'God Only Knows': The Tortured,
Killed, or Forcibly Disappeared People of
Yemen
US citizens bear responsibility for the US government’s support of these crimes
By Kathy Kelly
July 26, 2018 "Information
Clearing House"
- “If they would just
confirm to us that my brother is alive, if
they would just let us see him, that’s all
we want. But we can’t get anyone to give us
any confirmation. My mother dies a hundred
times every day. They don’t know what that
is like.”
In July of 2018, an
Amnesty International report entitled
“God Knows If He’s Alive,” documented
the plight of dozens of families in southern
Yemen whose loved ones have been tortured,
killed, or forcibly disappeared by Yemeni
security forces reporting to the United Arab
Emirates (UAE). The UAE is part of the
Saudi-led coalition that, with vital US
support, has been bombarding and blockading
famine and disease-ravaged Yemen for three
brutal years. The disappearances, and
torture, can sadly be laid at the doorstep
of the United States.
One testimonial after another echoes the sentiments of a woman whose husband has been held incommunicado for more than two years. “Shouldn’t they be given a trial?” she asked. “Why else are there courts? They shouldn’t be disappeared this way – not only are we unable to visit them, we don’t even know if they are dead or alive.”
The report describes bureaucratic farces in which families beg for information about their loved ones’ whereabouts from Yemeni prosecutors and prison officials, but the families’ pleas for information are routinely met with silence or intimidation.
Are You Tired Of The Lies And Non-Stop Propaganda? |
The families are appealing to an unelected Yemeni exile government whose president, Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi, (when “elected” president in 2012, he was the only candidate) generally resides in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. The UAE has, so far, supported Hadi’s claim to govern Yemen. However, the Prosecutor General of Hadi’s government, as well as other officials, told Amnesty International the government of Yemen has no control over operations “spearheaded by the UAE and implemented by the Yemeni forces it backs.”
When months and years pass and families of people who are missing still have no news about their loved ones, some try to communicate unofficially with prison guards or with former detainees who have been released from various detention sites. They repeatedly hear stories about torture of detainees and rumors about prisoners who died in custody.
The Amnesty report implicates UAE-backed local forces in Yemen, as well as the UAE military, in the crimes of torture and other ill-treatment of detainees. Of seven former or current detainees interviewed by Amnesty, five said they were subjected to these abuses. “All seven witnessed other detainees being tortured,” the report adds, “including one who said he saw a detainee held in a cell next to him being carried away in a body bag after he had been repeatedly tortured.”
In June 2017,
Human Rights Watch and the Associated
Press exposed a network of clandestine
prisons operated by the UAE in Yemen. Their
reports described ghastly torture inflicted
on prisoners and noted that senior US
military leaders knew about torture
allegations. Yet, a year later, there has
been no investigation of these allegations
by the Yemeni government, by the UAE, or by
the UAE’s most powerful ally in the Yemen
war, the United States.
“It is shocking, to say the least,” the
Amnesty report states, “that one year after
a network of secret prisons operated by the
UAE and the Yemeni forces it backs was
exposed, these facilities continue to
operate and that there has not been a
serious investigation undertaken into
credibly documented violations, including
systemic torture in custody.” The Amnesty
report calls on the US to “facilitate
independent oversight, including by the US
Congress, over US military or intelligence
cooperation with Yemeni and UAE forces
involved in detention activities in Yemen.”
It further calls for investigating any
involvement of US military or intelligence
personnel in detention-related abuses in
Yemen.
To date, the US continues selling weapons to the UAE and to its coalition partner, Saudi Arabia, despite several Congressional debates and a few increasingly close votes demanding a full or partial end to US weapons sales considering the terrible practices being carried out as part of the Yemen war.
Since March of 2015, a coalition of nine countries led by Saudi Arabia and the UAE and relying on crucial U.S. logistical aid, has bombarded Yemen while blockading its major port, despite Yemen’s status as one of the poorest countries in the world. Targeting transportation, electrical plants, sewage and sanitation facilities, schools, mosques, weddings and funerals, the vicious bombing has led to starvation, displacement, and the spread of disease including cholera.
On the same day that the Amnesty report was released, Saudi Arabia’s King Salman pardoned “all military men, who have taken part in the Operation Restoring Hope of their respective military and disciplinary penalties, in regard of some rules and disciplines.” It seems likely that the Amnesty report precipitated this royal decree
Along with three countries in North Africa’s “Sahel” desert region, Yemen has been cited as part of the worst famine crisis in the 70-year history of the UN. In the past three years of aerial and naval attacks, Yemen’s key port of Hodeidah has remained partially or fully closed despite the country’s vital need for relief supplies. And, while Yemenis suffer the chaos and despair characteristic of war, the Saudis and UAE refer to the war as “Operation Restoring Hope.”
Many thousands of Yemenis, subjected to consistent bombing and threats of starvation and famine, have fled their homes. Many seek refuge out of Yemen. For instance, close to 500 Yemenis have traveled nearly 500 miles to reach a visa-free port on South Korea’s Jeju Island. On July 21, during an international phone call hosted by young friends in Afghanistan, listeners heard Kaia, a resident of Jeju Island, describe the “Hope School.” She explained how she and several other young people are trying to help welcome Yemenis now living in their village of Gangjeong. The young people are already committed to peacefully resisting U.S. and South Korean military destruction of their shoreline and ecosystem. Now, they have started an informal school so Yemeni and South Korean residents can learn from one another. Small groups gather for conversational exchanges translated from Arabic to English to Korean. Many South Koreans can recall, in their own familial history, that seven million Koreans fled Japanese occupation of their land. Their Korean forebears relied on hospitality from people in other lands. The Catholic Bishop of the Jeju diocese, Monsignor Kang Woo-il, called on Koreans to embrace Yemeni refugees, labeling it a crime against human morality to shut the door on refugees and migrants.
Kaia’s account of the newly launched school describes an effort that truthfully involves restoring hope. The cynical designation of Saudi and UAE led war in Yemen as “Operation Restoring Hope” creates an ugly smokescreen that distracts from the crucial need to investigate war crimes committed in Yemen today.
US citizens bear responsibility for the US government’s support of these crimes.
The Yemenis mean us no harm and have committed no crime against us. Congressional votes have come quite close, with bipartisan support, to ending US participation in and support for the Saudi and Emirati led Coalition war against Yemen. Ending arms sales to the UAE and Saudi monarchies, supported by both sides of the aisle, will signal to the UAE and Saudi Arabia the US will no longer assist their efforts to prolong war and siege in Yemen. On cue from the initiative and energy shown by young South Koreans, people in the US can and should organize campaigns to educate their communities, educational institutions, and media outlets about the plight of people in Yemen. Conscious of the nightmare faced by Yemenis whose husbands, brothers, fathers and sons have been disappeared or detained by shadowy military enforcers, US people can work toward implementing each recommendation in Amnesty’s devastating report.
(kathy@vcnv.org) co-coordinates Voices for Creative Nonviolence.The views expressed in this article are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Information Clearing House.
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