In a landmark judicial review case on 7, 8 and 10 February, the UK High Court will determine the legality of the UK government’s arms transfers to Saudi Arabia amid the current armed conflict in Yemen.
Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, Rights Watch (UK) and Oxfam will make submissions to the Court, in a legal challenge brought by Campaign against Arms Trade (CAAT).
“The UK government’s repeated refusal to halt arms transfers beggars belief, given the extensive and credible reporting showing the Saudi Arabia-led coalition’s ongoing serious violations of international human rights and humanitarian law, including possible war crimes,” said James Lynch, Head of Arms Control and Human Rights at Amnesty International.
“It is a sad state of affairs that NGOs have to go to court in an effort to force the UK government to do the right thing for the people of Yemen.
“How many civilians need to be killed, maimed, rendered homeless, and have their hopes and dreams shattered by Saudi Arabia-led forces that the UK government, among others, continues to recklessly arm?”
UK domestic law, the global Arms Trade Treaty (ATT) to which the UK is a State party, and rules of customary international law require the UK to ensure that its arms transfers do not aid the commission of war crimes by Saudi Arabia.
For more of Amnesty International’s research on UK arms transfers to Saudi Arabia, please see:
Yemen: Coalition used UK missile in unlawful airstrike
Flooding the region with arms is adding fuel to the fire in Yemen
UK Government breaking the law supplying arms to Saudi Arabia, say leading lawyers
Yemen: Children among civilians killed and maimed in cluster bomb ‘minefields’
Yemen: Evidence counters UK claims about use of British-made cluster munitions in Yemen