Categories
Politics
Reflections
Arts & Culture
Consumer
HomeAboutContact

Subscribe for updates

Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
HomeAboutContact
Politics
Reflections
Arts & Culture
Consumer
Twitterfacebooklinkedinemail
print

Who will investigate the use of Brazilian tear gas in Bahrain?

Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
By:
Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
March 10, 2012
March 16, 2022
Who will investigate the use of Brazilian tear gas in Bahrain?
Share this:
Twitterfacebooklinkedinemail
print

Who will investigate the use of Brazilian tear gas in Bahrain?

This is a translation from Portuguese of my column that appeared in the March 9, 2012 edition of O Globo:

Rasheed Abou-Alsamh

The Brazilian foreign ministry Itamaraty and Condor Non-Lethal Technologies must find us naive. After my report on the misuse of Brazilian-made tear gas against pro-democracy protesters in Bahrain (O Globo, 9/1), the Folha de S. Paulo reported (11/1) that the foreign ministry would investigate whether there was breach of contract in the use of gas in Bahrain.

I was waiting for a report from the so-called investigation. Then came an article entitled "Brazil, Producer and Exporter of Arms", published by the Brazilian investigative site A Publica, on Jan. 27, which said the following: "Itamaraty itself acknowledges that it has no power of investigation: after the scandal of Bahrain, the office of the Itamaraty spokesman said that the ministry was only ‘watching with interest’ as the story unfolds.... ‘It is a contract between private parties. It may even involve a foreign government, but responsibility for its product lies with its manufacturer,’ said the foreign ministry.”

I sent six questions to Itamaraty on the use of Brazilian tear gas in Bahrain, my main question being: "It seems that the Brazilian government is washing its hands of any responsibility for the misuse of Brazilian-made tear gas in Bahrain. Why? Does Brazil not think it is important to safeguard the human rights of civilians in a civil war situation, or are Brazilian economic interests more important than human rights? "

I also asked if Brazil had sent a diplomat to Bahrain to investigate. This was the non-response I received: "This office states that the jurisdiction of the ministry and other public administration bodies on the matter in question is clearly defined by the National Policy on the Export of Military Equipment."

This policy, known by the acronym PNEMEM in Portuguese, is not very demanding. A Brazilian exporter needs to submit just three things: 1. An import permit from the importing country; 2. An End User Certificate 3. In the case of countries in which the import of these materials is unregulated, a statement from the Brazilian diplomatic mission in importing country or from the importing country's diplomatic mission in Brazil, is needed.

I called Condor in Rio de Janeiro and talked to their marketing manager, Massilon Miranda, who repeated the statement made in December that his company had never sold tear gas to Bahrain, but may have sold the gas to neighboring countries. Perhaps one of the armed forces of one of the Gulf Cooperation Council countries, which were deployed in Bahrain last year to help the Bahraini royal family quell the demonstrations, had used the gas made in Brazil? Perhaps, but the way things are going, I do not think we will ever know for sure. Certainly not if we depend on Itamaraty or Condor for confirmation.

It is striking that Condor has the inability to admit that its tear gas could have been used in Bahrain. "There was never any confirmation that any person has died a victim of tear gas — even more so Brazilian gas — in Bahrain," said Miranda. "Maybe activists are doing this campaign to limit the means that police have to use against them. Is all that smoke actually from tear gas?"

The photo of a used canister of tear gas manufactured by it, emblazoned with the Brazilian flag, released by activists in Bahrain; the two deaths caused by Brazilian gas as reported by Zainab al-Khawaja, and miles of video showing security forces in Bahrain throwing thousands of canisters of tear gas against protesters, are not enough to convince the spokesperson of the Condor that it became involved in a civil war, whether it likes it or not?

The Brazilian government has a policy to help the export of arms manufactured in the country, and President Dilma Rousseff signed a provisional order in September exempting Brazilian manufacturers of armaments from taxes. Brazil has a long history of exporting heavy and light weapons to areas of conflict areas since the 1970s. The country sold many weapons to the regime of Saddam Hussein in the 1980s when Iraq was at war with Iran for eight years.

Not surprisingly, Itamaraty is in the difficult position of wanting to help Brazilian exports of weapons, but at the same time must feel a certain discomfort in seeing Brazilian-made tear gas, supposedly non-lethal, being used against children, women and old people. There is a responsibility on the part of Itamaraty and Condor to investigate, ascertain and possibly even suspend arms sales to Arab countries, since the end use of the exported tear gas was not in the country of the government that bought the gas from Brazil. It's the least we can do to rescue the reputation of Brazil as a country that cares about human rights — not only of Brazilians, but also of other people with a thirst for more freedom and dignity.

Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
By:
Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
Tags:
GCC
reform
Share this:
Twitterfacebooklinkedinemail
print

Comments

Dutch Johnson
3/18/2012 1:25 AM
3/16/2022 7:04 PM

Thank you. Keep asking the uncomfortable questions.

Leave a comment

Name
Comment
Your comment has been submitted! Refresh your page, it will appear shortly.
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form. Try again!

Other posts

·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Latest Posts
·
Genocide of Palestinians is not the answer
Politics
October 26, 2023
October 26, 2023

Genocide of Palestinians is not the answer

By:
Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
My stroke
Reflections
May 14, 2023
May 14, 2023

My stroke

By:
Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
Before she died, and after
Reflections
February 18, 2023
February 23, 2023

Before she died, and after

By:
Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
Why the Brasilia attacks are so worrying
Politics
January 12, 2023
January 12, 2023

Why the Brasilia attacks are so worrying

By:
Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
Previous
Next
2 / 71
Politics
December 19, 2014
March 24, 2022

Minha entrevista com a Radio Sputnik sobre a tortura da CIA

By:
Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
Politics
October 17, 2014
March 24, 2022

Jovens do PSDB repudiam ataque de militante pro-Dilma

By:
Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
December 20, 2013
February 18, 2023

Os estrangeiros descontentes

By:
Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
June 17, 2012
March 16, 2022

Síria: Um silêncio vergonhoso

By:
Rasheed Abou-Alsamh
Next
1 / 85
RW Logo
HomeAboutContact
Categories
Politics
Reflections
Arts & Culture
Consumer
Subscribe for updates
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

© Rasheed's World 2021. All rights reserved.

Site by