UN removes Saudi-led coalition from violators list of children’s rights
The United Nations decided to remove the countries of the coalition led by Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates with direct US and British support from the list of shame or the “black list” of perpetrators of violations against children in conjunction with a new massacre of the coalition that killed 4 children among 13 civilians.
United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres announced on Monday the launching of the year’s edition of the United Nations annual report on children in conflict without the inclusion of Saudi coalition countries in the list of violators of children’s rights.
Amnesty International was the first human rights organization that denounced the decision of “UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to remove the Saudi coalition from the blacklist of entities that committed abuses against children.”
The organization saw in a statement on Monday night that excluding the countries of the war coalition in Yemen from the list of shame questioned its mechanism.
Amnesty International did not find a justification for the decision, and alluded to the United Nations yielding to pressure from the coalition countries, saying “Perhaps Guterres was hoping that the media would be busy and that no one noticed this political move with distinction.”
The UN resolution coincided with the Saudi coalition’s committing a new massacre of civilians in Yemen which killed four children among 13 civilians when two coalition airstrikes hit a car on Sheda district highway in Saada province on Monday.