Tuesday August 28, 2018
Investigation says alliance may have committed war crimes and human rights violations during war with Houthi rebels.
Fragments of an MK-82 bomb were found near a school bus that was bombed earlier this month [Ahmad Algohbary/Al Jazeera]
The United Nations has accused the Saudi-UAE military alliance of committing possible war crimes in Yemen, adding there was "little evidence of any attempt ... to minimise civilian casualties."
In a damning report
on Tuesday, the UN said air attacks had caused the most direct civilian
casualties in the war, and a blockade of Yemeni ports and airspace may
have violated international humanitarian law.
The alliance, which has been at war with Houthi rebels since March 2015, has repeatedly denied allegations of war crimes, and claims its attacks are not directed at civilians.
However, data collected by Al Jazeera and the Yemen Data Project, has found that almost one-third of the 16,000 air raids carried out in the country have hit non-military sites.
The attacks have targeted weddings and hospitals, as well as water and electricity plants, killing and wounding thousands.
The charity Save the Children has estimated that an average of 130 children die every day from extreme hunger and disease - a crisis brought about by the conflict.
And according to the UN, at least 10,000 people have been killed since the start of the conflict. However, analysts say the death toll is likely to be higher.
'Violations continue to be perpetrated'
"The group of experts has reason to believe the government of Yemen,
Saudi Arabia, and the UAE, are responsible for violations of human
rights," said Kamel Jendoubi, the chair of the Group of International
and Regional Eminent Experts on Yemen.
"Violations and crimes have been perpetrated and continue to be perpetrated in Yemen by the parties to the conflict.
"Members of the government of Yemen and the [Saudi-UAE] coalition
may have conducted attacks that were disproportionate and could
constitute war crimes," said Jendoubi.
"They may have committed acts that could constitute war crimes such
as mistreatment, torture, attacks on peoples' dignity, rape,
recruitment, and enrollment of children under the age of 15 in the
hostilities."
The experts urged the international community to "refrain from
providing arms that could be used in the conflict "- an apparent
reference to countries like the United States and Britain, which supply
the Saudi-UAE alliance.
Despite repeated petitions by human rights groups, the US assists
Saudi Arabia and the UAE in "conducting aerial bombings in Yemen" and
provides "midair refuelling services" for their warplanes.
Between 2010 and 2015, Washington also sold more than $90bn of military equipment to Riyadh.
But following a recent air attack on a school bus that
killed 40 children, individual members of Congress called on the US
military to clarify its role in the war and investigate whether support
for the air raids could render American military personnel "liable under the war crimes act".
'Questions will be asked'
Al Jazeera's Alan Fisher in neighbouring Djibouti
"US Defense Secretary James Mattis is expected to hold a briefing at
the Pentagon later today, and he will undoubtedly be asked about the
continuing US role.
What we have heard from the panel of experts was criticism of Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and the Yemeni government.
The US and UK are helping this coalition, so questions will now be
asked about where we go from here and whether any of these governments
will accept the findings from this panel of experts."
'No light at the end of the tunnel'
The experts also criticised work by the alliance's Joint Incidents
Assessment Team (JIATY), which was set up as a bulwark against possible
rights violations.
They questioned the JIAT's explanations for the air attacks that have
killed civilians, and challenged its "independence and its ability to
carry out impartial investigations."
The experts also said nearly a dozen deadly air attacks they
investigated over the last year "raise serious questions about the
targeting process applied by the coalition."
They chastised some in-the-field coalition combatants for "routinely"
failing to seek information about official "no-strike" lists that
should have been avoided.
"Despite the severity of the situation we continue to see a complete
disregard for the people in Yemen," said Charles Garraway, one of the
authors of the report
"This conflict has reached its peak, with no apparent sight of light at the end of the tunnel.
"It is indeed, a forgotten crisis."