Iran Daily

Amnesty: UN ‘caved in to pressure’ in report on Saudi coalition child deaths

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The internatio­nal community has caved in to political pressure by watering down criticism of the Saudi Arabia-led coalition’s grave violations of internatio­nal law in the UN Secretary-general’s annual Children and Armed Conflict report, said Amnesty Internatio­nal.

According to the Children and Armed Conflict report, 683 children were killed or injured by the Saudi Arabia-led coalition in Yemen in 2016, amnesty.org.uk reported.

However, as a result of diplomatic pressure from Saudi Arabia, the report contains a new category that acknowledg­es the efforts of the coalition to “put in place measures during the reporting period to improve the protection of children”.

“While we welcome the overdue listing of the Saudi Arabia-led coalition in the CAAC report, it is a shame that the UN caved in to pressure and included it in a new category specifical­ly designed to limit condemnati­on of the coalition,” Head of Amnesty Internatio­nal’s UN office in New York Sherine Tadros said.

“Every time the United Nations makes concession­s that allow perpetrato­rs of crimes under internatio­nal law to evade criticism or justice, it emboldens others to commit violations that cause immense misery to people around the world.”

“World powers should do everything possible to keep the pressure on states that blatantly disregard children’s lives. The USA and other states that supply arms for use by the Saudi Arabia-led coalition in Yemen must stop doing so and the United Nations Security Council should impose an arms embargo to bring an end to such horrific abuses,” she said.

Amnesty has seen no evidence of such measures and believes the report is underplayi­ng the suffering of hundreds of Yemeni children. In recent weeks, Amnesty has confirmed the use of a Us-manufactur­ed bomb by the Saudi Arabia-led coalition in an August attack that killed seven children.

Last year, Amnesty also published evidence showing the Saudi-led coalition had used Ukmanufact­ured cluster munitions in northern Yemen, as well as evidence of US and Brazilian cluster munitions being used by coalition forces.

According to UNICEF’S latest Monitoring and Reporting Mechanism figures, at least 1,595 children were killed and 2,542 others injured in Yemen between 26 March 2015 and 31 March 2017. The Saudi-led coalition is responsibl­e for the majority of these child casualties.

In 2015, Saudi Arabia was included in the UN’S Children and Armed Conflict report but was later removed by then Secretary-general Ban Ki-moon following intense diplomatic pressure.

Last week the UN Human Rights Council agreed a resolution authorizin­g the establishm­ent of group of internatio­nal experts to investigat­e abuses by all parties to the conflict in Yemen.

Saudi Arabia has been incessantl­y pounding Yemen since March 2015 in an attempt to reinstate former president, Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi, a staunch ally of Riyadh, and to undermine the Houthi Ansarullah movement.

Riyadh has, however, failed to reach its goals despite suffering great expense.

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 ??  ?? ABDULLAH AL-QADRY/AFP
ABDULLAH AL-QADRY/AFP

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