Local Editor
Oxfam is urging the US Congress to oppose the sale of weapons to Saudi Arabia.
According to the organization, the US government’s planned sale of $1.15 billion worth of weapons to Saudi Arabia couldn’t be a worse idea for the people of Yemen.
"As long as American tanks and bombs are involved in the conflict, more lives will be lost," warned Scott Paul, a senior humanitarian policy advisor for Oxfam who just returned from Yemen. "Throughout my visit, I was asked repeatedly why the US is bombing Yemen. We’re technically not, but we’re supporting the Saudi-led coalition that is. I didn’t have a good answer."
Although the warring parties in Yemen bear responsibility for a conflict that has killed and injured over 10,000 civilians, displaced over 3 million people, and dragged half the population into hunger, foreign governments offering support and weapons to those parties also bear responsibility as they have legitimized the conflict, shielded the parties from criticism, and enabled them to continue fighting.
With Yemen’s economy on the verge of collapse and prices of food, fuel, and medical supplies skyrocketing, the US government says it wants to end the war there. But by selling arms to Saudi Arabia and refueling its jets on bombing runs, the US is sending a very different message, enabling the conflict to continue by putting more tanks on the battlefield.
The poorest country in the Middle East before Saudi-led coalition airstrikes began, Yemen is now staggering under a massive humanitarian catastrophe. One third of all Yemeni children under the age of 5 are suffering from acute malnutrition and more than 14 million people don’t have enough to eat.
But with the possibility of more US-funded arms fueling the war, the Yemeni people’s suffering will know no bounds.
Source: News Agencies, Edited by Website Team