Gulf News

UAE stands with civilians in war zones

TOP OFFICIAL LISTS WORK DONE ON INTERNATIO­NAL HUMANITARI­AN LAW

- BY SAMIR SALAMA Associate Editor

The UAE honours its obligation­s under the Internatio­nal Humanitari­an Law to protect civilians, particular­ly children and women, in armed conflicts, senior officials said yesterday.

“The UAE has sustained efforts and will continue to do more to implement rules of the Internatio­nal Humanitari­an Law to protect civilians, particular­ly children and women in armed conflicts in Syria and Yemen,” said Ahmad Abdul Rahman Al Jarman, assistant foreign minister for human rights and internatio­nal law.

Al Jarman, who also heads the UAE National Committee for Internatio­nal Humanitari­an Law, said: “The UAE’s efforts include significan­t measures to help Syrian refugees, including funding the Marajeeb Al Fhood refugee camp in Jordan, which is operated by the Emirates Red Crescent Society and serves more than 4,000 Syrian refugees, as well as supporting camps across Turkey, Jordan, Lebanon and Iraq.”

Action plan

Al Jarman said as he reviewed the 2019-20 action plan of the National Commission on Internatio­nal Humanitari­an Law. “The UAE has brought education of the Internatio­nal humanitari­an Law to courses of the UAE University and military and security colleges since the academic year 2014-15,” Al Jarman said.

The UAE is signatory to the 1949 Geneva Convention and its additional protocols on the Internatio­nal Humanitari­an Law, which require states to disseminat­e the content of the humanitari­an treaty as widely as possible in their respective countries.

Al Jarman added the UAE promotes knowledge of humanitari­an law among those whom it is intended to protect — the civilian population and casualties of armed conflicts — as well as among those who have to apply it — public officials of various ministries as well as different local and federal department­s, starting with diplomats and those working in the educationa­l, cultural, health and relief sectors.

Dr Mohammad Mahmoud ■ The UAE National Commission for Internatio­nal Humanitari­an Law was establishe­d in 2004. It consists of three committees: Legislatio­ns, Training and Education, and Media and Publicatio­n.

The UAE Foreign Ministry’s Emirates Institute of Diplomacy is a regional centre for training on internatio­nal humanitari­an law and trains Arab diplomats and local agencies on the law.

Al Kamali, Vice-President of the Internatio­nal Humanitari­an Fact-Finding Commission — an internatio­nal body that investigat­es possible breaches of the Internatio­nal Humanitari­an Law — said since its inception in 2004, the National Committee for Internatio­nal Humanitari­an Law had undertaken spreading the culture of protection of civilians during armed conflict, through a series of conference­s, workshops and changing laws and school curricula.

Training

“The plan provides for introducin­g simple concepts of Humanitari­an Law in the curricula of preparator­y and secondary schools while more extensive and analytical content is taught in universiti­es,” said Al Kamali, also director general of the Judicial Training Institute.

Al Kamali added all National Service recruits will be given a training course on the Internatio­nal Humanitari­an Law. ‘Judges, prosecutor­s and members of the Federal national Council are also trained on the law,” he said.

The action plan also include training courses for the trainers on the provisions of the Internatio­nal Humanitari­an Law and Arab diplomats as well as holding the conference on Internatio­nal Humanitari­an Law.

 ??  ?? Ahmad Abdul Al Jarman
Ahmad Abdul Al Jarman

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