Yemen: US-Backed Coalition Bombs Hospital

NOVANEWS
US-Backed Coalition Bombs Yemen Hospital, Killing at Least Seven Including Four Children
“We must stop this war on children.”
Destruction after a likely Saudi-led coalition bombing next to the Kitaf Hospital in Yemen on March 26, 2019.
Destruction after a likely Saudi-led coalition bombing next to the Kitaf Hospital in Yemen on March 26, 2019. (Photo: Save the Children)
An airstrike on a hospital in Yemen Tuesday killed seven people including four children, said a humanitarian group.
The global charity Save the Children, which supports the medical facility, is calling for a swift investigation into the incident and a suspension of arms sales to all parties to the conflict—including American arms-recipent Saudi Arabia.
“We are shocked and appalled by this outrageous attack,” said Carolyn Miles, President & CEO of Save the Children, in a statement. “Innocent children and health workers have lost their lives in what appears to been an indiscriminate attack on a hospital in a densely populated civilian area. Attacks like these are a breach of international law.”
“The Saudi-led coalition, which is backed by the United States, is the only party in the war using warplanes, mostly American and British-made fighter jets,” as the Washington Postnoted. Moreover, “the United States helps the Saudi coalition warmakers choose their targets,” wrote peace activist and author Kathy Kelly.

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Save the Children US

@SavetheChildren

A hospital we support in Saada was bombed today. 7 ppl, inc. 4 children lost their lives. We condemn this attack, particularly as the conflict in Yemen enters its 5th year today. Children, civilians & hospitals are .

According to Save the Children, the missile hit a gas station less than 50 yards from the Kitaf Hospital’s main entrance. Open for just 30 minutes when the bombing took place, the hospital was busy with staff and patients entering, said the aid group.
Miles said her agency is providing urgent aid to children who “have the right to be safe in their hospitals, schools, and homes. But time after time, we see a complete disregard by all warring parties in Yemen for the basic rules of war. Children must be protected. We must stop this war on children.”
The escalation in the conflict, which marked its four-year anniversary on Tuesday, has devastated infrastructure of the already impoverished country. It has been marked by attacks on civilian targets including medicalfacilities and a school bus, as well asaccusations of warcrimes.
In a Twitter thread, Yemen researcher at human rights group Amnesty pointed out how medical facilities have been repeatedly attacked during the conflict, and said the latest strike “shows that after more than four years of devastating conflict, the coalition is unrepentant in its complete disregard for the laws of war.”
“Deliberately attacking a functioning hospital is a war crime,” she wrote.

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Rasha Mohamed

@RashaMoh2

A Coalition airstrike that hit another hospital in northern yesterday, killing 7 people including 4 children, shows that after more than 4 years of devastating conflict, the Coalition is unrepentant in its complete disregard for the laws of war

Rasha Mohamed@RashaMoh2

The hospital in question is supported by Save the Children and is located in a remote area in northern in Kitaf . It caters for over 50,000 people and the next closest hospital is 60km away https://www.savethechildren.net/article/seven-killed-bombing-save-children-supported-hospital-yemen 

Seven killed in bombing of save the children supported 

Rasha Mohamed@RashaMoh2

A gentle reminder that signed a memorandum of understanding with the @UNHumanRights Special Representative for Children & Armed Conflict to reinforce the “protection of children” affected by the conflict in Yemen

Rasha Mohamed@RashaMoh2

Attacks on medical facilities by all parties to the conflict have been a “defining element” of Yemen’s conflict according to @P4HR. @theIRC & @unocha estimate that 50% of Yemen’s health care infrastructure was destroyed by end of 2017 https://phr.org/news/attacks-on-medical-facilities-in-yemen-is-a-defining-element-of-nations-intractable-conflict/#top 

Attacks on Medical Facilities in Yemen is a Defining Element of Nations Intractable Conflict

The deliberate targeting of health care facilities, with devastating impact on civilians, is a defining element of the ongoing conflict in Yemen. Al-Tawra Hospital, the central public hospital and…

phr.org

Rasha Mohamed@RashaMoh2

@Amnesty has documented how all parties to the conflict have attacked or militarized hospitals and harassed medical staffers. In November 2018, Amnesty documented how fighters took up positions atop a hospital roof in https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2018/11/yemen-huthi-gunmen-raid-hospital-as-hodeidahs-civilians-face-imminent-onslaught/ 

 

Saudi gunmen in Yemen raid hospital as Hodeidah’s civilians face imminent onslaught

This is a stomach-churning development that could have devastating consequences for the hospital’s medical workers and dozens of civilian patients.

amnesty.org

“After four years of bloodshed in the Arab world’s poorest country, Yemenis can no longer bear the catastrophic humanitarian impact of the war,” said Samah Hadid, Amnesty International’s Middle East campaigns director, in a statement on Monday.
“The international community must step up efforts to ensure that civilians are protected, obstacles to humanitarian assistance and arbitrary restrictions on import of essential goods are lifted, and impunity for war crimes and other violations is ended,” she said.

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