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Yemen

Last Updated: 23 August 2014

Cluster Munition Ban Policy

Policy

The Republic of Yemen has not acceded to the Convention on Cluster Munitions.

Yemen has not made a public statement explaining its position on joining the convention.

Yemen participated in two meetings of the Oslo Process that produced the convention (Lima in May 2007 and Belgrade in October 2007) and expressed its support for work to prohibit cluster munitions.[1]  It did not attend the negotiations of the convention in Dublin in May 2008 or the Convention on Cluster Munitions Signing Conference in Oslo in December 2008.[2]

Yemen attended in its first meeting of the convention in September 2011, when it participated as an observer in the Second Meeting of States Parties in Beirut, Lebanon. It did not attend the 2012 meeting, but participated as an observer in the Fourth Meeting of States Parties in Lusaka, Zambia in September 2013. Yemen attended the convention’s intersessional meetings in Geneva in 2013, but not those held in April 2014.

Yemen has voted in favor of UN General Assembly (UNGA) resolutions condemning the Syrian government’s use of cluster munition, including Resolution 68/182 on 18 December 2013, which expressed “outrage” at Syria’s “continued widespread and systematic gross violations of human rights…including those involving the use of…cluster munitions.”[3]

Yemen is a State Party to the Mine Ban Treaty. It is not party to the Convention on Conventional Weapons.

Production, transfer, and stockpiling

Yemen is not known to have produced or exported cluster munitions.

New evidence, detailed below, indicates that Yemen may have stockpiled cluster munitions in the past. Jane’s Information Group reported in 2004 that KMG-U dispensers that deploy submunitions are in service with the country’s air force.[4] Moldova exported 13 220mm Uragan multiple launch rocket systems to Yemen in 1994, and Yemen possesses Grad 122mm surface-to-surface rocket launchers, but it is not known if the ammunition for these weapons includes versions with submunition payloads.[5]

Use

Recently disclosed information shows that cluster munitions were used in Sada’a governorate in northern Yemen during fighting between the government of Yemen’s armed forces and Houthi rebels that intensified and spilled over the border with Saudi Arabia in November 2009, resulting in airstrikes and a ground intervention by armed forces from Saudi Arabia into Sada’a.

In July 2013, the Monitor reviewed photographs taken by clearance operators showing the remnants of unexploded BLU-97 and BLU-61 submunitions, made in the United States (US), as well as dual-purpose improved conventional munition (DPICM) submunitions of an unknown origin.[6] The BLU submunitions are dropped by aircraft, while the DPICM is launched from the ground or air by artillery or rocket. Arms experts view both means of delivery as beyond the military capabilities of the Houthi rebels.[7]

In May 2014, VICE News aired video footage shot near the city of Sada’a, the capital of Sada’a governorate, showing remnants of a US-made CBU-52 cluster bomb.[8] The Houthi administration in Sada’a provided VICE News with photographs showing remnants of Soviet-made RBK-250-275 AO-1SCh cluster bombs and associated antipersonnel fragmentation submunitions.[9]

The US-made CBU-52 and the Soviet-made RBK-250-275 AO-1SCh possess suspension lugs spaced at different lengths, which means the US cluster munitions were likely dropped by US-manufactured or compatible aircraft and the Soviet cluster munitions were likely delivered by Soviet-made or compatible aircraft. Saudi Arabia possesses attack aircraft of US and Western/NATO origin capable of dropping US-made cluster bombs, while Yemen’s Soviet supplied aircraft are capable of delivering Soviet-made RBK cluster bombs.

