A banned, British-made cluster bomb was used by the Saudi-led coalition in Yemen, Amnesty International
said on Monday, warning that civilians returning home in northern Yemen
risked
injury and death from "minefields" of deadly cluster bombs.
Cluster
bombs, dropped by air or fired by artillery, scatter hundreds of
bomblets across a wide area which sometimes fail to explode and are
difficult to locate and remove, killing and maiming civilians long after
conflicts end.
They pose a particular risk to children who can be attracted by their toy-like appearance and bright colours.
The BL-755 bomb, manufactured in Britain in the 1970s, was located by Amnesty in Hayran in northern Yemen near the Saudi border.
Amnesty
said this was the first confirmed use of a British-manufactured cluster
munitions since the adoption of the 2008 Convention on Cluster
Munitions, which prohibits the use, stockpiling, production and transfer
of cluster bombs.
The bomb, designed to break into more than 2,000 fragments, is known to be in the stockpiles of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, Amnesty said.
"Even
after hostilities have died down, the lives and livelihoods of
civilians, including young children, continue to be on the line in Yemen
as they return to de facto minefields," said Lama Fakih, Amnesty International senior crisis adviser.
"They
cannot live in safety until contaminated areas in and around their
homes and fields are identified and cleared of deadly cluster bomb sub
munitions and other unexploded ordnance," Fakih said in a statement.
A
Saudi-led coalition began a military campaign in Yemen in March last
year with the aim of preventing Iran-allied Houthi rebels and forces
loyal to Yemen's ex-President Ali Abdullah Saleh from taking control of the country.
More
than 6,000 Yemenis, about half of them civilians, have been killed in
the fighting and airstrikes over the past year, the United Nations says.
Millions more have been displaced.
The human
rights group said during its recent mission it documented 10 new cases
in which 16 civilians, including nine children, were killed or injured
by cluster munitions between July 2015 and April 2016.
A
British government spokesman said Britain was satisfied that its arms
export licences for Saudi Arabia were compliant with U.K. and EU
criteria.
"The U.K. Government takes its arms
export responsibilities very seriously and operates one of the most
robust arms export control regimes in the world," he said in a statement.
Britain
was not a member of the Saudi-led coalition and British personnel were
not involved in carrying out strikes in Yemen, directing or conducting
operations or selecting targets, he said.
Amnesty
said since the start of the Saudi-led military campaign in Yemen it
documented the use five other types of cluster munitions used by the
coalition forces manufactured by the United States and Brazil.
The
United Nations said in January that "troubling reports" that cluster
bombs have been used on civilian areas in the capital of Yemen could be a
war crime.
Mark Goldring, Oxfam GB chief
executive, said the Amnesty report was evidence that British arms sales
were adding to suffering in Yemen.
"This underlines a simple truth - Britain's arms sales and technical military support are fuelling a brutal war in Yemen," Goldring said in a statement.
The spokesman for the Saudi-led coalition was not immediately available for a comment.
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