkin/Associated Press)

Canada followed the lead of the UN in 2014 and imposed sanctions on individuals in South Sudanwho are believed to be behind the bloody civil war.

'Amatter that should be investigated'

Paul Champ, an international human rights lawyer, says if any of the vehicles or even spare parts were delivered after the Conservative government imposed sanctions on Oct. 24, 2014, Streit would be open to prosecution under Canadian law, regardless of where they were built.

"I really think there is a live issue here about whether this company has violated Canadian law," Champ said in an interview. "The delivery of these APCs by the Streit Group is right up to the line... It's arguable that this is an issue of willful blindness here."

The documents show Streit claims the last delivery of the armoured vehicles took place in August of 2014, almost two months before Canadian restrictions kicked in.

But Champ says giventhe possible diversion of the vehicles, nobody should take the company's word at face value, especially when you consider the timing of the deal.

"I think that's a matter that should be investigated," he said.

"Everyone knew about the escalation of violence in 2013 in South Sudan, which became a full-out war in December of 2013. The fact that these armoured personnel carrier were sold in the spring of 2014, right in the middle of a brutal civil war one of the most brutal civil wars in the world I think that raises real questions."