US use

On 17 December 2009, the US used at least five ship- or submarine-launched TLAM-D cruise missiles, each containing 166 BLU-97 submunitions, to attack a “terrorist group” training camp in al-Majalah in the al-Mahfad district of Abyan governorate in southern Yemen. The attack killed 55 people, including 41 civilians living in a Bedouin camp.[10] Neither the US nor the Yemeni government has publicly responded to the allegations.[11] The US has never exported the TLAM-D cruise missile.[12]

A 2010 report of the Yemeni parliament’s investigation into the attack called on the Yemeni government to investigate and “hold accountable those found guilty” of “mistakes that were made causing the deaths of…innocent victims” and called on the Yemeni authorities to compensate victims and remove cluster munition remnants from the site.[13]

The government of Yemen accepted the report’s findings in 2010, but does not appear to have implemented the recommendation to clear the contaminated area and provide compensation for the casualties caused and damaged property. An October 2013 report by Human Rights Watch (HRW) found the cluster munition remnants from the 2009 attack at al-Ma‘jalah were never cleared and have killed four more civilians and wounded 13 more in the period since the strike. The most recent casualty was on 24 January 2012, when a young boy brought home a bomblet that exploded, killing his father and wounding him and his two brothers.[14]

 



[1] Statement of Yemen, Lima Conference on Cluster Munitions, Session on Victim Assistance, 23 May 2008. Notes by Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom.

[2] For details on Yemen’s cluster munition policy and practice up to early 2009, see Human Rights Watch and Landmine Action, Banning Cluster Munitions: Government Policy and Practice (Ottawa: Mines Action Canada, May 2009), p. 262.

[3]Situation of human rights in the Syrian Arab Republic,” UNGA Resolution 68/182, 18 December 2013. Yemen voted in favor of a similar resolution on 15 May 2013.

[4] Robert Hewson, ed., Jane’s Air Launched Weapons, Issue 44 (Surrey, United Kingdom: Jane’s Information Group Limited, 2004), p. 848.

[5] Submission of the Republic of Moldova, UN Register of Conventional Arms, Report for Calendar Year 1994, 28 April 1995; International Institute for Strategic Studies, The Military Balance 2011 (London: Routledge, 2011), p. 335; and Colin King, ed., Jane’s Explosive Ordnance Disposal 2008, CD-edition (Surrey, UK: Jane’s Information Group Limited, 2008).

[6] Interview with Abdul Raqeeb Fare, Deputy Director, Yemen Executive Mine Action Center (YEMAC), Sanaa, 7 March 2013; interview with Ali al-Kadri, Director, YEMAC, in Geneva, 28 May 2013; and email from John Dingley, UNDP Yemen, 9 July 2013.

[7] Landmine and Cluster Munition Blog post by Mark Hiznay, “Who used cluster munitions in northern Yemen,” 15 November 2013.

[8]VICE on HBO Debriefs: Crude Awakening & Enemy of My Enemy,” aired on the Home Box Office television network, 19 May 2014.

[9] Multiple emails from Ben Anderson, Correspondent and Producer, VICE News, May 2014.

[10] Amnesty International published a series of photographs showing the remnants of the cruise missile, including the propulsion system, a BLU-97 submunition, and the payload ejection system, the latter of which is unique to the TLAM-D cruise missile. See also, “U.S. missiles killed civilians in Yemen, rights group says,” CNN, 7 June 2010.

[11] In December 2010, Wikileaks released a US Department of State cable dated 21 December 2009 that acknowledged the US had a role in the 17 December strike. The cable said that Yemeni government officials “continue to publicly maintain that the operation was conducted entirely by its forces, acknowledging U.S. support strictly in terms of intelligence sharing. Deputy Prime Minister Rashad al-Alimi told the Ambassador on December 20 that any evidence of greater U.S. involvement such as fragments of U.S. munitions found at the sites - could be explained away as equipment purchased from the U.S.” See “ROYG [Republic of Yemen Government] looks ahead following CT operations, but perhaps not far enough,” US Department of State cable SANAA 02230 dated 21 December 2009, released by Wikileaks on 4 December 2010.

[12] The TLAM-C cruise missile, which has a unitary warhead, has been bought by one country: the United Kingdom. There have been no other sales of this system by the US to foreign militaries. US Navy Fact File, “Tomahawk Cruise Missile.”

[13] Republic of Yemen, Special Parliamentarian Investigating Committee Report On Security Events In the Province of Abyan, pp. 21–22 (En.), p. 16 (Ar.). Cited in Human Rights Watch (HRW), “Between a Drone and Al-Qaeda,” 22 October 2013.

[14] HRW, “Between a Drone and Al-Qaeda,” 22 October 2013.