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Bolstering Calls to Stop Arming Saudis, Data Confirms Targeting of Civilian Sites

Amid “unrelenting attacks on civilians and on civilian infrastructure” and as a new campaign aims to block the Obama administration from selling $1.15 billion worth of weapons to Saudi Arabia, new reporting sheds further light on the devastation the kingdom’s military coalition, backed by the U.S. and U.K., has wrought on Yemen’s population.

Over one-third of all the coalition’s air strikes in Yemen have hit civilian targets like schools and hospitals, the Guardian reports Friday.

In fact, there have been “repeated strikes on school buildings and hospitals.”

In five of the past 18 months, the Guardian continues, “the Saudi-led coalition hit more non-military sites than military.”

The revelation is based on a survey of the strikes conducted by the Yemen Data Project. From the Guardian:

The findings, the paper writes, “will refocus attention on U.K. arms sales to Saudi Arabia” and its role in the war.

Asked about the findings, Saudi foreign minister Adel bin Ahmed al-Jubeir dismissed the claim that civilian sites were targeted, telling the Guardian that Houthi rebels “turned schools and hospitals and mosques into command and control centers. They have turned them into weapons depots.”

On the other side of the Atlantic, human rights campaigners continue their efforts to block the pending arms deal. Several online petitions have already been circulating, and Human Rights Watch this week launched a campaign calling on people to tell their senators to stop the deal by instead backing a bipartisan resolution.

As the organization’s Kristine Beckerle Finberg and John Sifton wrote earlier this month,

The new campaign page states:

The human rights organization say the Senate is set to vote on the resolution Sept. 20.

Additional reporting this week by the Associated Press puts a human face on the high levels of child malnourishment gripping the port city and surrounding area of Hodeidah.

“There is an accelerating increase in the number of children suffering malnutrition,” Ossan al-Abbsi, a pediatrician at Hodeidah’s central hospital, told AP. “We used to have five cases while the rest of the beds were empty on any given day. Now, you can never find an empty bed in our unit.”

In the country overall, the UN says, 1.5 million children suffer from life-threatening malnutrition.

Last month, Julien Harneis, UNICEF representative in Yemen, said, “Children are paying the heaviest price of the conflict in Yemen.”

U.N. humanitarian coordinator for Yemen Jamie McGoldrick said recently that he was “deeply disturbed by the unrelenting attacks on civilians and on civilian infrastructure throughout Yemen by all parties to the conflict, which are further destroying Yemen’s social fabric and increasing humanitarian needs, particularly for medical attention at a time when the health sector is collapsing.”

McGoldrick said last month that the death toll from the ongoing conflict surpassed 10,000.

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