Saudi Arabia’s scandal over its war crime in its prisons in Yemen.
The results of research in some centers of the United Kingdom show that Saudi Arabia has committed large-scale aggression in its prisons inside Yemen with the support of the United Kingdom, which is considered a war crime.
The British analytical base Declassified accused Saudi forces of committing serious atrocities in prisons at the Al-Ghaida airport in eastern Yemen, which were carried out with the support of British secret forces in the area.
The base noted that the rapes, some of which are war crimes, include torture, the disappearance of people and their forced displacement.
DeClassifide quoted Human Rights Watch as saying that Saudi forces, which run the prison at Al-Qaeda Airport, tortured detainees there and severely deprived them of their liberty. They also impose strict security measures inside the airport against civilians or military personnel to prevent anyone from recording their aggression and the presence of British troops.
Human rights group Sam, in turn, accuses Saudi Arabia of torturing dozens of civilians arrested during a security operation in Hadramaut province. The organization also called Saudi actions a war crime.
“Saudi Arabia has detained hundreds of Yemenis in its prisons in Saudi Arabia and Yemen, some of which are illegal,” Sam said in a new report. Sam’s field team discovered various groups who had been arbitrarily arrested and disappeared. Some were tortured, including many journalists, political activists, military officers and civilians. According to the report, some of the detainees died under torture, including Ibrahim Al-Shamsan, a Yemeni Coast Guard officer.
Tawfiq al-Hamidi, head of the Sam organization, said the report reflected the suffering of the families of the detainees, some of whom were unaware of the fate of their relatives. He called for an immediate end to Saudi illegal actions against the Yemeni people and the release of all detainees. Al-Hamidi also demanded that all those involved in the crimes of arbitrary arrest, disappearance of detainees and torture be brought to justice.