Britain Helping Riyadh in Yemen War

Local Editor

The UK stands accused of joining Saudi Arabia’s military campaign against Houthi rebels in Yemen. Six British experts are helping their Saudi colleagues target areas for attacks, according to Sky News. The Ministry of Defence has denied the allegations.

Britain is well known for supplying the Saudi regime with billions of dollars worth of military hardware. However, it now appears the UK is helping the kingdom to use these weapons on the battlefield.

The experts are believed to be helping Saudi forces coordinate attacks against the Houthi rebels in Yemen. However, the Ministry of Defence [MoD] says no British military personnel are taking part in direct operations, but are merely helping to train the Saudis to make sure they comply with international law.

The claims have brought a stinging response from human rights groups, who say they have documented dozens of examples of the Saudi-led coalition committing breaches of international law.

"At a time when the Saudis and other members of the Gulf coalition are committing multiple violations of the laws of war in Yemen - we’ve documented that," said David Mepham, the director of Human Rights Watch UK, as cited by Sky News.

"Human Rights Watch has put out numerous reports about what the Saudis are up to in Yemen - that the British are working hand in glove with the Saudis, helping them, enhancing their capacity to prosecute this war that has led to the death of so many civilians. I think it’s deeply regrettable and unacceptable," he added.

The UK spends £55 million [$80 million] on aid to Yemen every year. However, Cameron’s government has been criticized for continuing to sell weapons to Saudi Arabia during the conflict, in which some 6,000 people have been killed.

Former Conservative cabinet minister Andrew Mitchell told the Telegraph: "Britain’s humanitarian and foreign policy are pursuing different ends.

"The Yemenis are being pulverized by the Saudis while we try to get aid in through ports, which are being blockaded and while British ordnance is being dropped there."

A recent report by the Campaign Against Arms Trade [CAAT] found the UK has received £5.6 billion [$8.19 billion] for arms deals with Saudi Arabia, since David Cameron became prime minister. In December, the rights group pledged to pursue legal action against the government in response to arms sales to the kingdom.

"UK fighter jets and UK bombs have been central to the humanitarian catastrophe being unleashed on the people of Yemen. Thousands have died and essential infrastructure, including hospitals, has been destroyed," Andrew Smith of CAAT said on the organization’s website.

 

"The UK has continued to support airstrikes and provide arms, despite strong evidence that war crimes are being committed. The Saudi regime has an appalling human rights record at home and abroad, and these arms sales should never have been approved in the first place," he added.

On January 2, Saudi Arabia ended a ceasefire in Yemen, which had lasted just over two weeks after being implemented in mid-December.

The Saudi-led campaign in Yemen, which started in March, has been slammed by human rights organizations, while the UN said on December 23 that the kingdom should do more to try and implement the ceasefire.

 

"A failure to act decisively does not only spell misery for the millions of vulnerable people in Yemen today. It would inevitably push the country into an irreversible process of Balkanization, the consequences of which would lie outside of anyone’s control," the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussei said.

Source: News Agencies, Edited by Website Team