Yemen 4.32 pm Keith Vaz (Leicester East) (Lab) I beg to
move, That this House notes the worsening humanitarian
crisis in Yemen; and calls upon the Government to take a lead in
passing a resolution at the UN Security Council that would give
effect to an immediate ceasefire in Yemen. I am
most...Request free trial
Yemen
4.32 pm
-
(Leicester East)
(Lab)
I beg to move,
That this House notes the worsening humanitarian crisis in
Yemen; and calls upon the Government to take a lead in
passing a resolution at the UN Security Council that would
give effect to an immediate ceasefire in Yemen.
I am most grateful to all members of the Backbench Business
Committee for granting this vital debate. I also thank my
fellow officers of the all-party group on Yemen, the hon.
Members for Portsmouth South (Mrs Drummond) and for Glasgow
Central (Alison Thewliss), for leading this debate with me.
I commend the Under-Secretary of State for Foreign and
Commonwealth Affairs, the right hon. and gallant Member for
Bournemouth East (Mr Ellwood), for the work he has
undertaken on Yemen. He demonstrated to all of us last week
what a brave, honourable and decent man he is. I am also
pleased to see the shadow Foreign Secretary, my right hon.
Friend the Member for Islington South and Finsbury (Emily
Thornberry), and the shadow International Development
Secretary, my hon. Friend the Member for Edmonton (Kate
Osamor), in their places.
We meet today at a time when Yemen, one of the poorest
countries on earth, stands on the precipice of an
unprecedented tragedy. Two years ago this week, a Saudi-led
coalition launched an intervention after the legitimately
elected Government of the President of Yemen, Mansur Hadi,
had been ousted in a coup by Houthi rebels. We welcomed the
action of the coalition, which was mandated by the Security
Council in resolution 2216. Earlier today in another part
of this House, and thanks to the chairing of the hon.
Member for Bristol North West (Charlotte Leslie), we heard
from Major General Asiri, the spokesman for the Saudi
coalition, on the coalition action so far and its
aspirations for the future. The meeting was extremely
useful.
This afternoon, we stand in a very different world from the
one of two years ago. The latest figures from the
humanitarian crisis in Yemen are unbelievable: 10,000
people have died; more than 1,500 of the dead were
children; 47,000 people have been injured, many crippled
for life; and 7 million are at immediate risk of
starvation, including 2 million children. The United
Nations has just announced that Yemen is only one step away
from outright famine. In total, 21.2 million people require
urgent humanitarian assistance—80% of the country’s
population. We have become frighteningly numb to the
figures. It should shock us to our very core: 21 million
people is more than double the entire population of
Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales.
-
(Cardiff South and
Penarth) (Lab/Co-op)
My right hon. Friend is making a strong and appropriate
speech, setting out the scale of the tragedy that Yemen is
experiencing and what it potentially faces. Does he share
my great concern that both sides in the conflict continue
to frustrate humanitarian access? For example, at the port
of Hudaydah, cranes that were supposed to unload crucial
medical and humanitarian cargoes are not yet in place.
-
My hon. Friend is absolutely right. We are very concerned
about the blockades by both sides and the inability to get
humanitarian aid into the country. I know that other right
hon. and hon. Members will, along with me, want to draw
attention to the problem of access.
According to a recent YouGov poll, less than half the UK’s
population even knows that there is a war in Yemen, a
former British colony. It is the forgotten war, which is
why the motion has only one objective: to secure an
all-important, long-lasting ceasefire. I hope that in this
debate we can show solidarity and unity in support of the
people of Yemen. Members may of course wish to raise many
issues, and rightly so, but the motion is clear, and its
focus is on bringing peace to Yemen.
How did we arrive at this point? In the Arab spring of
2011, Yemen and Tunisia stood apart in the region as the
sites of the only peaceful transitions to democracy.
Particular praise for that goes to the current Minister for
Europe and the Americas, who became the Prime Minister’s
envoy to Yemen. The UK has maintained stronger links with
Yemen than any other western country. Three Members of this
House were born there: myself, my hon. Friend the Member
for Walsall South (Valerie Vaz) and the hon. Member for
Portsmouth South. Members such as the hon. Member for
Charnwood (Edward Argar), who is the vice-chair of the
all-party group, have visited the country, and Members
including the hon. Members for Beckenham (Bob Stewart) and
for Tonbridge and Malling (Tom Tugendhat) have served there
in the armed forces.
The past two years have chipped away at the Yemeni people’s
historical good will for the United Kingdom. Last Friday, I
met members of the Yemeni diaspora in Sheffield, with
another officer of the all-party group, my hon. Friend the
Member for Sheffield, Brightside and Hillsborough (Gill
Furniss). At that meeting, the community’s message was one
of disbelief that the United Kingdom had not acted more
strongly to end the fighting. We continue to be one of the
largest bilateral aid donors to Yemen, and the Department
for International Development is contributing £100 million
to the country. I commend the efforts of the Secretary of
State for International Development, who has made
additional funds available to Yemen as a priority for her
Department and taken the lead on Yemen internationally.
That work was begun under her predecessor, the right hon.
Member for Sutton Coldfield (Mr Mitchell), who is in his
place and has recently returned from Sana’a. He has
described the “appalling scale” of the crisis there. I hope
he will be able to catch your eye, Madam Deputy Speaker.
So far, we have had three failed opportunities for a
sustainable end to the fighting: negotiations in April 2016
ended in failure; a UN-sponsored round of talks in Kuwait
ended in failure in August 2016; and John Kerry’s
initiative last November led to the Saudi-led coalition and
Houthis agreeing to the UN special envoy’s terms, but the
agreement collapsed when President Hadi refused to sign the
deal. The intervention of the Foreign Secretary secured a
three-day ceasefire in October, which allowed vital aid to
reach the most desperate parts of the country, but that was
just a drop in an ocean of despair. The political process
has now ended. Talks have not been revived. Will the
Minister confirm whether a new round of talks has been
planned and what ongoing discussions he has had with the
key players in the conflict? Many are now part of a very
complicated game of thrones that is the crisis in Yemen,
including the Hadi Government, the Houthis, former
President Saleh, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates,
Oman, Iran, the UK, and the USA. The only winners are Daesh
and al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula. Oman has now been
invited into the “Quad” of nations seeking to resolve the
crisis.
I travelled to Oman in February to meet the Foreign
Minister, Yusuf bin Alawi bin Abdullah. I thanked the Omani
Government for the assistance that they gave me locally.
The Minister told me that there is hope. He said that the
road map of the UN special envoy, Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed,
was firmly on the table. He was also clear that the
political road map can and should begin immediately,
implementing a ceasefire while the economic and security
issues are resolved. When the Minister replies, can he
inform us whether, subject to the immediate obstacles being
overcome, he believes the political road map can now be
implemented?
-
(East Lothian)
(SNP)
On the urgency of the need for a ceasefire, is the right
hon. Gentleman aware of a report in yesterday’s Washington
Post that the United States Administration are now getting
back into a Saudi project to invade and capture Hudaydah
port?
-
I am not aware of that report. That would be extremely
damaging to the process that I am talking about today,
which is the need for all parties, including the United
States, to support a ceasefire. I will certainly look at
that report. Perhaps the Minister who has heard what the
hon. Gentleman said will have an opportunity to reply.
When I was in Oman, I also had the opportunity to speak to
President Hadi. The President, speaking to me from Aden,
was focused on addressing the humanitarian crisis, but he
was no closer to agreeing to the UN special envoy’s
proposal. If President Hadi signs up to this agreement, he
has an opportunity to be remembered as the man who brought
peace to Yemen, and who stopped the suffering of his
people. He should take it. I am grateful to him for
accepting an invitation to address the all-party group in
June. Can the Minister confirm whether President Hadi is
any closer to agreeing to the terms of the special envoy’s
road map?
The UK can and must be the honest broker. That means
putting pressure on all parties, including those who
receive British support. Can the Minister tell us whether
the UK is prepared to sanction the Yemeni and Saudi
Governments, if they allow the next round of negotiations
to fail?
Tomorrow may be one of the most critical days in the
history of Yemen. At 10am in New York, the United Nations
Security Council will hold a full session on the conflict
in Yemen, where they will hear directly from the special
envoy. It will be chaired by our excellent ambassador,
Matthew Rycroft. The United Kingdom is the current
President of the Security Council, as we are, of course,
the “pen holder” on Yemen at the United Nations, which
means that we lead on all issues relating to Yemen. This is
a unique opportunity to make a case to the Security
Council, and to secure a new resolution that would enable a
ceasefire.
