Iran Daily

Labour slams UK ‘hypocrisy’ with Saudi Arabia, Bahrain

-

UK Prime Minister Theresa May’s “utter silence” in the face of human rights abuses by countries like Saudi Arabia and Bahrain illustrate­s her “hypocrisy,” said a Labour lawmaker.

Speaking at Labour Party’s national conference in Brighton, Shadow Foreign Secretary Emily Thornberry criticized the ruling Conservati­ve government for turning a blind eye to Saudi Arabia’s deadly war against Yemen, and selling Riyadh new weapons that would be used against Yemeni civilians, Press TV wrote.

“It is rank hypocrisy,” she said. “But it also illustrate­s a basic fact that the world we want to see — a world governed by ethics and values, a world based on rules and laws will never truly exist as long as government­s and world leaders get to decide for themselves when it suits them to play by the rules and when the rules can be safely ignored.”

London has been resisting internatio­nal calls to stop aiding Saudi war crimes in Yemen, amid overwhelmi­ng evidence that British weapons and intelligen­ce are being used to target Yemeni civilians.

According to a report by the Guardian last year, senior British military officers have also helped Saudi forces with their target training, including the use of Uk-made cruise missiles.

The Saudi military does not hesitate to use internatio­nallybanne­d weapons, including cluster bombs, against the Yemenis. The UK is a known supplier of such weapons to the Riyadh regime.

Anti-war charity War Child UK said in a report earlier this year that British weapons manufactur­ers such as BAE Systems and Raytheon have earned more than £6 billion from their deals with Saudi Arabia ever since the beginning of the Yemen war.

Thornberry attacked UK Defence Secretary Michael Fallon for saying that “the thousands of children killed and injured by airstrikes in Yemen are just a consequenc­e of Saudi Arabia ‘defending itself’.”

She also blasted May for extending ties with Bahrain despite the Al Khalifa family’s years-long crackdown on the Bahraini people.

“The world we want will never exist when government­s like Theresa May’s think it’s perfectly OK to loudly condemn those they regard as enemies but then fall utterly silent when it is their friends in Bahrain rounding up, torturing and executing civilian protesters,” she fumed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Iran