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Call to suspend Saudi from UN council

Manzurul Alam Mukul || risingbd.com

Published: 08:14, 30 June 2016   Update: 15:18, 26 July 2020
Call to suspend Saudi from UN council

Risingbd Desk: Two international human rights organizations on Wednesday called for Saudi Arabia to be suspended from the United Nations Human Rights Council over its conduct in the military campaign in Yemen.


In a joint statement, Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch said Saudi Arabia had committed “gross and systematic violations of human rights” during its two and a half years on the Human Rights Council. They said the Saudis had used their position to block independent investigations and criticisms of how the country has waged war in Yemen.


Saudi Arabia leads a coalition that has been accused of using cluster bombs and launching indiscriminate airstrikes against civilians in its battle against rebels in neighboring Yemen. The U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights has estimated that more than 3,500 civilians have been killed and 6,200 wounded since the war began in March 2015.


Saudi officials could not be reached for an immediate comment, but the U.S.-backed coalition repeatedly has denied targeting civilians, saying it acts only in response to truce violations by the rebels.


The statement also cited Saudi Arabia’s human rights record at home, including the jailing of dissidents and discrimination against migrant workers, women and the Shiite minority. It said there has been a surge in executions since Saudi Arabia joined the Human Rights Council, including some for nonviolent, drug-related offenses.


But the bulk of the statement focused on the war against Houthi rebels in Yemen, a campaign that was launched last year after rebels advanced on the temporary capital of Aden. A fragile cease-fire is in place, and the Saudis back U.N.-brokered negotiations between the internationally recognized government and the rebels, but airstrikes have continued.


Saudi Arabia is one of 47 countries that sit, in a rotating membership, on the Human Rights Council, a Geneva-based body that can investigate abuses and recommend U.N. action but has no prosecutorial or judicial powers. The council currently includes several members criticized for human rights violations, including China, Cuba, Russia, Venezuela and Vietnam. Human rights groups have long argued that countries with poor records should be excluded from the council. But they have been particularly critical of the elected seat held by Saudi Arabia, which is usually ranked at the bottom of Freedom House’s list assessing freedom around the world.
 “We have assessed that the Saudis have crossed a t

hreshold,” said Richard Bennett, head of Amnesty International’s U.N. office, citing a council rule that member states can be suspended over particularly egregious human rights violations.


“They’ve done that in Yemen. They’ve done so domestically, and they’ve used their membership on the Human Rights Council to shield themselves from scrutiny. I can’t think of other members that have done that. Saudi Arabia is in a class of its own.”


In October, Saudi Arabia and its allies on the Human Rights Council successfully resisted a proposed international inquiry into human rights violations by all parties in the Yemen conflict. Instead, it adopted a resolution supporting a decree by the Saudi-backed government of President Abed Rabbo Mansour Hadi, creating a national commission of inquiry. It asked the U.N. human rights office to offer “technical assistance” and help with “capacity building.”


Earlier this month, the Saudi-led coalition was briefly placed on a list of countries that maim and kill children in conflicts. Also on the list were Yemeni government forces, the Houthi rebels and al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.


Source: Agencies


Risingbd/June 20, 2016/Mukul

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