The two-day Security Policing Conference and Exhibition will be hosted in Farnborough, Hampshire, South East England. It will kick off on March 10, with the press explicitly excluded.
News of the arms fair surfaces as Britain reportedly approved the sale of £16 million worth of anti-riot equipment, including tear gas and rubber bullets to countries on its own human-rights blacklist.
Critics say the government is putting profits ahead of human rights.
READ MORE: UK selling tear gas and rubber bullets to states it deems repressive - report
Organized by the Home Office, this week's arms fair in Farnborough will focus on the sale and promotion of military wares commonly deployed for“state repression,” according to anti-arms group Campaign Against the Arms Trade.
Delegations from a slew of repressive regimes are expected to attend, CAAT says.
Although the invitee list is yet to be publicly disclosed, the think tank suggests it will likely contain representatives who have frequented similar events. Among these are representatives from Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, UAE, Colombia, Qatar, Libya and Algeria.
CAAT carries out research into the global arms trade and its devastating impact worldwide.
It seeks to raise awareness about the destructive effect arms dealing has on security, human rights and economic development at home and abroad.
The think tank warns UK military equipment may have been used during repressive crackdowns and human rights violations in Bahrain, Egypt, Kuwait and Hong Kong. It says these allegations would never have surfaced were it not for the work of journalists and activists based in these regions.
READ MORE: ‘Complicit in Gaza’s misery’: Pro-Palestine activists shut down UK arms factory
CAAT’s Andrew Smith says this week’s arms fair undermines the British government’s claims of promoting human rights abroad. He warns the event will ultimately serve to bolster and strengthen repressive governments.
Smith argues events such as this consolidate Britain’s links to dictatorships, and further entrenches the coalition government’s position as a “global arms dealer.”
Last year, visitors attending the arms fair in Farnborough were presented with the exhibition stands of weapons manufacturing giants, such as BAE Systems, Thales, Finmeccanica, Heckler & Koch and others. Surveillance firms like the Gamma Group and The Hacking Team were also present, according to CAAT.
BAE Systems is Europe’s largest arms firm, and has supplied many repressive governments, such as Saudi Arabia’s, Bahrain’s and Mubarak's Egypt.
Thales is the eleventh largest arms firm in the world, and has also sold military wares to some of the most oppressive regimes across the globe, CAAT says.
In February, pregnant political activist Anne Marie O’Reilly quietly entered a glitzy arms industry dinner in Westminster, commandeered a microphone and warned the assembled arms dealers and MPs that making profit by causing “death and destruction” is unacceptable.
Her unexpected intervention left the crowd somewhat stunned. Before being escorted off stage, O'Reilly suggested arms dealers in the audience should reconsider their careers.
The annual dinner, which cost attendees £246 per head, was hosted by ADS – a trade body for British Aerospace, and other defense, security and space companies.
Shortly before the ADS soiree, it emerged the Prince of Wales allegedly wishes to end his role as a promoter of UK arms in the Gulf States.
The revelation was unveiled by an unauthorized biography documenting Prince Charles’ life, published in February.
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