In Saudi Arabia, Obama Urged to Address Repression, Executions, Civilian Deaths
As President Obama meets with Gulf leaders on Wednesday, human rights groups pleaded with him to bring up a laundry list of issues during his visit, ranging from Gulf countries’ dismal human rights records toward their citizens to the U.S.-backed, Saudi-led bombing campaign in Yemen that has killed thousands of civilians.
Obama is in Saudi Arabia for the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC). Alongside Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Oman, Qatar, and Kuwait are the other members of the GCC.
“To rescue someone from harm, there is nothing greater than that.”
—Nusra al-Ahmed, mother of a child facing execution in Saudi Arabia
“As the GCC’s key international partner on security,” wrote Amnesty International’s interim USA director Margaret Huang in a letter to Obama, “you are in a unique position to act to halt the slide into deep repression taking place across the region.”
“In particular,” wrote Huang, “I urge you to address repression of freedom of expression and the abusive use of criminal justice systems in the name of security, and violations of international humanitarian law by the Saudi Arabia-led coalition in the Yemen conflict.”
Human Rights Watch has been raising the alarm for months about civilian casualties in Yemen and on Wednesday called again on Obama to withdraw U.S. support for the Saudi-led coalition’s airstrikes.
“I’ve spent months scrambling through rubble from strikes, interviewing people bereaved when bombs killed or gravely wounded their loved ones with no apparent military target,” wrote Belkis Wille, a Yemen and Kuwait researcher for Human Rights Watch.
“Obama and Gulf leaders should make it a priority to end airstrikes that are unlawfully killing civilians,” continued Wille, “Saudi Arabia, as the leader of the coalition, should carry out credible and impartial investigations of alleged unlawful attacks and hold those responsible to account as required by the laws of war. Civilian victims of wrongful attacks should be compensated. Until that happens, the United States should suspend all weapons sales to Saudi Arabia. That just might get the Saudis’ attention.”
Rights groups have long called for an embargo on arms sales to Saudi Arabia. Yet under Obama, arms sales have increased to Saudi Arabia by 96 percent compared to the Bush administration. As recently as December, the U.S. sold Saudi Arabia over 18,000 bombs and 1,500 warheads for a total of $1.29 billion.
Meanwhile, over 3,000 civilians were killed in Saudi-led airstrikes in Yemen between March 2015 and March 2016, according to the United Nations, and those numbers don’t include the over 100 civilians killed by U.S.-made bombs in an airstrike on an outdoor market in Yemen earlier this month.
Human rights advocates also called on Obama to address the rights abuses to which many Gulf nations are subjecting their own citizens.
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