Stephen O’Brien, the outstanding UN Under-Secretary-General
for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Co-ordinator,
and a former Member of this House, made a stunning
announcement this month that the world faces its worst
humanitarian crisis since 1945. He focused on Yemen. The
French Government, who previously took a backseat on Yemen,
announced last week the need for an immediate ceasefire. I
have met both the Chinese and Egyptian ambassadors to
London. On behalf of their Governments, they told me that
the first priority was the cessation of hostilities. Most
importantly, it is very clear that nobody is winning the
war on the ground, and that nobody will ever win by
military means. The only solution will come from the
negotiating table. That point was forcefully made by the UN
panel of experts.
I spoke to Matthew Rycroft yesterday, and he explained that
the political process needs to begin moving in the right
direction. It is clear to me, and I hope that it will be
clear to the House, that a resolution adopted tomorrow
would commit all sides to guarantee the ceasefire. Will the
Minister ensure that the United Kingdom proposes such a
resolution at tomorrow’s session? That will really help the
peace process. If it is not to be tabled tomorrow, what is
the timetable for putting forward that motion? Quite
simply, these efforts cannot wait.
While we push for peace, Yemen continues to face myriad
challenges. Organisations such as Save the Children,
Islamic Relief, Oxfam, Médecins sans Frontières, UNICEF,
CARE, Christian Aid and the Red Cross are performing
wonders on the ground, but there are still chronic
humanitarian access issues. Despite the generous
contributions to the UN appeal, which is only 50% filled,
serious damage to the port of Hudaydah has, as we have
heard, created a monumental blockage for aid delivery into
Yemen. If Hudaydah cannot function, we cannot stop famine
in Yemen. Has the Minister considered proposals by the
Yemen Safe Passage Group, led by a former British
ambassador to Yemen, that the UN takes over the running of
the port to allow aid to flow into the country? I am sure
that other officers of the all-party group will speak
further on the humanitarian crisis.
-
(Aldershot)
(Con)
rose—
-
I will take this final intervention.
-
I apologise for not being here for the right hon.
Gentleman’s opening remarks, but I did hear him say that he
had a meeting with General Asiri this morning, as I also
did. The point he made to me was that the Saudis have the
capacity to block the port—they are not doing so—and that
the port is in the hands of the militia, who are taking
their tithe on all the goods coming in. In fact, it is the
Houthi militia who are standing between the aid and the
people who need it.
-
I was at the same meeting, and the hon. Gentleman is
absolutely right. That is why we need a ceasefire, and why
we need the UN going in there to monitor the delivery of
aid. As we heard, the aid was being hijacked and used for
other purposes, which is why the ceasefire is so important.
To conclude, what we do know and what is beyond all doubt
is that al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula and Daesh have
exploited the crisis that has grown in Yemen as a result of
this conflict, and that they now de facto control swathes
of territory. My interest in Yemen is not political; it is
deeply personal. Aden, the city of my birth, was once the
jewel of the Arabian sea. It was once a centre of British
influence and of global trade, as ships passed through the
Suez canal. The people of Yemen do not deserve to be
condemned to suffer one of modern history’s greatest human
catastrophes. I see a crisis that is not intractable. I see
that there is a path to peace.
I began by warning that Yemen stood on the precipice of an
unprecedented tragedy. This is true, but we have the chance
in New York tomorrow morning to save this beautiful
country. We are part of this conflict, and the time for
waiting, watching and failing to act must end. Nero fiddled
as Rome burned. The presidency that we hold tomorrow gives
us the opportunity to demonstrate leadership, and
leadership is exactly what the Yemeni people need. Let us
bring light back to a country that otherwise will be
consumed by darkness, starvation and evil.
-
Several hon. Members rose—
-
Madam Deputy Speaker (Mrs Eleanor Laing)
Order. The House will be aware that this is a very short
debate, finishing at 6 o’clock. Therefore, I have to impose
an immediate time limit of four minutes.
4.49 pm
-
Mr (Sutton
Coldfield) (Con)
The right hon. Member for Leicester East (Keith Vaz), with
his customary eloquence, has put the case extremely well.
The last time the House debated Yemen, I was in Yemen,
visiting Sana’a and Sa’dah, so I have an opportunity to
update the House on what is happening there. I pay tribute
to the extraordinary work that the United Nations and its
leader there, Jamie McGoldrick, are doing in Yemen, and to
Oxfam, which, in the highest traditions of British
international non-governmental organisations, is performing
extraordinarily well and doing magnificent work.
It is good to see the Minister in his place. My submission
to him is that the Government’s policy needs tweaking. We
are supporting a coalition that is not going to succeed. We
need to move towards neutrality, we need to try to engineer
a ceasefire and we need to update UN resolution 2216.
Because of the deep respect with which Britain is held in
that part of the world, and particularly in Yemen, the
adversaries, and particularly the Houthis, would be willing
to accept British mediation. In my view, it is essential
that we engage with all parties inside the structure of the
United Nations to secure the ceasefire and Yemeni-Saudi
Arabian talks.
The British Government’s policy needs tweaking because it
is internally inconsistent. One part of the British
Government is seeking to get development aid and vital
supplies in through the port of Hudaydah, while another
part is supporting the coalition that has been bombing the
port. The coalition has put the cranes out of action when
they are vital for unloading the ships that one part of the
British Government is trying to get into the port.
Britain is seeking to help to de-mine ordnance—the British
de-mining group up in Sa’dah, which has been heavily
bombed, is led by a former British Army officer. We can see
the inconsistencies in our position. Britain is supporting
a malnutrition ward in a major hospital, from which
Médecins sans Frontières has withdrawn, in Sa’dah, yet it
is seen as part of the coalition that is causing the
problems.
-
As ever, the right hon. Gentleman speaks with great
eloquence and is informed on these matters. Does he agree
that, in that inconsistency, there is a particular issue:
the continued use of cluster munitions by the coalition?
Human Rights Watch reports of an incident just this month.
He mentioned landmines. These are instruments of war that
predominantly kill civilians and leave problems for many
months and years after conflicts have ended.
-
Mr Mitchell
The Minister will perhaps make this clear, but my
understanding is that the Saudis have agreed not to use any
of the cluster munitions that were sold by Britain to Saudi
Arabia in 1986.
Another inconsistency is that, recently, we have heard that
the Americans launched a bombing attack on al-Qaeda in
Yemen, but al-Qaeda is fighting on the same side as us
against the Houthis. The internal inconsistencies in the
policy very much need to be addressed.
We know that the world faces four famines. Many of us had
believed that, in the year 2017, it would be inconceivable
that that awful biblical experience could be revisited on
people, yet four famines are pending—in northern Nigeria,
Somalia, southern Sudan and Yemen. However, the Yemenis are
not starving: they are being starved by a blockade in which
we are complicit. Although Britain has led the way in
tackling those four famines, and although the Department
for International Development is doing its best to ensure
that steps are taken in Yemen to stop that starvation, the
people of Yemen are being starved. The UN has made it
absolutely clear from first-hand evidence on the ground
what that means for the future of children in the country.
In my view, the Government must do everything they can to
ensure that the ceasefire takes place, and that British
policy is tweaked, using all the many instruments at our
disposal, which the Minister knows so well, through the
United Nations and elsewhere. We should try to make certain
that the blockade is lifted, that the ceasefire takes
place, and that there are Saudi-Yemeni talks. We then need
the Yemeni-Yemeni talks, for which there is a basis—it has
to be from the bottom up through all the different parties,
governorates, tribes and so forth in Yemen. Britain has an
important role to play in that.
We should bear in mind that Yemen imports 90% of what it
eats, and 80% through the port of Hudaydah. One effect of
the blockade and the failure of the banking system is that
the four major wheat importers cannot get the credits to
put that right. Britain should help to lead in stopping
that.
4.54 pm
-
(Liverpool, West Derby)
(Lab/Co-op)
I congratulate my right hon. Friend the Member for
Leicester East (Keith Vaz) and the other officers of the
all-party group on Yemen on organising what is a timely
debate, as we have just marked the third anniversary of the
crisis in Yemen.
It is a particular pleasure to follow the right hon. Member
for Sutton Coldfield (Mr Mitchell), the former Secretary of
State for International Development, who kindly gave
evidence to the International Development Committee
recently, following his visit to Yemen. Today, he has again
provided a thoughtful and important contribution.
