U.S. strike on Yemen migrant centre may constitute humanitarian 'violation': Amnesty
Rights group Amnesty International urged the United States on Monday (May 19, 2025) to investigate possible violations of international law in a deadly strike on a migrant detention facility in rebel-held Yemen.
Last month's attack, which prompted international alarm and was part of the U.S. bombardment campaign against the Iran-backed Houthis, killed 68 people held at a centre for irregular migrants in Saada, the rebel authorities said at the time.
Agnes Callamard, Amnesty's secretary-general, said that 'the U.S. attacked a well-known detention facility where the Houthis have been detaining migrants.'
'The dead were all migrants from African countries,' the Houthis had said.
To Ms. Callamard, 'the major loss of civilian life in this attack raises serious concerns about whether the U.S. complied with its obligations under international humanitarian law.'
'The U.S. must conduct a prompt, independent and transparent investigation into this air strike,' she added.
A U.S. defence official had told AFP in the aftermath of the strike that the military launched 'battle-damage assessment and inquiry' into 'claims of civilian casualties related to the U.S. strikes in Yemen'.
Amnesty cited people who work with migrants and refugees in Yemen and visited two hospitals that treated the victims, saying that they had seen 'more than two dozen Ethiopian migrants' with severe injuries including amputations.
The morgues at both hospitals had run out of space, the witnesses told Amnesty.
In mid-March, the United States began an intense, near-daily military campaign against the Houthis after they had renewed threats to attack vessels in the vital Red Sea and Gulf of Aden shipping lanes.
The campaign ended with a U.S.-Houthi ceasefire agreement earlier this month.
The Houthis, who control large swathes of Yemen, began firing on Israel and Israeli-linked shipping in November 2023, weeks into the Gaza war triggered by an attack by the Yemeni rebels' Palestinian ally Hamas.
Amnesty said it had analysed satellite imagery and footage from the site of last month's strike on Saada, in Yemen's north.
The group said it was 'unable to conclusively identify a legitimate military target' within the targeted prison compound, citing Houthi restrictions on independent investigations.
'Any attack that fails to distinguish between civilians and civilian objects on the one hand, and legitimate military targets on the other, even within the same compound, constitutes an indiscriminate attack and a violation of international humanitarian law,' Amnesty said.
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