Rights group sues Abu Dhabi Crown Prince in France over Yemeni war
Wed, Nov 21, 2018 | By publisher
Judiciary
A rights group filed a lawsuit against Abu Dhabi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed al-Nahyan during his visit to France on Wednesday.
In the suit, the group accused the prince of war crimes, complicity in torture and inhumane treatment in Yemen.
French lawyer Joseph Breham, filed the law suit against the Crown Prince on behalf of the NGO “International Alliance for the Defense of Rights and Freedoms” (Alliance internationale pour la defense des droits et des libertes (AIDL).
The AIDL said Prince Mohammed, who is Deputy Supreme Commander of the UAE Armed Forces, is responsible for attacks that hit civilians.
“It’s in this capacity that he has ordered bombings on Yemeni territory,” said complaint filed on behalf of the AIDL, which is based in France.
The complaint also cites a report by U.N. experts that said coalition attacks may have constituted war crimes and that torture was carried out in two centers controlled by Emirati forces.
The complaint makes reference to the bombing of a building in Sanaa in October, 2016, where a wake was taking place for the father of the Houthi administration’s interior minister.
Documents from Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International and Oxfam on arbitrary detentions and the use of illegal cluster bombs are also referenced in the complaint.
The lawyers said French courts were competent to handle the case in line with the United Nations convention against torture.
The complaint, filed in a Paris court, comes as pressure grows on French President Emmanuel Macron to curb arms sales to Saudi Arabia and the UAE.
The two countries head a coalition fighting the Iran-aligned Houthi rebels who control most of Northern Yemen and the capital Sanaa.
France also has a military base in Abu Dhabi.
A number of Yemenis have joined the legal action, AIDL lawyer Joseph Breham said.
There was no immediate response from the Crown Prince’s court or the UAE government media office to an emailed request for comment.
Diplomatic efforts to halt the war in Yemen have proved unsuccessful and attempts by rights groups to hold the war’s protagonists to account have gained little international traction so far.
French prosecutors are already studying a similar complaint filed in April against the Saudi crown prince, starting a legal process likely to last years.
The Yemen war has claimed more than 10,000 lives and forced from their homes more than three million, more than 10 per cent of the population. (Reuters/NAN)
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