This coming Saturday, in Liverpool, we will hold the
monthly vigil for peace in Yemen, which is arranged by
Liverpool Friends of Yemen, drawing on the large Yemeni
community in Liverpool and on other friends. In advance of
this afternoon’s debate, I contacted members of Liverpool
Friends of Yemen to ask what they would like me to address
if I were called to speak, and the major focus was the one
reflected in the motion before the House: the sheer scale
of the humanitarian crisis the people of Yemen face and the
need for peace in that country.
-
Mr (Coventry South)
(Lab)
I am sure my hon. Friend would agree that, as my right hon.
Friend the Member for Leicester East (Keith Vaz), who moved
the motion, forcefully said, the United Nations decisions
tomorrow will be very important, given what previous
speakers have said about a ceasefire, and perhaps the
blockade will be lifted as well.
-
I agree absolutely, and let us all hope for progress as a
consequence of the United Nations Security Council
discussions tomorrow.
The scale of this crisis has been documented by the
previous speakers and in previous debates. UNICEF tells us
that more than 1,500 children have been killed since the
fighting began, with a similar number being recruited to
fight by both sides of the conflict. As my right hon.
Friend said in his opening speech, the conflict has claimed
the lives of at least 10,000 people, and some have put the
level of civilian deaths alone as high as 5,000.
The United Nations has given the crisis level 3 status,
putting it on a par with similar crises in Syria, Iraq and
South Sudan. The president of the International Committee
of the Red Cross has said that the intensity and severity
of the fighting have left Yemen looking like Syria did
after five years of conflict. Some 19 million people are in
need of immediate humanitarian assistance—that is 80%, or
four in five, of the population. Half a million children
are suffering from severe malnutrition. Saleh Saeed, the
chief executive of the Disasters Emergency Committee, who
is originally from Yemen, has said that families are having
to make the “unbearable” decision between buying medicine
or food. This simply cannot be allowed to continue.
-
My hon. Friend mentioned medicine. Does he agree that there
is a crucial crisis in the health sector? The health
Ministry’s workers have not been paid since August last
year. There is a lack of medicines in many areas. Despite
the amazing work of organisations such as MSF, many people
cannot access the help they need.
-
I thank my hon. Friend for his intervention. He anticipates
the next paragraph of my speech, where I point out that
there are 15 million people with no access to healthcare.
Of course, 70 health centres have been destroyed as part of
the conflict.
Today, the International Development Committee publishes
its report on UK aid and the allocation of resources. The
work DFID is doing in Yemen is a fine example of why the
Prime Minister was right yesterday to say that UK aid is a
badge of hope. This morning, the Committee took evidence on
education, and we heard about the latest plans from DFID,
working with other donors, to ensure that children affected
by the conflict do not become a lost generation and that
there is investment in the capacity of the Government and
local communities in Yemen to ensure that children do not
lose out on their education.
The right hon. Member for Sutton Coldfield talked about
what many have described as the paradox of aid—the positive
record we as a country have on aid, but the fact that our
involvement is aligned with one side of the conflict. I am
keen to hear from the Minister what the Government are
doing to try to get the port at Hudaydah reopened. That
issue has been raised by a number of colleagues during the
debate.
Those of us on the International Development Committee have
said consistently that there should be an independent
UN-led inquiry into all alleged violations of international
humanitarian law by both sides in the conflict. However,
let us unite behind the motion. This important motion marks
the third anniversary, but it also says, ahead of tomorrow,
that we want to see a ceasefire, peace and justice, and
that we commit to rebuilding Yemen once peace comes.
4.59 pm
-
(South Ribble)
(Con)
I pay tribute to the right hon. Member for Leicester East
(Keith Vaz) and my hon. Friend the Member for Portsmouth
South (Mrs Drummond) for bringing the forgotten war back to
the Chamber again. Sadly, since the last time we all spoke
on this, the humanitarian situation has become worse. I
will not reiterate the points about the port of Hudaydah,
but I look forward to hearing what my right hon. Friend the
Minister is doing, with colleagues, to ensure that it is
open.
On the appeal for $2 billion of funds, sadly, although we
are a third of the way through 2017, only 6% of that money
has been raised. The UK is in a good position on the
list—we are third—but many of our European partners have
not paid up yet. I ask the Minister to urge his colleague,
the Minister for Europe and the Americas, to talk to
European partners about how they can do their part as well.
I want to unpick the second part of the motion, which
assumes that a UN Security Council resolution would give
effect to an immediate ceasefire. Of course, that is what
we all want. It is in the best interests of the Yemeni
people, who are now suffering greatly through starvation,
more poverty and drug addiction, but it is also in the
British national interest, because we cannot afford to have
this training ground for terrorists that washes up on our
shores.
I applaud the efforts that the Government are making on the
diplomatic front. We have been able to achieve that through
our long-standing relationship with Saudi Arabia, which was
mentioned by my hon. Friend the Member for Aldershot (Sir
Gerald Howarth); through constituents of mine who have
lived there for many years; through parliamentary visits;
and through meetings of the Quad involving the US, Saudi
Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. I know that the
Minister had a very good working relationship with
Secretary Kerry, and I would be interested to hear what
conversations he has had with Secretary Tillerson,
particularly since the raid on al-Ghayil.
We need to think more broadly about the UN’s role in
peacekeeping in the 21st century, because this war involves
non-state actors. We did not have that as much in the 1940s
and ’50s. On one side, we have the Yemeni Government of
Hadi backed by the Saudi-led coalition with nations that
are members of the UN; on the other, we have the Houthis.
People say they are an Iran-backed Government. Yes, there
are arms coming through from Tehran, but there is not the
same level of boots on the ground that there is in Syria.
-
Mr Mitchell
It is hard to believe that many arms are getting through
because the country is completely blockaded, by land, sea
and air, by the Saudis.
-
I accept that point.
-
(Hyndburn) (Lab)
rose—
-
I briefly give way to my Lancashire neighbour.
-
In January, the UN panel of experts report reiterated that
point. One of the reasons arms cannot get in is the
embargo, which obviously has an adverse effect on aid, too.
-
The hon. Gentleman and my right hon. Friend make my point
for me.
We are dealing not with another state but with the Houthis,
who are amorphous and do not play by the same rules. We
need to be aware of that when we are looking for peace and
a ceasefire, which is what the aim of all of us should be
and what this debate is about. We need to have innovative
thinking about nation states, about the role of diplomacy
and about the role of the United Nations. I applaud the
idea, on this anniversary, of having a UN Security Council
resolution, but I am interested in how it will actually be
enforceable. How do we bring the Houthis to the table? How
do we get food through and how do we stop people fighting?
What tools can we, as parliamentarians, give to our
diplomats? What tools can we give to the Minister and his
Foreign Office colleagues? What can we give to our
soldiers, if that is what we need to do, in this
multi-faceted modern conflict? We need to continue to
engage with all parties. We need to be prepared to talk to
the Houthis, the Saudis and everybody involved. We need to
be able to back up our words with money and with actions,
perhaps including military actions.
5.04 pm
-
(Glasgow Central)
(SNP)
I extend my thanks to my co-sponsors from the all-party
parliamentary group on Yemen—the right hon. Member for
Leicester East (Keith Vaz) and the hon. Member for
Portsmouth South (Mrs Drummond)—both of whom are a great
credit to the country of their birth.
Along with many emails from my constituents in Glasgow who
follow the situation closely, I have received many
briefings from organisations for this debate. There are too
many to name, but I am extremely grateful for those
briefings outlining the desperate situation on the ground.
I also recently met the Norwegian Refugee Council, and the
APPG had a valuable session with Yemen-based
non-governmental organisations. Yemeni constituents of mine
have also shared their experiences of the situation in
Yemen.
There has been a lot of talk about Yemen being on the brink
of famine, with the International Committee of the Red
Cross saying that there are only three to fourth months
left to save Yemen from starvation. Jamie McGoldrick, the
UN humanitarian co-ordinator for Yemen, concurs, saying
that there is only about three months’ supply of food left
in the country.
As I understand it, part of the issue with declaring famine
is that there are not enough independent people on the
ground to do so. People are starving, though—of that there
is no doubt. The aid agencies know what they are seeing and
they are all begging the UK Government to help to get food
into the country as a matter of the utmost urgency.
Blockades at Yemen’s ports by the Saudi-led coalition have
contributed to the situation. Hudaydah is strategically
important. It used to handle 70% of food imports, as well
as humanitarian aid. It has been under sustained attack,
leading to the destruction of infrastructure and rendering
inoperable the cranes that used to unload the cargo ships.
Unloading must now be done by hand, which is an impossible
task.
The frustrating thing is that the port could be operating
at the moment. The World Food Programme has bought and paid
for cranes to replace those destroyed by the air strikes.
