More than one-third of all Saudi-led air raids on Yemen
have hit civilian sites, such as school buildings, hospitals, markets,
mosques and economic infrastructure, according to the most comprehensive
survey of the conflict.
The findings, revealed by the Guardian
on Friday, contrast with claims by the Saudi government, backed by its
US and British allies, that Riyadh is seeking to minimise civilian
casualties.
The survey, conducted by the Yemen Data Project,
a group of academics, human rights organisers and activists, will add
to mounting pressure in the UK and the US on the Saudi-led coalition,
which is facing accusations of breaching international humanitarian law.
It will refocus attention on UK arms sales
to Saudi Arabia, worth more than £3.3bn since the air campaign began,
and the role of British military personnel attached to the Saudi command
and control centre, from which air operations are being mounted. Two
British parliamentary committees have called for the suspension of such sales until a credible and independent inquiry has been conducted.
Saudi Arabia
disputed the Yemen Data Project figures, describing them as “vastly
exaggerated”, and challenged the accuracy of the methodology, saying
somewhere such as a school building might have been a school a year ago,
but was now being used by rebel fighters.
The independent and non-partisan survey, based on open-source data,
including research on the ground, records more than 8,600 air attacks
between March 2015, when the Saudi-led campaign began, and the end of
August this year. Of these, 3,577 were listed as having hit military
sites and 3,158 struck non-military sites.
Where it could not be established whether a location attacked was
civilian or military, the strikes were classified as unknown, of which
there are 1,882 incidents.
Saudi Arabia intervened in March 2015 to support the Yemeni government against Iran-backed Houthi rebels
in control of the capital, Sana’a. The UN has put the death toll of the
18-month war at more than 10,000, with 3,799 of them being civilians.
Human rights organisations in Yemen have documented repeated
violations by the Houthis, including the use of landmines and
indiscriminate shelling. Human Rights Watch noted this year that Yemeni
civilians had “suffered serious laws of war violations by all sides.”
The Yemen Data Project has chosen to focus exclusively on the impact
of the air campaign, rather than fighting on the ground, citing the
difficulty of gaining access to frontline fighting and impartial
information.
One of the most problematic findings of the survey for Saudi Arabia
is the number of reported repeat attacks. While some attacks on civilian
sites can be explained away as mistakes or being the location of
military camps in densely populated areas such as Sana’a, repeated
strikes on school buildings and hospitals will add to demands for an
independent investigation.
One school building in Dhubab, Taiz governorate, has been hit nine
times, according to the data. A market in Sirwah, Marib governorate, has
been struck 24 times.
The UK’s shadow defence secretary, Clive Lewis, said of the survey:
“It’s sickening to think of British-built weapons being used against
civilians and the government has an absolute responsibility to do
everything in its power to stop that from happening. But as ministers
turn a blind eye to the conflict in Yemen, evidence that humanitarian
law has been violated is becoming harder to ignore by the day.”
The Liberal Democrat foreign affairs spokesperson, Tom Brake, said
the data added more weight to calls for the suspension of arms sales.
“Despite consistent evidence showing targeting of civilians, first
Cameron and now May’s governments have continued their hypocritical
defence of Saudi Arabia’s brutal campaign in Yemen,” he said.
Sixty-four members of the US Congress, from the Democratic and
Republican parties, sent a letter to Barack Obama last month urging the
president to postpone sales of new arms to Saudi Arabia. The US also provides the Saudis with intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance and logistical support.
The Democratic congressman Ted Lieu, who organised the letter and is a
colonel in the US air force reserve, said: “The actions of the
Saudi-led coalition in Yemen are as reprehensible as they are illegal.
The multiple, repeated airstrikes on civilians look like war crimes.”
Campaigners are calling for an independent inquiry to establish whether
attacks on civilian targets are because of poor intelligence, lack of
precision on the part of the Saudi-led coalition planes, or a high
degree of disregard for civilian lives.
Staff at the Yemen Data Project said they adopted rigorous standards,
using news reports aligned with both sides in the conflict and
crosschecked against other sources, such as social media,
non-governmental organisations and evidence on the ground.
According to the project, the Saudi-led coalition hit more
non-military sites than military in five of the past 18 months. In
October 2015, the figures were 291, compared with 208; in November, 126
against 34; December, 137 compared with 62; February 2016, 292 to 139,
and March, 122 compared with 80.
Over the course of the war, the survey lists 942 attacks on
residential areas, 114 on markets, 34 on mosques, 147 on school
buildings, 26 on universities and 378 on transport.
Asked by the Guardian about the figures during a visit to London, the
Saudi foreign minister, Adel bin Ahmed al-Jubeir, portrayed the Saudi
air force as professional and armed with precision weapons.
He said the Houthis had “turned schools and hospitals and mosques
into command and control centres. They have turned them into weapons
depots in a way that they are no longer civilian targets. They are
military targets. They might have been a school a year ago. But they
were not a school when they were bombed”.
The attachment of British military staff at the Saudi command centre has become increasingly controversial.
A UK Ministry of Defence spokesperson said: “The United Kingdom is
not a member of the Saudi-led coalition and UK personnel are not
involved in directing or conducting operations in Yemen, or in the
target selection process.
“The MoD does provide training and shares best practice to the Royal
Saudi air force, including training on targeting. We also provided
guidance and advice to support continued compliance with international
humanitarian law.”
The Yemen Data Project was set up this year in response to a lack of
reliable official military figures. It says the project brings together
figures from backgrounds in security, academia, human rights and
humanitarian issues, and describes it as “independently funded to avoid
any partisan affiliation.”
“Where independent reporting is not available, the data has been
cross-referenced with sources from opposing sides to the conflict to
ensure the reporting is as accurate and impartial as possible,” the
project said.
Given the general lack of transparency from parties to the conflict
and a paucity of independent reporting on the ground, the data had been
verified and cross-referenced to the greatest extent possible, it added.
The number of civilian casualties is not included, because much of
this area is highly politicised and it has not been possible to
independently verify claims.
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