Business Day

US killing of Iran general was unlawful, says UN expert

• Finding part of report on increased use of killer drones

- Agency Staff Geneva /AFP

The US drone strike that killed Iran’s top general, Qassem Soleimani, was “unlawful”, the UN expert on extrajudic­ial killings concluded in a report released on Tuesday.

Agnes Callamard, the UN special rapporteur on extrajudic­ial, summary or arbitrary executions, concluded it was an “arbitrary killing” that violated the UN charter.

The US had provided no evidence that an imminent attack against US interest was being planned, she wrote.

The independen­t rights expert does not speak for the UN but reports her findings to it.

Her report on targeted killings through armed drones, half of it about the Soleimani case, is to be presented to the UN Human Rights Council session in Geneva on Thursday.

The US withdrew from the council in 2018.

US President Donald Trump ordered the killing of Soleimani in a January 3 drone strike near Baghdad Internatio­nal Airport.

Soleimani was “the world’s top terrorist” and “should have been terminated long ago”, Trump said at the time.

Iraqi commander Abu Mahdi al-Muhandis was also killed in the drone strike.

“In the light of the evidence that the US has provided to date, the targeting of Gen Soleimani, and the deaths of those accompanyi­ng him, constitute an arbitrary killing for which, under [internatio­nal human rights law], the US is responsibl­e,” Callamard said in her report.

The strike contravene­d the UN Charter, with “insufficie­nt evidence provided of an ongoing or imminent attack”, Callamard wrote.

“No evidence has been provided that Gen Soleimani specifical­ly was planning an imminent attack against US interests, particular­ly in Iraq, for which immediate action was necessary and would have been justified,” Callamard said.

“No evidence has been provided that a drone strike in a third country was necessary or that the harm caused to that country was proportion­ate to the harm allegedly averted.

“Soleimani was in charge of Iran’s military strategy and actions in Syria and Iraq. But absent an actual imminent threat to life, the course of action taken by the US was unlawful.”

The killing of Soleimani, a national hero at home, provoked outpouring­s of grief in Iran. He headed the Quds Force, the foreign operations arm of Iran’s Revolution­ary Guards.

Tehran retaliated by firing a volley of ballistic missiles at US troops stationed in Iraq.

While the attack on the western Iraqi base of Ain Al-Asad killed no US soldiers, dozens suffered brain trauma.

TARGETED KILLINGS

Callamard’s report addresses targeted killings through armed drones with the proliferat­ion in drone use and their expanding capability over the past five years. It makes recommenda­tions designed to regulate their use and enhance accountabi­lity.

Callamard said that while incidents such as the killing of Soleimani and the September 2019 attack on Saudi Arabia’s oil-processing facilities sparked strong political reaction, “the vast majority of targeted killings by drones are subjected to little public scrutiny”.

Drone technologi­es and drone attacks were generating fundamenta­l challenges to internatio­nal legal standards, she said.

NO EVIDENCE HAS BEEN PROVIDED THAT GEN SOLEIMANI WAS PLANNING AN IMMINENT ATTACK AGAINST US INTERESTS

 ?? /Reuters ?? Hero to many: A mourner holds pictures of Qassem Soleimani at a rally in Beirut, Lebanon, in February 2020. Soleimani was the top commander of Iran’s Quds Force when he was killed by a US drone in January.
/Reuters Hero to many: A mourner holds pictures of Qassem Soleimani at a rally in Beirut, Lebanon, in February 2020. Soleimani was the top commander of Iran’s Quds Force when he was killed by a US drone in January.

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