They are currently sitting in a port in the UAE, after
being refused access by the Saudi-led coalition. That is
utterly unacceptable.
-
Is my hon. Friend also aware that one of the offshoots of
the blockade is that the boats carrying refugees from
Somalia to Yemen are being attacked and sunk by Saudi
Apache helicopters?
-
Yes, and that incident was absolutely appalling and
shocking. Nobody can fail to be upset by the pictures of
those Somali people, who have suffered enough without being
bombed.
Ministers must make sure that the cranes, which have been
bought and paid for, are installed in Hudaydah. That would
turn on the taps: it would get aid and commercial
operations flowing again, and get things moving.
Hudaydah’s strategic importance is recognised by both the
Houthis and the Saudis. Aid agencies, including the UN,
fear that the conflict in and around Hudaydah is ramping
up, which must be prevented at all costs. Half a million
people would be displaced and it would make aid efforts all
but impossible. Yemen’s primary port cannot be a frontline
in this conflict, and I seek the assurance of Ministers
that they will pursue the matter.
-
Brendan O’Hara (Argyll and Bute) (SNP)
My hon. Friend is making a very powerful speech. We have
already heard about the ridiculous situation of the UK
Government giving aid with one hand while arming the
antagonists with the other. Does she agree that famine
relief and a ceasefire can come about only with the
immediate suspension of the Government’s selling of arms to
the Saudi regime, which has already been found to be guilty
of breaches of international humanitarian law?
-
Absolutely. As I said in Foreign Office questions earlier,
£3.3 billion has been made from arms licences over the past
two years, which dwarfs the £85 million in Government aid,
welcome though that is. The arms sales must stop now. Peace
will not happen if bombs continue to rain down on the heads
of people in Yemen.
The UK Government’s role in establishing the UN
verification and inspection mechanism at the port of
Hudaydah, inspecting the goods entering Yemen’s ports while
they are still at sea, is welcome, but Save the Children
told me yesterday that that has not prevented the Saudi-led
coalition from carrying out its own inspections, thereby
delaying vital aid shipments. That can mean a delay of up
to three months in delivering aid and medical supplies,
leaving aid workers making life and death decisions on the
ground about who they can help with dwindling resources.
Some shipments have been diverted from Hudaydah and around
the coast to the smaller port of Aden, meaning that convoys
have instead to complete the dangerous journey overland,
via checkpoints and across the frontline, adding at least
another three weeks to the time taken for that aid to reach
the people it needs to reach and risking the lives of
everybody on the convoy.
Moving goods and people across the country also requires
confirmation of deconfliction from authorities in Yemen,
without which the convoy will become a target in the war,
and nobody wants that to happen. Other Members will no
doubt outline the grave mistakes and errors that have
happened during air strikes. NGOs based in the country tell
me that they are fearful for the lives of their workers at
every single checkpoint where they get stopped. They become
targets, regardless of the assurances given to them by the
governing parties and their warm words.
All the organisations I have met have stressed the
difficulty of moving around Yemen, the complications with
visas and the delays caused by petty bureaucracy. Some
agencies have not been able to make field visits to support
their operations on the ground and to bring back evidence
that will enable funders to encourage more people to donate
to their campaigns. They are not being well enough
supported by the Government agencies that should be
facilitating aid.
There are increasing problems in getting to Yemen, with
limitations on travel by land and sea. Sana’a airport is
also closed and people cannot leave, including those who
seek urgent medical assistance. I ask the Government to
speak to the Saudis about removing that blockage so that
people can get in and out by air and receive treatment.
All the delays are costing lives and leaving the population
with long-term health problems as a result of severe
malnutrition. For want of clean water and a suitable diet,
people are less able to fight off disease and their immune
systems are more susceptible to cholera. There have been a
suspected 22,000 cholera cases in 15 governorates in the
past six months alone, and at least 100 people have died as
a result. Tragically, UNICEF estimates that 63,000 children
died in 2016 from preventable diseases linked to
malnutrition. That is 8,500 more children than were born in
the whole of Scotland last year. That is a generation. The
future of Yemen hangs in the balance, and the Government
must do more.
5.10 pm
-
Mrs (Portsmouth South)
(Con)
I thank the Backbench Business Committee for allowing us to
hold this incredibly important debate, and I thank my
friend the right hon. Member for Leicester East (Keith Vaz)
for organising it.
The situation in Yemen really is a forgotten conflict—or
perhaps a better term would be an ignored conflict, in the
UK. The humanitarian crisis is on a knife edge. Yemen has
always been desperately poor, and 90% of its food and goods
are imported, but it is surrounded by huge wealth, and
there is no reason why it should not be a functioning
country with help from its neighbours.
The war has left Yemen unable to make the best of its own
resources. It has some reserves of oil and gas, but its
inability to export them has crippled its foreign exchange
reserves. The Yemeni central bank has no power to sustain
the economy, and the move from Sana’a to Aden without its
database or bureaucrats has not helped. There are 1.5
million public sector employees who are being paid only
sporadically, if at all.
Yemen’s GDP has contracted a further 35% since 2015. A war
economy is now in place, and tribal leaders are making a
fortune while Yemenis starve. As part of any settlement of
the conflict, the international community must be ready to
rebuild confidence in the country’s financial institutions
and guarantee the restoration of the Yemeni economy while
bringing rural tribes back together.
I can understand why the coalition has fought to keep its
own people safe from attacks. There were four Scud attacks
this morning into Saudi territory, and the frequency of
such attacks is increasing. The continued fighting is
storing up problems for the future. There is no doubt in my
mind that the country will continue to be used as a base by
Daesh and al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula if the conflict
persists, and there are growing signs that the groups
involved in Syria and Iraq see Yemen as a long-term safe
haven. Al-Qaeda has claimed 76 attacks this year in
southern and eastern Yemen, and 11 Yemeni security forces
were killed near Aden only yesterday. I disagree with the
suggestion made by my right hon. Friend the Member for
Sutton Coldfield (Mr Mitchell) that al-Qaeda is on our
side. It could be an immense threat to the stability of the
region.
-
Mr Mitchell
The point I was making is that in attacking al-Qaeda, the
Americans attacked an element that was fighting the
Houthis. They attacked an element that was, in that
instance, on our side of the conflict.
-
Mrs Drummond
That may be the case, but al-Qaeda is still attacking the
Yemeni security forces, and it is a grave danger to the
rest of the region.
We are already supplying aid, which is limiting the impact
of the humanitarian crisis, but I want to ask the British
Government to be an honest broker in ending the political
crisis. My right hon. Friend the Member for Sutton
Coldfield recently visited as a guest of the Houthis, and
they told him that they were happy to engage with the
British Government on a peace process. Let us challenge
them to see whether they really mean it, and whether they
really understand UN Security Council resolution 2216,
which asks them to lay down their arms and withdraw. We
have much expertise in peace negotiations and a long
history of engaging with everyone in this area, from
Governments to tribal leadership.
On the humanitarian front, I urge the Government to
continue to work to improve the flow of aid. We have
already helped to ease the blockade on Hudaydah port for
supplies of humanitarian aid, fuel and food, but the
coalition recently refused access for four new mobile
cranes, supplied by the World Food Programme, which would
vastly improve the port’s capacity for unloading essential
supplies. This is a UN body, and the coalition must accept
the role of the UN as an impartial agent in this crisis.
That includes acceptance of the role of the UN inspection
and verification mechanism. I know there are doubts about
this being in Djibouti, and there is concern that weapons
are still being bought in.
Will the Minister report back to this House on whether the
UN inspection and verification mechanism is working in a
timely fashion. What evidence is there that weapons are
being smuggled? Is there any possibility of the mechanism
being established in the port of Hudaydah to reassure the
coalition that weapons are not being smuggled? The cranes
must be got to Hudaydah, and they must be put to work.
Other ports, such as Aden and Mukhalla, must be used to
bring in more aid. Will the Minister call on the coalition
to support the rehabilitation of port infrastructure and
get the cranes working? Is there any indication that the
coalition, backed by the US, will soon be attacking
Hudaydah, which I know is a concern? Most importantly, will
the British Government demand an immediate ceasefire, call
all sides to negotiations on the basis of the special
envoy’s proposals and lead the country of Yemen to peace?
-
Several hon. Members rose—
-
Madam Deputy Speaker (Mrs Eleanor Laing)
Order. I have to reduce the time limit to three minutes,
and I remind the House that it is not compulsory to take an
intervention and thus increase the time limit for one’s
speech.
5.15 pm
-
(Norwich South)
(Lab)
Thank you, Madam Deputy Speaker, for your generosity with
the time. I am very glad to speak in this place about the
current situation in Yemen.
