Letter from Kate Allen, Director of Amnesty, to the Observer
We have featured on these pages the continuing scandal of arms sales to the Saudi regime. Not only the destruction of large parts of Yemen these weapons are used for, but the fact that the Saudi regime’s repression of its own people and denial of human rights. After China, they are the world’s second biggest executioner often following unfair trials and confessions extracted through torture. But no matter, there’s money to be made.
Kate Allen discusses these factors in her letter to the Observer newspaper on Sunday 10 May 2020:
It is, as you say, long over overdue that the UK government put its relationship with Saudi Arabia on a healthier footing (Now is the time to distance ourselves from an odious regime, editorial 3 May, 2020). For years, the UK has claimed behind-closed-doors diplomacy with Riyadh has been better than “lecturing” the kingdom over its appalling humans rights record. Yet repression has only worsened including under the suppose reformer Mohammad bin Salmon. Now virtually every human rights activist in the the country has either been locked up, intimidated in to silence or forced the flee the country.
We have sole Riyadh plenty of weaponry, but the UK hushed policy on Saudi human rights has sold the country’s embattled human rights community shamefully short.
The weapons are used in the war in Yemen the bombing of which has caused appalling damage to the nation’s infrastructure.
Attacks by the Saudi-led coalition have destroyed infrastructure across Yemen. Saudi forces have targeted hospitals, clinics and vaccinations centres. Blockades have starved the population and made it hard for hospitals to get essential medical supplies. Source; Campaign Against the Arms Trade
The UK is complicit: many of the Coalition’s attacks have been carried out with UK-made fighter jets, and UK-made bombs and missiles – and the UK government has supported them with billions of pounds of arms sales.
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