Scottish National Party MP Angus Robertson in Parliament
during PM’s Question Time said civilians were being killed by the Royal Saud
Air Force “who have done that using British-built planes with pilots who are
trained by British instructors, and who are dropping British-made bombs and are
coordinated by the Saudis in the presence of British military advisers. Is it
not time for the prime minister to admit that Britain is effectively taking
part in a war in Yemen that is costing thousands of civilian lives, and that he
has not sought parliamentary approval to do that?”
The UK ally was also accused by the United Nations special
envoy to Syria Staffan de Mistura of deliberately undermining ongoing efforts
for reaching a political solution in Syria.
In a confidential briefing to the 15-nation UN Security
Council meeting on January 18, de Mistura accused Saudi Arabia of complicating
his efforts on Syria by trying to tightly control which opposition groups are
allowed to participate in the international negotiations to resolve the deadly
crisis in the country. The UN diplomat also said that the Saudi-backed
opposition groups in Syria and their “sponsors” have time and again rebuffed
his personal appeals to allow other groups being represented in the talks on
Syria.
Another ally of the UK has been accused of using Latin American mercenaries in the Yemen war. 450 military personnel from the European and Latin American
countries, but mainly from Colombia, have been recruited to fight for the
Saudis in Yemen. Reports emerged in late December 2015 that six Colombian
troops and an Australian commander had been killed in clashes. The Colombians
have been dispatched to Yemen under an agreement between the United Arab
Emirates and the US-based security
services company formerly called Blackwater.
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