-
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Foreign and
Commonwealth Affairs (Mr Tobias Ellwood)
On a point of order, Madam Deputy Speaker. I am sorry to
interrupt the hon. Gentleman, but I seek your clarification
about this observation, Madam Deputy Speaker. When this
debate ends, there will be an Adjournment debate that, if I
understand the protocols of the House correctly, will be
allowed more than its 30 minutes. Is it not possible for us
to use our full allocation and the time up to the period of
30 minutes before Members of the House disperse today?
-
Madam Deputy Speaker
I have every sympathy—heartfelt sympathy—with what the
Minister has said. This is a vital debate, and I will not
use up time in fully answering his point of order. The
House decided on the timetable. The Backbench Business
Committee gave 90 minutes for this debate, and I am
powerless to change that. The Minister has, however, made a
very good point.
-
I pay tribute to my right hon. Friend the Member for
Leicester East (Keith Vaz) and the hon. Members for
Portsmouth South (Mrs Drummond) and for Glasgow Central
(Alison Thewliss) for securing today’s debate. I pay
tribute to them not just as a politeness but because by
choosing Yemen as a topic for public debate in the House,
they have brought into our public arena an urgent
discussion that it is clear our Government would much
rather not have and that is, or at the very least should
be, deeply embarrassing for them. I say that not to score a
petty political point, but to highlight the fact that it is
the role of all elected Members to speak up when our
Government are acting wrongly on the international stage.
That is the essence of our democracy.
As Members have said, a famine in Yemen is imminent, which
is a disastrous prospect on top of the many children and
adults who have already died. This famine is not a
consequence of natural disaster, but a result of the civil
war. The right hon. Member for Sutton Coldfield (Mr
Mitchell) memorably said again today, “Yemenis are not
starving: they are being starved”. It is a famine that is
being deliberately used a weapon of war, but one that can
be stopped as soon as we find the political will to stop
it. That is a huge responsibility for all of us in the
House, and we must find the political will to do so as a
matter of the utmost urgency.
That is a particular responsibility for us because the UK
is a permanent member of the UN Security Council, we hold
the presidency this month of the UN Security Council—that
will end this week—and we of course have close political
ties with neighbouring states. It is clear that we have
been gifted an opportunity to set the international agenda,
and it is nothing less than our absolute moral duty to do
so. Let us begin by acknowledging that, notwithstanding the
good intentions in the motion, we cannot pass a resolution
that
“would give effect to an immediate ceasefire in Yemen”
however much we might wish we could do so. We must,
however, call for an immediate ceasefire, and throw our
weight behind that goal.
We can certainly recognise that all major parties to this
war must be part of the solution, and that United Nations
Security Council resolution 2216 needs to be replaced by a
realistic alternative that will bring everyone to the
negotiating table. We can and must recognise the importance
of independent witnesses on the ground, and the urgent need
for reliable data relating to food insecurity so that
relief can be well targeted. Binding assurances are clearly
needed from both sides on the protection of humanitarian
workers. These are credible and achievable political goals.
5.19 pm
-
(Hyndburn) (Lab)
I congratulate my right hon. Friend the Member for
Leicester East (Keith Vaz) on securing the debate. I think
it is the second time in six or eight weeks that we have
come to the Chamber to debate Yemen. I am delighted to do
so. I think last time I opened up by saying that the most
important point is not armed sales, but the people who are
suffering in Yemen. This is about a ceasefire, about peace
and about throwing all our weight behind trying to achieve
something that will benefit the people on the ground. It is
not about token policies bandied around for self-promotion.
The UN panel of experts published a new updated report in
January and I would like to pick the bones out of it, even
if I will not get to say a great deal in two minutes. The
panel stated that
“an outright military victory by any one side is no longer
a realistic possibility in the near term”.
We have to recognise that there are three sides to this
conflict. As well as the misery and suffering of the people
on the ground, Islamist terrorists will profit from the
conflict for as long as it goes on. It is important to
remember that the UN panel of experts continues to support
the democratically elected President Hadi and the coalition
through UN resolution 2216, which condemns the Houthi-Saleh
coup and calls for meaningful peace talks. It praises the
Gulf Co-operation Council for its attempts in trying to
bring about a ceasefire. My right hon. Friend the Member
for Leicester East pointed out that one of the blockages on
the Houthi side is that so far they do not seem willing or
able to come to the table. Listening to the right hon.
Member for Sutton Coldfield (Mr Mitchell), it may be that
that is going to change. Let us hope that it does. It is
important for them to come to the table, because that is
the road map to peace.
The UN panel reports that both sides have committed
terrible atrocities and that
“some of the coalition attacks may amount to war crimes”.
The Saudis, who are involved in coalition operations in
Iraq and Syria, operate to NATO standards. They openly
admit that they have made mistakes. None the less, some
atrocities have occurred and the UN panel recognises that
some of them have been committed by the coalition. However,
the panel recognises that many atrocities, if not more,
have been committed by the Houthis. The panel’s report
states that
“violations of international humanitarian law and human
rights norms were widespread”,
including the use of mortar bombs, free flight rockets into
densely populated residential areas, attacks on hospitals,
forcible disappearance of individuals and detention,
torture and murder.
I see that the clock has run down. I ask the Minister to
press for a ceasefire and meaningful peace talks.
5.22 pm
-
(Islwyn)
(Lab/Co-op)
I thank the Backbench Business Committee for granting this
very important debate on Yemen. I thank my right hon.
Friend the Member for Leicester East (Keith Vaz), and the
hon. Members for Portsmouth South (Mrs Drummond) and for
Glasgow Central (Alison Thewliss). I want to pay tribute in
particular to my right hon. Friend. Yemen has been called
the forgotten conflict. The way he speaks so passionately
about his country of birth means that that will never be
the case in this House as long as he is here.
The political situation in Yemen, which has led to this
point, is obviously very complicated. Once the Houthis
captured parts of Yemen and essentially launched a coup
d’état against the new President Hadi, it became evident
that the country would descend into civil war. There is a
natural instinct and a well-established principle in
international law that where there is conflict and a
humanitarian situation develops, there is not only a right
to intervene but an international responsibility to protect
civilians in certain circumstances.
In a single attack in March last year, which involved a
Saudi air strike on a crowded village market, 106
civilians, including 24 children, died. We must face up to
the fact that there is a very realistic chance that the
weapon used to cause so much destruction and grief was sold
to Saudi Arabia by the UK. We have heard that the UK has
given advice and support to Saudi forces to help them to
comply with their obligations under international law, but
the message clearly is not getting through. Saudi Arabia
has designated the entire Yemeni governorate of Sa'dah a
military target. That tramples over protocol I of the
Geneva convention which defines legitimate military
targets, and to which both the UK and Saudi Arabia have
signed up. The definition includes a wide range of
infrastructure, military industrial and communications
targets, but it does not include hospitals, including those
run by aid organisations or village markets. Illegally
declaring an entire governorate a military target, and
recklessly killing civilians in cities, schools and
hospitals as a result, is a clear breach of international
law. This is a position supported by the UN humanitarian
co-ordinator for Yemen.
Turning war into peace is never easy, but the United
Nations can be a fantastic vehicle when properly used. We
must take the civil war in Yemen and seriously encourage
our counterparts on all sides of the conflict—with the
exception of the terrorist groups of Daesh who are taking
advantage of the war—to stop the armed conflict and get
around the negotiating table. Brokering a ceasefire is the
first step towards that, and it is something in which we
could and should play a role.
-
Does the hon. Gentleman not accept that the Saudis have
invited the United Nations to monitor the port movements?
Would that not help to relieve the humanitarian problem?
-
I fully accept that the Saudis have been invited into the
Government, but what I am concerned about is the Saudis
using civilians as targets and those civilians being hurt.
That is when we have a humanitarian catastrophe on our
hands.
-
Mr Mitchell
To be absolutely clear, the Saudis are preventing the
replacement cranes from getting into Hudaydah, in spite of
the fact that the Department for International Development
urgently needs these cranes in order to unload vessels
carrying aid, medicine and food.
-
I accept the right hon. Gentleman’s point.
Clearly, ceasefires are simply the beginning of a long
peace-making process. Any ceasefire needs to be enforced if
it is to be successful. Without enforcement, ceasefires
have a tendency to fall apart and very quickly become
active armed conflicts. This can be seen in Syria and to
some extent in Ukraine. UN peacekeepers are specifically
intended for this very purpose, and could be deployed in
Yemen to enforce a ceasefire agreement.
