RNA - The humanitarian situation in Yemen is “increasingly unsustainable” and urgent action must be taken by both sides in the conflict, he said, adding that the situation is turning into a “deep humanitarian catastrophe,” said Ahmed Benchemsi, communications and advocacy director at Human Rights Watch’s Middle East and North Africa, RT reported.
“More than 3 million people have been displaced in Yemen and more than 80 percent are relying on some form of humanitarian aid. Yemen has the highest rate of child malnutrition in the world now and it is estimated that one in five persons are in severe food insecurity,” he said, citing data from the World Food Program.
“We ourselves, at Human Rights Watch, were able to document 61 apparent unlawful airstrikes, all conducted by the coalition, some of which may amount indeed to war crimes and that have killed nearly 900 civilians and have hit civilian areas, including markets, schools, hospitals and private homes,” Benchemsi told RT.
“Targeting civilian targets is an absolute violation of the laws of war and this is what we are closely monitoring in Yemen,” he added.
He called on western powers who supply Saudi Arabia with weapons to immediately halt deliveries.
“We clearly recommend that the United States, the United Kingdom, France and others should suspend all weapons sales to Saudi Arabia until they curtail their unlawful airstrikes in Yemen and until also a credible investigation is conducted about those violations," Benchemsi said, adding that previous investigations conducted by the coalition do not appear to the HRW to be “fair or credible.”
Since March 2015, Saudi Arabia has headed an international military coalition whose air operation targets Yemeni people to reinstate the fugitive former Yemeni president Abd Rabbuh Mansour Hadi.
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