9th January 2026
Madrid NewsMain News

Spain cancels sale of 400 bombs to Saudi Arabia

Spain said Tuesday it has cancelled a 2015 deal to sell 400 laser-guided bombs to Saudi Arabia, which is leading a coalition fighting rebels in Yemen.

A defence ministry spokesman confirmed a Cadena Ser radio report that said Spain’s new Socialist government planned to return the 9.2m euros already paid by the Saudis for the arms under a deal signed by the previous conservative administration.

Yemenis dig graves
Yemenis dig graves for children who where killed when their bus was hit during a Saudi-led coalition air strike, that targeted the Dahyan market the previous day in the Huthi rebels’ stronghold province of Saada. Photo taken on 10 August 2018 (AFP)

The spokesman declined to elaborate but the announcement comes after an August air strike by the Saudi-led coalition battling rebels in Yemen that killed dozens of civilians, including 40 children.

The incident sparked a wave of international anger and calls by the United Nations Security Council for a ‘credible and transparent’ investigation.

The coalition had claimed to have targeted a bus carrying rebels.

ALSO READ: Saudi Arabia has signed deal for 5 Spanish-built warships

Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and other allies intervened in Yemen in March 2015 after Shiite Huthi rebels linked to Iran ousted President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi’s government from the capital Sanaa and seized swathes of the country.

Nearly 10,000 people have been killed in the conflict since then, 2,200 of them children, and sparked what the UN has described as the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.

Amnesty International says Spain is one of biggest arms exporters to Saudi Arabia.

It and other rights groups, including Greenpeace and Oxfam, on Tuesday urged Spain to stop all arm sales to Saudi Arabia during a meeting with Spain’s secretary of state for trade, Xiana Mendez.

The government did not make any commitment to limit other arms sales to Saudi Arabia during the meeting, Oxfam spokeswoman Lara Contreras told AFP.

While the 400 bombs which Spain will no longer send to Riyadh represent just ‘one percent of total arms sales to Saudi Arabia, it sends a clear message that it is important’ to the Spanish government, she added.

Spain signed an agreement with Saudi Arabia in April to sell the Gulf Arab state five warships in a deal estimated to be worth around 1.8 billion euros.

Recent Posts

Pedro Sánchez says Spanish troops could also participate in peacekeeping mission in Ukraine

News Desk

Podemos founding member and former MP Errejón to stand trial for alleged sexual assault

News Desk

Weather warnings issued across Spain, as parts of Europe face transport chaos from cold snap

News Desk

Spain joins European allies in rejecting Trump’s call for US control of Greenland

News Desk

Around 1,400 protest in Madrid and Barcelona against US ‘imperialist aggression’ in Venezuela

News Desk

Spain’s inflation rate eased slightly in December, with 2025 closing at 2.7% average

News Desk

Leave a Comment