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The UK’s International Development Select Committee called on David Cameron to halt the sale of arms to Saudi Arabia following widespread evidence that the Saudi-led coalition was targeting civilian areas and engaging in the indiscriminate bombing of Yemen.
Calls for Independent Inquiry
In a letter to International Development Secretary Justine Greening, the committee called on the UK government to withdraw opposition to an independent international investigation into Saudi military action in Yemen, saying it was "unthinkable" to trust a Saudi-led inquiry to be objective.
"It is a longstanding principle of the rule of law that inquiries should be independent of those being investigated. Furthermore given the severity of the allegations that the Saudi-backed coalition has targeted civilians in Yemen, it is really unthinkable that any investigation led by coalition actors would come to the conclusion that the allegations were accurate," committee chairman Stephen Twigg wrote.
The committee was critical of the government’s claim that the Saudis had not breached humanitarian law as a result of its aggression, while MPs were scathing of the UK’s decision to dramatically increase arms sales in recent times.
"We received evidence that close to £3bn worth of arms licenses have been granted for exports to Saudi in the last six months. This includes £1bn worth of bombs rockets and missiles for the three-month period from July to September last year - up from only £9m in the previous three months," the MPs said.
"We need an independent, international fact-finding mission to uncover the truth. Until then we should cease selling arms to Saudi Arabia [...] All parties to this conflict should review their obligations under international law and undertake to put civilians and humanitarian work above other interests."
’Very Significant’ Intervention
The intervention from the International Development Select Committee follows similar concerns previously raised by members of the European Parliament and a leaked UN report, which stated that Saudi Arabia was in breach of humanitarian law in Yemen.
Andrew Smith, spokesperson for the Campaign Against Arms Trade [CAAT] told Sputnik the committee’s involvement was "very significant", given that it involves criticism from David Cameron’s own MPs.
"I think the government is likely - particularly in the short term - to use its usual line about how rigorous and robust its arms exports supposedly are, when nothing could be further from the truth. I think in the long term with the more pressure coming from the select committee, more pressure coming from NGOs, more pressure coming from the wider public, the more likely there is to be change."
Source: News Agencies, Edited by Website Team