UK Targeted
in EU Arms Embargo Against Saudi Arabia
By Felicity
Arbuthnot
February
26, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- Only days after Prime Minister David Cameron’s
embarrassing Little Englander strut around the
European Parliament attempting to dictate – sorry,
“negotiate” – new terms for Britain’s membership of
the European Union, the EU Parliament has delivered
a backhanded, but unmistakable, blow to the UK and
its partner in crime, Saudi Arabia.
As Saudi
decimates Yemen with British made bombs and
missiles, dropped from British aircraft, advised by
British military experts based in the Saudi Command
and Control Centre, the European Parliament voted on
Thursday, February 25th, for an EU-wide arms embargo
against Saudi in protest at its assault on its
southern neighbor.
The
Parliament cited the “disastrous humanitarian
situation” as a result of the “Saudi-led military
intervention in Yemen”.
“The vote
does not compel EU member states to act but it does
increase pressure on Riyadh, in the wake of
criticism from the UN and growing international
alarm over civilian casualties in
Yemen”,
comments The Guardian.
“An earlier
draft of the resolution” which had named “and
criticised the UK and other EU member states,
including France, Spain and Germany, was dropped.
The final version said ‘some EU member states’ had
continued to authorise transfers of weapons to Saudi
Arabia since the violence started, in violation of
EU rules on arms control.” The amendment was passed
by 359 votes to 212, with 31 abstentions.
In fact,
“under a 2008 code of conduct, EU member states
promised not to sell weapons to countries where they
might be used ‘to commit serious violations of
international humanitarian law’ and undermine
regional peace and stability.”
Since the
Saudi blitz began in March 2015, an estimated 7,000
people have been killed and 35,000 injured, with a
UN panel in January,
stating: “The coalition’s targeting of civilians
through airstrikes, either by bombing residential
neighbourhoods or by treating the entire cities of
Sa’dah and Maran as military targets, is a grave
violation of the principles of distinction,
proportionality and precaution. In certain cases the
panel found such violations to have been conducted
in a widespread and systematic manner”, in violation
of international humanitarian law.
“Holding
perpetrators of violations of international
humanitarian law and international human rights law
to account is fundamental and necessary for tackling
impunity and deterring future violations in Yemen,”
it states.
As the
Campaign Against the Arms Trade (CAAT) points out,
in spite of the vote not being legally binding, it
sends a strong message to member States that have
continued to arm Saudi Arabia despite allegations of
war crimes in Yemen.
CAAT again
reminds that the UK has licensed £2.8 billion of
arms to Saudi since bombing of Yemen began in March
2015 and has licensed £6.7 billion of arms to Saudi
since David Cameron took office in 2010.
The
Campaign’s Andrew Smith is unequivocal:
The
European Parliament has sent a clear, strong and
much needed message to governments like the UK,
that have been complicit in the destruction of
Yemen. The toxic combination of arms sales and
political support has helped to fuel, facilitate
and legitimise the humanitarian catastrophe that
is taking place.
Moreover:
Government Ministers may talk about the
importance of human rights, but UK bombs and
fighter jets have been absolutely central to the
bombardment. Thousands have died yet the message
sent out by the UK government is that their
lives are less important than arms company
profits.
In January
2016, Law firm Leigh Day, representing CAAT, issued
a pre-action protocol letter for judicial review
challenging the government’s decision to export arms
to Saudi Arabia despite increasing evidence that
Saudi forces are violating international
humanitarian law in Yemen. CAAT is expected to make
further announcements on the status of the legal
action in the coming weeks.
Whilst
Saudi Arabia is Britain’s largest customer for
weapons, a recent study by Opinium LLP for CAAT
found that 62% of UK adults oppose arms sales to
Saudi Arabia, with only 16% supporting them.
UK exports
of armaments to Saudi increased by over 11,000
percent in just a three month period last year, with
David Cameron, when queried in this trade in death
ever repeating his delusional mantra that: “We have
some of the most stringent arms control procedures
of any country in the world.”
Ironically,
as Amnesty
points out:
The UK
was a leading light in the creation of the Arms
Control Treaty (2014), an important
international law designed to eliminate arms
sales that fuel human rights abuse. When the UK
signed on the dotted line of the treaty in April
2014 Foreign Secretary William Hague stated it
would ‘make the world safer, by placing human
rights and international humanitarian law at the
heart of decisions about the arms trade.’
Meanwhile,
as the illegal bloodbath continues in Yemen, William
Hague’s successor, Philip Hammond, who, incredibly,
appears even more intellectually challenged than his
predecessor, states that he is relying on Saudi
Arabia to investigate their own carnage, deaths and
detonations of International Humanitarian Laws,
Human Rights, the Rights of the Child, the Geneva
Convention – but then, after the Balkans,
Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Syria, and arms sales,
Britain is hardly in a position to take any high
moral ground.
Incidentally, when then Secretary of State James
Baker promised to reduce Iraq to a “pre-industrial
age” in 1991, the onslaught was called “Operation
Desert Storm”. The Saudis have named their
equivalent in Yemen “Operation Decisive Storm.” In
Latin, Yemen, one of the oldest centers of
civilization in the Near East, was called Arabia
Felix: “Fortunate Arabia”, or “Happy Arabia.”
Response to some ironies can only be to weep.
Felicity
Arbuthnot is a journalist with special knowledge of
Iraq. Author, with Nikki van der Gaag, of
Baghdad in the Great City series for World
Almanac books, she has also been Senior Researcher
for two Award winning documentaries on Iraq, John
Pilger's Paying the Price: Killing the
Children of Iraq and Denis Halliday
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