Yemeni Apartment building destroyed by air raid

Yemen: one third of air raids hit civilian areas

Nearly one third of air raids in Yemen carried out by a Saudi-led coalition dropping smart bombs made in Scotland have hit non-military sites, according to a new report.

Thousands of hospitals, schools, farms, buses, markets and homes across Yemen have been hit by warplanes known to use Paveway IV missiles.

The new figures revealed the scale of the carnage as Saudi Arabia’s bombing campaign in Yemen’s war passed the 1000 day mark.

The Yemen Data Project – a not for profit organisation – said that from 26th March 2015 to 15th December 2017 there were 15,489 air raids with 31 percent targeting civilian sites.

Some of the missiles were produced by US arms giant Raytheon which has a factory in Glenrothes making laser guided systems for bombs.

The new report prompted condemnation of UK arms sales to Saudi Arabia and calls for an urgent ceasefire to help Yemen’s civilian population which is suffering a catastrophic humanitarian crisis.

The Yemen Data Project has been collecting data on the aerial war since day one on 26 March 2015.

Its latest report said that from 26 March 2015 to 15 December 2017, the Saudi-led coalition has carried out a total of 15,489 raids – an average of 474 per month.

The report said: “Nearly one third of all air raids (31%) targeted non-military sites. These included 386 air raids targeted farms; 183 air raids targeted market places: 102 air raids targeted water and electricity sites: 62 air raids targeted food storage sites.”

The northern governorate of Sa’ada was the most heavily targeted Yemeni governorate with 2996 air raids followed by 2432 in the governorate of Taiz.

The report said that the first half of December 2017 saw a “notable shift in targeting” with air raids on non-military targets double those recorded on military targets.

From 1st to 15th December – out of a total of 270 raids – 46 targeted military sites while 98 targeted non-military sites – including schools and homes.

The Saudi-led coalition is backed by the US and the UK with both nations having military personnel deployed in the Saudi command-and-control centre for coalition airstrikes.

Ross Greer MSP, external affairs spokesperson for the Scottish Greens, said: “While innocent people, including children, are being slaughtered by Saudi missiles, Scots will be shocked and upset to know that both our governments are involved.

“The Tory government at Westminster has authorised billions of pounds of UK-made weapons to be sold to Saudi Arabia and the Scottish Government has given almost a hundred grand in a single year to Raytheon, Saudi’s missile supplier.

“It’s time to end this complicity in war crimes. The UK government needs to end all arms sales to the Saudi regime and the Scottish Government must stop giving economic development cash to the arms trade.

“That money could be better spent on small businesses across the country than on supporting a company complicit in immense human suffering.”

Douglas Chapman MP, shadow SNP spokesperson on Defence Procurement, said the UK Government has been “part of the problem” leading to a “humanitarian catastrophe that was beyond grave”.

He added: “Last Summer I predicted that the war in Yemen, and the lack of a ceasefire, was creating a humanitarian catastrophe that was “beyond grave”.

“We are now at that point where if bombing continues and aid cannot get into the country, men, women and children will die on a massive scale.”

Andrew Smith of Campaign Against Arms Trade said: “For over 1000 days, people in Yemen have endured a terrible humanitarian catastrophe. The situation is only getting worse for those on the ground, yet the situation couldn’t be better for companies like Raytheon that have profited every step of the way.

“The war may be taking place thousands of miles away, but bombs made in Scotland are playing a central role in the destruction. We don’t believe that, like the rest of the UK, people in Scotland support the terrible bombardment.

“It’s time for the government in Westminster to listen, and to end the arms sales for good.”

Save The Children described the actions of all warring parties as “deplorable” and said that a further 50,000 children are expected to die.

Tamer Kirolos, Yemen Country Director, Save the Children said: “We have seen civilians killed, schools and hospitals bombed, and humanitarian access severely restricted. All of this has seemingly intentionally created conditions in which children are starving and are not able to get suitable medical attention.

“We need an immediate end to any restrictions that are stopping humanitarian aid and commercial supplies of fuel, food and medicine from getting in and we also urgently need a credible ceasefire and a negotiated peace deal. The UN Security Council must put its full effort into making this happen now.”

In reply, a UK Government spokesperson said: “The UK government takes its export control responsibilities very seriously and operates one of the most robust export control regimes in the world.

“We rigorously examine every application, including those from Saudi Arabia, on a case-by-case basis against the Consolidated EU and National Arms Export Licensing Criteria. We will not grant a licence if to do so would be inconsistent with these Criteria.”

The United Nations is investigating allegations of war crimes in Yemen including air strikes by the coalition, which is fighting Houthi rebels also accused of atrocities.

The Yemen Data Project is a not-for-profit project run by national security, human rights, humanitarian, and academic experts.

An air raid refers to a single incident, which could comprise multiple airstrikes.

Photo credit: Ibrahem Qasim | CC | Wikipedia

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