To conclude, this would clearly be difficult, given the
wider geopolitical forces involved and the necessity of
agreement among the United Nations Security Council, but it
is something we must strive towards, encourage and support.
Too many people have died; we cannot oversee another famine
such as the one we see in Yemen at the moment.
5.26 pm
-
(Sheffield,
Brightside and Hillsborough) (Lab)
I congratulate my right hon. Friend the Member for
Leicester East (Keith Vaz) on bringing this debate to the
House today. What we are seeing in Yemen is a humanitarian
crisis—referred to as one of the worst the world has ever
seen. Over the past 18 months, the war and destruction have
killed over 10,000 people, with at least 1,200 of them
being children. According to the Office of the High
Commissioner for Human Rights, the majority of those deaths
are from coalition air strikes. Some 3 million people have
severe malnutrition, with a further 21 million requiring
urgent humanitarian assistance.
This is one of the world’s worst hunger crises. The Red
Cross warned this month that there are only three or four
months left to avoid famine. We are used to statistics and
figures in this place, but I remind my hon. Friends that
each and every one of these people is a mother, a father, a
brother or sister, a husband or wife or a child. These are
the innocent victims caught up in the forgotten war. The
conflict is making this enormous catastrophe worse every
day that it continues—and both sides are failing to
facilitate the flow of vital humanitarian aid, and failing
to conduct any kind of credible investigation in Yemen that
meets international standards.
There are many Yemeni people living in my constituency,
many of whom have family caught up in the destruction in
Yemen. They are absolutely terrified for their relatives.
Last week, my right hon. Friend the Member for Leicester
East joined me at an event in Sheffield with a local Yemeni
community. I commend his huge commitment to shedding light
on the crisis and his work on the issue.
Over the weekend, we marked the two-year anniversary of the
beginning of the conflict in Yemen. I must say, with
enormous regret, that if the current political will remains
as it is, this conflict will continue. We must take action
now. There must be an immediate ceasefire and humanitarian
aid must be adroitly brought in and distributed. If the
conditions for that are not met, huge numbers of Yemenis
will continue to suffer and die. The coalition insists that
it has only military targets, but I suggest that the
evidence of the Saudi-led coalition attacks on civilians
and the resulting civilian catastrophe that has ensued
shows either incompetence on the part of the Saudi
coalition or, as suggested by human rights organisations, a
blatant breach of international humanitarian law.
The United Kingdom’s approach to the war in Yemen is a
total contradiction, and I urge the Government to do all
that they can to adopt a new resolution. We must see some
progress towards an immediate ceasefire as soon as
possible. Alongside that, humanitarian access must be a
priority, and food supplies and aid routes must be
established if we are to avoid an even greater catastrophe.
5.30 pm
-
(Rutherglen and
Hamilton West) (SNP)
The humanitarian situation in Yemen is extremely serious,
and continues to spiral out of control. A report released
by UNICEF yesterday makes harrowing reading. It states:
“Malnourished children across Yemen are teetering between
life and death…. Cemeteries are filling up with small
unmarked graves, the deaths of children unreported to
authorities, their suffering invisible to the world.”
Some 9.6 million children—80% of all children in the
country—are in need of humanitarian assistance. That is a
moral outrage.
Citing international development budgets in response to
repeated expressions of serious concern about the United
Kingdom’s arms trade with Saudi Arabia is also an
outrageous way for any supposedly responsible Government to
act. As we have heard, the Saudi-led coalition has
destroyed much of the infrastructure in Yemen. As a result
of air strikes on the port of Hudaydah, only one of the six
loading cranes remains functional. That is seriously
hampering DFID’s efforts to get aid into the country.
Good intentions count for absolutely nothing. What good is
it if we allocate an aid budget but continue to support
those who are making it near-impossible to get the aid to
those who need it? Nearly 10 million wee ones need
assistance, and not only are we not doing enough to help;
we are actively preventing ourselves from helping. Why are
we ignoring the brutal and realistic prospect of an
impending famine, a famine that we will have been utterly
and shamefully complicit in creating? The international
development line simply will not wash any more.
Why are the UK Government so keen to continue selling
weapons that they are unwilling even to try to persuade
their Saudi allies to stop the bombing? Why are we not
front and centre, leading ceasefire negotiations at the
United Nations? There are clear breaches of international
humanitarian law on all sides of the conflict, but the
Government continue their policy of implausible deniability
about their allies, and, worse still, their collusion in
those breaches. Their insistence that the Saudis should be
allowed to investigate themselves would be laughably absurd
if it were not so obscenely improper.
Unfortunately, I do not have much time. Let me end by
saying this. The Government appear to be totally incapable
of changing direction or doing the right thing. Instead,
they stick to their line and ignore the consequences. This
is real life. Millions of children are starving, and that
simply cannot continue. We must see action if we are to
prevent a catastrophe. The Government cannot and must not
wait for another moment. Let us show real leadership, and
help to bring an end to the widespread suffering of the
people of Yemen.
5.33 pm
-
(East Lothian)
(SNP)
Let me put it to the Minister—for whom esteem has never
been higher in the House after last week—[Hon. Members:
“Hear, hear”]—that tomorrow will be the United Kingdom’s
last chance to influence materially the course of events in
Yemen. There seems to be a great deal of building up to
ensuring that the conflict and the bombing will worsen
rather than lessening.
Since the arrival of the Trump regime, the United States
has changed its stance significantly. The level of US
bombing in Yemen has increased, and is higher than it has
been in the last two years. The Trump regime has changed
the Obama regime’s position on supplying precision weapons
to the Saudi air force, which had almost run out of such
weapons. It is feared that the Saudis will now use the
resupply to intensify the bombing. Yesterday, the
Washington Post contained a very reputable report that
Defence Secretary Mattis was asking permission from the
White House to change the rules of conduct to enable United
States forces to intervene more strategically, with the
Saudi-led coalition, in order to occupy the port of
Hudaydah. The Saudis and the Emirates do not have the
materiel to undertake such an invasion; that would have to
come from the US Marine carriers in the Gulf. That will
only end up with a situation where, far from reducing the
conflict, it will increase, and therefore the humanitarian
crisis will get even worse.
It has not so far been mentioned in the debate that,
despite this conflict, more than 250,000 African refugees
have poured into Yemen in the last two years, and over
100,000 in the last year, fleeing famine in Africa. That is
making the situation on the ground in Yemen even worse.
What discussions have the Government had with the Trump
regime on the intensification of the American military
involvement in Yemen, and what steps are the UK Government
going to take to intervene now, when they have the chance,
in the UN, to try to get a ceasefire before the conflict
becomes even more bloody and the humanitarian crisis
becomes even worse?
5.35 pm
-
(Dunfermline and
West Fife) (SNP)
Summing up from the Scottish National party Benches is
something of a tall order today, and I hope colleagues will
forgive me for not mentioning all the excellent
contributions. Looking back over my notes, I see that 23
March marked a year almost to the day since the Committees
on Arms Export Controls first met to discuss this issue. I
am a member of that Committee, and it is with some sadness
that I find myself speaking more than a year later with us
having achieved very little from our side, while the
humanitarian situation in Yemen becomes ever worse. During
that time we on the SNP Benches have been consistent in our
position that Her Majesty’s Government must suspend all
arms sales to Saudi Arabia immediately, until a full,
independent and transparent investigation into the alleged
breaches of international humanitarian law has taken place.
-
Will the hon. Gentleman give way?
-
No, as I want to leave some time for the right hon. Member
for Leicester East (Keith Vaz) to speak at the end.
We in the SNP have had a very straightforward, honest and
consistent position throughout this whole sorry saga: it is
simply that this already atrocious humanitarian situation
cannot be allowed to get worse through a continued Saudi
offensive, and if this Government have any leverage at all,
as they claim, with the regime in Riyadh, they must
convince it to stop the bombing now and come to the table
to bring peace to the people of Yemen.
This debate also provides an opportunity for the London
Government to reflect on how their decision to allow arms
sales, and how the military and security assistance that
they give their Saudi allies, has affected this
humanitarian situation. It is a damning indictment of UK
foreign policy that we have become so reliant on this one
bilateral relationship, not only in terms of the options it
gives the UK in the region, but in terms of how important
this is to maintain the current level of arms exports.
