The Phnom Penh Post

The UK welcomes probe into Yemen airstrike

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BRITAIN on Sunday welcomed the results of an investigat­ion by the Saudiled coalition fighting in Yemen into an air strike last month that killed 40 children, but urged clarificat­ions on other deadly operations.

The Saudi-led coalition on Saturday said “mistakes” had been made in the August 9 strike on a crowded marketplac­e in a part of northern Yemen held by Huthi rebels that the Red Cross said had killed 51 people.

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

“We welcome the speed of the investigat­ion into the incident of August 9, and the coalition’s announceme­nt of regret and action to address the recommenda­tions of that investigat­ion,” said the British Foreign Office. “We are reviewing the investigat­ion’s conclusion­s.”

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

Separately on Sunday, the US State Department called the Saudi-led coalition’s investigat­ion into the August 9 attack “an important first step toward full transparen­cy and accountabi­lity”.

Britain, however, asked the coalition to provide informatio­n on two other deadly incidents.

It welcomed the opening of a separate investigat­ion into air strikes on August 23 south of the rebel-held port city of Hodeida that killed 26 children and four women.

“[We] encourage the publicatio­n of the outcomes of this investigat­ion as soon as possible,” it said.

It also urged “clarificat­ion of the cir- cumstances around the incident of August 2”, when explosions in the rebelheld port city of Hodeida killed at least 55 people.

Britain had “serious concern at the tragic loss of life in Yemen over the last month,” violence it said killed 400 Yemenis in the first two weeks of August alone.

UN investigat­ors said Tuesday that all sides in Yemen’s conflict may have committed war crimes, highlighti­ng deadly air strikes, rampant sexual violence and the recruitmen­t of young children as soldiers.

The Saudi-led coalition intervened in Yemen in March 2015 after the Huthis ousted President Abedrabbo Mansour Hadi’s government from the capital Sanaa and seized swathes of the country.

The devastatin­g conflict has since left nearly 10,000 people dead and sparked what the UN has described as the world’s worst humanitari­an crisis.

 ?? AFP ?? A man transports a child to a hospital after he was wounded in a reported air strike on the Iran-backed Huthi rebels stronghold province of Saada on August 9.
AFP A man transports a child to a hospital after he was wounded in a reported air strike on the Iran-backed Huthi rebels stronghold province of Saada on August 9.

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