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Saudi Arabia should be dropped from UN Human Rights Council, say British lawyers | Saudi Arabia should be dropped from UN Human Rights Council, say British lawyers |
(about 20 hours later) | |
A campaign to remove Saudi Arabia from the UN Human Rights Council has been launched by a group of British lawyers, who argue the desert kingdom’s membership of the body is “contradictory and ironic”. | A campaign to remove Saudi Arabia from the UN Human Rights Council has been launched by a group of British lawyers, who argue the desert kingdom’s membership of the body is “contradictory and ironic”. |
Saudi Arabia, whose seat on the council expires in 2019, has faced international condemnation for its role in the Yemen conflict. | Saudi Arabia, whose seat on the council expires in 2019, has faced international condemnation for its role in the Yemen conflict. |
It is also accused of crackdowns on political dissidents as well as having deeply conservative laws on issues including homosexuality and women’s rights. | It is also accused of crackdowns on political dissidents as well as having deeply conservative laws on issues including homosexuality and women’s rights. |
In a report, London-based lawyers Rodney Dixon QC and Lord Kenneth Donald John Macdonald said suspending Saudi Arabia from the body would “act as a major lever for the government to clean up their act and make a proper new start”. | In a report, London-based lawyers Rodney Dixon QC and Lord Kenneth Donald John Macdonald said suspending Saudi Arabia from the body would “act as a major lever for the government to clean up their act and make a proper new start”. |
They raised the plight of 60 political activists and peace campaigners who the human rights lawyers said were detained in September last year. | They raised the plight of 60 political activists and peace campaigners who the human rights lawyers said were detained in September last year. |
Speaking to Al Jazeera, Mr Dixon said it was "completely contradictory and ironic for a government with systemic patterns of abuse - as we have highlighted in the report - to be sitting on the council, and in fact previously to have chaired the council”. | Speaking to Al Jazeera, Mr Dixon said it was "completely contradictory and ironic for a government with systemic patterns of abuse - as we have highlighted in the report - to be sitting on the council, and in fact previously to have chaired the council”. |
The report said: "Those detained have not been charged with any offence, and the information about the reasons for their arrests and circumstances of their imprisonment are very limited." | The report said: "Those detained have not been charged with any offence, and the information about the reasons for their arrests and circumstances of their imprisonment are very limited." |
Yemen has been torn apart by three years of conflict between the Saudi-backed government of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi and the Houthi. | Yemen has been torn apart by three years of conflict between the Saudi-backed government of President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi and the Houthi. |
More than 10,000 people have died in the conflict, which has also triggered the world's largest cholera epidemic, starvation and other diseases. | More than 10,000 people have died in the conflict, which has also triggered the world's largest cholera epidemic, starvation and other diseases. |
Saudi-led air strikes – which in some cases have targeted hospitals and funeral gatherings – have killed thousands of civilians. | Saudi-led air strikes – which in some cases have targeted hospitals and funeral gatherings – have killed thousands of civilians. |
Human Rights Watch has previously criticised the decision to keep Saudi Arabia on the UNHCR, saying it raised questions about the integrity of the group. | Human Rights Watch has previously criticised the decision to keep Saudi Arabia on the UNHCR, saying it raised questions about the integrity of the group. |
Labour's Fabian Hamilton, a shadow foreign minister, said it would be "entirely right that Saudi Arabia’s position on the United Nations Human Rights Council be reviewed". | |
He told The Independent: "Due to its clear targeting of civilians in Yemen, causing many to die from starvation and a humanitarian catastrophe, it has become clear that Saudi Arabia’s position on the Human Rights Council is unsustainable and inherently contradictory.” | |
The UNHCR comprises 47 members distributed by region. Thirteen places go to Asia-Pacific states including China and Philippines, which themselves have faced global criticism for poor human rights records. | The UNHCR comprises 47 members distributed by region. Thirteen places go to Asia-Pacific states including China and Philippines, which themselves have faced global criticism for poor human rights records. |
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