The stories we have heard today of the humanitarian crisis
in Yemen are extremely distressing, and we are hearing ever
more harrowing stories from the non-governmental
organisations on the ground there trying to help. They come
not from just one or two NGOs, but from Save the Children,
Oxfam, Amnesty International, the International Committee
of the Red Cross and Médecins sans Frontières. They have
also come up with plans that all have a similar theme. All
these agencies are looking to secure rapid and unimpeded
access, to deliver humanitarian aid to the affected
populations. They are asking for the current spending and
funding commitments to be built upon—a previous speaker
talked of the 6% or 7% of funding that has already been
given—and for support to be given to the Human Rights
Council resolution of September 2016 which calls for an
investigation and an international independent inquiry.
They are urging all parties to stop the use of explosive
weapons with wide area effects on populations, and they are
calling for an intensification of efforts to support the
UN-led peace talks. Lastly, but most importantly, they are
calling for no sales or transfer of arms to any party
involved in the Yemeni conflict.
We are also now seeing increasingly desperate tactics
employed by Houthi rebels, including the use of unmanned
craft to attack Saudi warships in the Red sea, in what is
something of a modern warfare first. As I have said, the UK
contribution to this is significant, not only in the sense
that we have allowed weapons to be exported, but, I believe
more significantly, because of the numbers of UK personnel
who are advising the Saudi armed forces on a number of
issues. What they are doing there is a mystery; it is
unclear as the Ministry of Defence refuses to tell us.
When I visited Saudi last year with the Defence Committee,
the British embassy was clearly keen to impress upon us
that UK personnel were looked on by their Saudi
counterparts as playing a vital part—something that gets to
the heart of the Government’s narrative—so I would
appreciate answers to the following questions. In a war
being fought largely by mercenaries, how confident can we
be that no current or former UK citizens are involved in
ways that would put their actions beyond the purview of the
Ministry of Defence? Why have the UK Government stopped
trying to buy back the Saudi Government’s undoubted
stockpile of cluster munitions, as per their obligations
under international law? The issue of cluster munitions
sold legally by the UK to Saudi in the 1980s brings to mind
the length of the relationship, and I want to reflect on
how we got to where we are today.
The UK Government have been involved with Saudi Arabia from
the start. UK engineers extracted oil and built roads and
infrastructure in the kingdom. UK nurses have staffed the
hospitals, and teachers have staffed the schools. How is
it, after all that, that the UK has so little leverage over
the regime? Why must we always hear about the carrot, not
the stick? Germany and the Netherlands have banned the sale
of matériel to Saudi on international humanitarian law
grounds. Indeed, it is the Government’s rejection of the
Dutch-led UN motion on war crimes in favour of the Saudi
one that first called their priorities into question. I
only hope that it is not the size of the commercial
relationship that has skewed priorities on Whitehall.
I have no doubt that the defence sector is important to our
national economy, just as it is to the local economy in
Fife, but despite the highly skilled jobs and the civilian
applications of defence technology, we must consider the
high licensing standards that defence products need to
conform to in order to be sold worldwide. No one on the SNP
Benches does not understand the complex situation. We are
expected to believe, on the one hand, that the role that UK
personnel play is significant enough to mean that the UK
has substantial leverage over the Saudi regime while, on
the other hand, that those personnel are not in the country
for anything more than an advisory role. I hope that the
Minister will take the time to enlighten us today on where
those people stand. What is the UK role in Saudi? If it is
significant, we are tired of not being given the proper
answers. If it is not, please stop telling us we are able
to affect matters in the kingdom.
Colleagues have asked other questions today. The right hon.
Member for Leicester East is a doughty fighter on Yemen.
The hon. Member for Liverpool, West Derby (Stephen Twigg)
talked about the 5,000 people who have lost their
lives—1,500 of whom were children. The hon. Member for
South Ribble (Seema Kennedy) asked about other nations not
paying their way, and I am sure that the Minister, with his
influence, can bring more pressure to bear on nations that
are not putting money into the pot to help Yemen. My hon.
Friend the Member for Glasgow Central (Alison Thewliss)
mentioned there not being enough independent people to
declare that the famine exists and also the £3.3 billion-
worth of arms sales, which dwarfs the figure that we offer
in international aid.
The hon. Member for Portsmouth South (Mrs Drummond), who
always speaks on these matters with great distinction,
wants Yemen to return to being a successful, functioning
country. That is what we all want, but we must stop the
arms sales now to allow space for peace to occur. My hon.
Friend the Member for Rutherglen and Hamilton West
(Margaret Ferrier) highlighted the £500,000 for children
who are suffering from malnutrition. We should cease the
arms sales, get on a path to peace, and ensure that the
people of Yemen have a fighting chance of rebuilding their
country in the future.
5.43 pm
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(Islington South and
Finsbury) (Lab)
I thank the sponsors of this debate, particularly my right
hon. Friend the Member for Leicester East (Keith Vaz) and
the hon. Member for Portsmouth South (Mrs Drummond), both
of whom were born in Yemen and bring a depth of knowledge
and passion to such debates, for which we are grateful.
In previous debates, we have tended to see Yemen through
the prism of British involvement in the conflict in the
form of arms sales and other military support to the
Saudi-led coalition. I do not intend to dwell on those
issues today, although I am sure that they will be raised
again, not least because we await the High Court’s judgment
in the next few weeks on the legality of the Government’s
sale of arms to Saudi.
When we look at Yemen today what we see, first and
foremost, is a humanitarian catastrophe—the world’s worst,
according to the United Nations. We should not forget that,
even before the start of this war, Yemen was the poorest
country in the Arab world, a destitute nation surrounded by
wealthy neighbours and with a desolate landscape that meant
it relied on imports for 90% of its food.
Now Yemen is engulfed by famine in all but name, and no
wonder. It is not just that 90% of the country’s food is
imported but that most of those imports need to go through
the port of Hudaydah, the Red sea port that has been razed
by airstrikes—the airstrikes have completely destroyed the
port’s cranes, making it impossible to unload cargo. Even
if supplies could get as far as the port and then through
the roadblocks, the paperwork and the searches—some,
indeed, call it a blockade—mean it is unlikely that the
supplies would be able to get any further because the Saudi
airstrikes have also systematically destroyed the roads and
bridges that make it possible to get supplies from one
place to another.
The other 10%—the small amount of food that the Yemeni
people produce themselves—has for the most part gone, too,
as bombs have struck factories, food markets, poultry farms
and even fishing boats. Jamie McGoldrick, the UN’s
humanitarian co-ordinator, has said:
“The economic dimension of this war has become a tactic…It
is an all-encompassing, applied economic suppression and
strangulation that is causing everyone here to feel it”.
However, the UN special envoy for Yemen told the Security
Council in January that a viable proposal for peace was on
the table and within reach. What happened to that proposal?
Where has it gone? Was it connected to the ceasefire
resolution that we were told the UK would introduce six
months ago? Can the Minister tell us what has happened to
the resolution?
The last time we debated this matter, the Minister told us
that the British Government were in the process of
redrafting the resolution to make it up to date. How is
that going? Do we have an up-to-date resolution? When the
Security Council meets tomorrow, under British
chairmanship, to discuss the humanitarian crisis in Yemen—I
understand the Russians pressed for the discussion—we will
be the pen holder, we will be chairing the meeting and we
should be putting forward a peace resolution. Are we going
to? I fear not.
I have been told that the UK is, in fact, increasingly
stepping back on the diplomatic front for fear of upsetting
the Saudis on the one hand, and the Americans on the other.
I am told by my sources on the 38th floor that the new
Administration in America are now considering stepping up
their support for the coalition military campaign. If that
is right, will the Minister confirm that the Saudis have
been given the rest of the year to stabilise Yemen—that is
the wording—and to reassert the Yemeni Government’s
authority over the entire country? Surely that cannot be
the case, because we all know that a military approach
alone will not work.
May I also ask about the role of Stephen O’Brien? He is a
former Member of this House whom many Members will know. He
is now the United Nations Under-Secretary-General for
Humanitarian Affairs and is obviously important in this
regard. He has said that we are facing the worst
humanitarian crisis since 1945 and that the crisis is in
Yemen. I would appreciate it if the Minister could confirm
that Mr O’Brien is not leaving his post and that rumours he
is leaving, not out of choice but because of Saudi
objections, are wrong.
Is this forgotten war becoming the new Syria? It is a
multi-layered civil war being fought by major powerful
nations, either directly or through proxies, in which the
victims are civilians who suffer unbearable and
insufferable torment. People are also being starved. I urge
the Minister to ensure that Britain, once again, takes up a
proactive role on Yemen because we are a permanent member
of the Security Council, because we are currently the
president of the Security Council, because we are the pen
holder and because we have a close relationship with Saudi
Arabia, one of the major parties. What the people of Yemen
need more than anything else at the moment is peace. We
have some power in the conflict, and we can do something
about it tomorrow.
5.49 pm
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The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Foreign and
Commonwealth Affairs (Mr Tobias Ellwood)
Let me briefly make the point that I wish there were more
time to respond to this very good debate, as I have only
eight minutes in which to do my best to do justice to it.
It has served as a reminder that the House takes these
matters very seriously. I join Members in paying tribute to
the right hon. Member for Leicester East (Keith Vaz) and
the others who tabled the motion. I will do my best to
rattle through the points and, as usual, I will write to
right hon. and hon. Members with more details. Again, I
make the point that I find it bizarre that we are stopping
in order to have an Adjournment debate of an hour and a
half, when such debates normally last only 30 minutes.
I will focus on the points made by the right hon.
Gentleman, who made a comprehensive speech in summarising
the challenges that Yemen faces. The scale of the tragedy
is well known to us all, with 70% of the population now
needing humanitarian assistance. In answer to the right
hon. Member for Islington South and Finsbury (Emily
Thornberry), let me say that Britain continues to play a
leading role, unswayed by the prejudice or interest of any
other country. As she says, we are the pen holder, and we
are determined to do that job without prejudice and without
influence from other nations, doing what we see is best. We
show leadership at the United Nations and in the new Quint,
which involves nations from around the middle east that are
looking at this and which met in February, along with UN
special envoy Ismail Ahmed. I met him two weeks ago, when
we discussed what parameters we need to get in place in
order for a ceasefire to work and then for a UN Security
Council resolution to be supported.
Many right hon. and hon. Members have mentioned the
importance of the port of Hudaydah, and that must not be
underestimated. Yemen has two critical access points, one
being the port of Aden, in the south, and the other,
halfway up the Red sea, being Hudaydah, with a population
of 3 million. If the civil war moves into that area, it
will devastate that city, probably displacing about half
the people who live there—1.5 million people—and causing
mayhem. Not only will it further the prospect of famine and
lead to a refugee crisis, but it will flatten the port
itself. We may be frustrated with the amount of aid getting
through the port at the moment, but the situation will be
even worse if the battle were to commence in that populated
urban area. We therefore call on the coalition and the
Houthis to recognise that the world is watching and that
they need to come back to the table. This will be sorted
not by a military solution, but by a political one, and it
is very important that that is recognised.
A lot has been said about the cranes, but let me make it
clear that the old cranes were bombed a number of years ago
and the new cranes are sitting in Dubai. They have been
moved there to keep them out of harm’s way; no one knows
exactly what is going to happen to the port of Hudaydah as
it is unclear where the battle is going.
I reiterate how unhelpful and wrong it would be for us not
to work towards a peaceful solution. The right hon. Member
for Leicester East rightly said that this problem is not
intractable—there is a path to peace. An awful lot of
plates are spinning in the middle east, but I genuinely
believe that Yemen is one problem that can be solved—to do
that, however, we also need the will of the Yemeni people.
My right hon. Friend the Member for Sutton Coldfield (Mr
Mitchell), for whom I have a huge amount of respect, made a
helpful visit to Yemen, although such travel is not
endorsed. In his own inimitable way, he went there and he
has shared his findings. He paid tribute to the UN
agencies—I join him in doing so—and spoke about there being
perhaps a difference in strategy between different
Departments. I make it clear that we have one clear
strategy, but I can see the dilemma in that on the one hand
the Department for International Development is determined
to get aid into the country, whereas on the other we are
dealing with this protracted war, which this coalition is
pushing, and it is not doing a particularly good job of it.
I have been critical about its actions before; it is not
used to sustained warfare and it has made mistakes, which
we have debated here. We have made it clear to the
coalition that, as I have just said, the war will not be
ended in this way.
We certainly support Saudi-led efforts to restore stability
and check the advance of the Houthis, because that started
all this in the first place. Let us not forget that the
Houthis pushed through Sana’a and would have taken over the
port of Aden had a coalition not answered the call by
President Hadi to stand up for his legitimacy. Mention has
been made of weapons systems—
-
rose—
-
Mr Ellwood
I am afraid I do not have time to give way; I do apologise.
Members talked about weapons systems getting into Yemen. I
am afraid they are getting in by land and by sea, not so
much through the port of Hudaydah. Smaller boats are
getting in and providing arms up and down the Red sea, and
arms are also getting in through land corridors. The UN
verification and inspection mechanism is not working as
well as it could because it is not able to capture all the
boats that are moving in.
I have to contend with a point made by my right hon. Friend
the Member for Sutton Coldfield. We can discuss this after
the debate, but I do not agree that because al-Qaeda is
fighting the Houthis we should somehow be in some form of
alignment with it. Al-Qaeda’s track record shows that we
cannot entertain any alliance whatsoever. It has brought
insecurity and harm to the middle east and, indeed, to
Europe.
-
Mr Mitchell
Will my right hon. Friend give way?
-
Mr Ellwood
I shall give way briefly; I thought my right hon. Friend
might wish to respond.
-
Mr Mitchell
I should make it absolutely clear that no one regards
al-Qaeda with greater abhorrence than me. The point I was
making was that in this particular conflict there are some
very uneasy alliances against the Houthis.
-
Mr Ellwood
I apologise to the right hon. Member for Islington South
and Finsbury; I know she wanted me to give way earlier, but
it is important that my right hon. Friend was able to put
that on the record.
Many have called for a ceasefire, which is fully
understandable given where we want to go. Nevertheless, for
one to work in practice, parameters need to be in place. We
need withdrawal lines and the decommissioning of heavy
weapons, or agreement on that decommissioning. We need
buffer zones ready, in place or agreed, and we need
policing mechanisms to manage any violations that take
place; otherwise, we will see the situation ratcheting out
of control again and the ceasefire being breached.
In my discussions with Ismail Ahmed, the UN envoy, and with
other countries, we have talked about what the parameters
of a ceasefire would look like and the process that would
be needed. The parameters would have to be built around,
first, the sequencing of security steps, including
withdrawals; secondly, the agreement of roles and
appointments—in essence, a transition leadership; thirdly,
the resumption of discussions based on resolution 2216 and
the Gulf Co-operation Council initiative; fourthly; the
signing of a detailed agreement; fifthly, the finalisation
of an electoral road map; and finally, the drafting of a
constitution, which would lead to elections. That is a
ballpark design that the UN envoy is trying to promote.
Unfortunately, it is signing up to the detail that is
causing problems for all stakeholders. Nevertheless, we are
absolutely committed to pursuing that process at the UN to
ensure that a ceasefire eventually comes around.
The role of the United States was mentioned. I will visit
it soon to make sure it is committed. Rex Tillerson, the
new Secretary of State, worked in Yemen for several years
and knows the area very well indeed. I make it clear that
the additional military support the US is giving is not
designed for more precision munitions; it is designed to
enable better intelligence gathering so that fewer mistakes
are made. More to the point, it is important that the US
works with us and others to deter further military action
and to focus on getting that political agreement in place.
UN Security Council resolution 2216 was clear that
unblocking the political process required the Houthis and
forces loyal to former President Saleh to withdraw from
Sana’a and hand over their weapons. Despite consistent
demands from the international community, the Houthi-Saleh
alliance has refused to discuss these issues with the UN
special envoy. It has also taken a series of unilateral
steps that have undermined peace efforts, including the
establishment of a supreme political council and a shadow
Government to rival President Hadi’s. This is unacceptable.
We do not recognise the rival Government, and the Yemeni
parties must engage with the peace process and meet the
obligations set out in the UN proposals.
In conclusion, the UK Government are gravely concerned
about the humanitarian crisis in Yemen. We are taking a
leading role in the international response, which means not
only providing substantial humanitarian aid but using all
diplomatic means available to us to support efforts to
reach a political agreement and to press for a solution to
the economic crisis. As I have said before, it is
ultimately the Yemenis themselves who must reach a
compromise. The Yemeni people need and deserve peace, and
we continue to work with international partners to secure
it.
5.59 pm
-
The House has spoken with one voice today. A total of 45
Members have attended the debate over the past 90 minutes—we
could have had another 90 minutes to discuss this war. It may
be a forgotten war outside, but it is not forgotten in the
House of Commons. The voice of this House is very clear: we
want peace in Yemen; an immediate ceasefire; and the aid to
get into Yemen to avoid the predicted famine; and we need to
start tomorrow. We place that motion in the hands of the
Minister. We wish him well, and ask him to come back with
better news for us.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House notes the worsening humanitarian crisis in
Yemen; and calls upon the Government to take a lead in
passing a resolution at the UN Security Council that would
give effect to an immediate ceasefire in Yemen.
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