Were Australian weapons used in Saudi atrocities on Yemen border?

April 19, 2024
Issue 
Light Tactical Vehicle fitted with a roof top system, allowing guns and cannons to be fired remotely. Still: EOS Defense Systems

A Human Rights Watch (HRW) report, from August,聽on聽the mass killing of hundreds, even thousands, of unarmed migrants and asylum seekers by Saudi Arabia at the Yemen-Saudi border, raises questions about the potential use of Australian-supplied weaponry.

Yemen, on the southern border of Saudi Arabia, is in a nine-year civil war between the Saudis and the聽Ansar Allah (鈥淗outhi鈥) government.

Strategically, the nation sits at the entrance to the聽Bab-el-Mandeb聽Strait, which links the聽Red Sea聽to the聽Indian Ocean聽via the聽Gulf of Aden, a global shipping lane carrying an estimated US$1 trillion in goods annually.

yemen.png

Yemen sits strategically at the entrance to the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait.

罢丑别听聽is trying to impose a blockade on any country continuing to supply Israel with weapons, as part of its stand against genocide and to聽show solidarity with Palestine.

In response, the聽, with Australian government support, have escalated their retaliatory attacks.

The majority of migrants and asylum seekers using the 鈥淵emeni Route鈥 to get to Saudi Arabia are Ethiopians, fleeing serious human rights abuses, with the proportion of women and girls increasing.

It is a聽聽populated by Houthi rebels;聽聽trafficking girls, drugs and human聽; and people smugglers.

It鈥檚 also an arms traders鈥 paradise, with the multi-trillion dollar聽the biggest gunrunners of all.

Australian arms exports聽to Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates form part of this mix.

Freedom of Information聽figures obtained by聽91自拍论坛聽show that in the eight and a half years from July 1, 2015, to January 29 this year, the Department of Defence approved 131 export permits to Saudi Arabia and 257 to the UAE 鈥 388 in total.

No export applications for the UAE were denied in that period, while five were denied to Saudi Arabia (two in 2019鈥20 and three in 2020鈥21).

In Australia, almost all details of weapons exports are kept hidden by the federal government, which is regularly accused by聽Greens Senator David Shoebridge聽and independent media of聽聽on defence accountability and end-use compliance.

The ethics of supplying Australian arms to Saudi Arabia is again in the spotlight after HRW uncovered evidence that migrants and asylum-seekers had been killed at the Yemen-Saudi border 鈥 allegedly by Saudi officers.

Human Rights Watch demands investigation

贬搁奥听聽last August that Saudi border guards had killed聽鈥渁t least hundreds鈥澛爋f Ethiopian migrants and asylum seekers trying to cross the Yemen-Saudi border in the 15 months between March 2022 and June 2023.

罢丑别听听迟颈迟濒别诲 鈥淭hey Fired On Us Like Rain鈥 Saudi Arabian Mass Killings of Ethiopian Migrants at the Yemen-Saudi Border聽describes sickening torture, murder and armed violence against unarmed civilians using a variety of weapons.

鈥淪audi officials are killing hundreds of women and children out of view of the rest of the world while they spend billions on sports-washing to try to improve their image.鈥

It adds:聽鈥淚f committed as part of a Saudi government policy to murder migrants, these killings, which appear to continue, would be a crime against humanity.鈥

The report notes a concerning escalation in migrant and asylum seeker killings: 鈥淲hile Human Rights Watch has documented killings 鈥 at the border with Yemen and Saudi Arabia聽, [these] killings appear to be a deliberate escalation in both the number and manner of targeted killings.鈥

HRW said 鈥渃oncerned countries should press for accountability and the UN should investigate鈥. Australia has good reason for concern.

Australian involvement?

The detailed report contains satellite images of a Saudi border guard post with what HRW says may be a Mine-Resistant Ambush Protected vehicle parked nearby.

The vehicle was seen in the imagery from October 10, 2021, to December 31, 2022. The report notes the vehicle 鈥渁ppeared to have a heavy machine gun mounted in a turret on its roof鈥.

Survivors interviewed by HRW described 28 separate incidents in which groups of migrants were attacked by mortar projectiles and other explosive weapons. One survivor that some people could not be identified聽鈥渂ecause their bodies are thrown everywhere鈥, while other people 鈥渨ere torn in聽half鈥.

Australian weapons manufacturer聽Electro Optic Systems (EOS) was聽聽in early 2019 by Saudi Arabia to supply it with 500 remote weapons systems.

It was a significant contract.

The Saudi Kingdom, known for its human rights abuses 鈥 including the October 2018 murder and dismemberment of dissident journalist Jamal Khashoggi 鈥 ordered twice as many EOS high-tech systems as the Australian Defence Force.

The EOS remote weapons system enables a roof-mounted heavy machine gun, grenade or missile launcher, small cannon or combination of these to be operated from inside the vehicle by the user. The company says its remote weapons systems significantly increase precision and lethality鈥. (See the weapon in action聽.)

EOS 聽its weapons systems to Saudi Arabia in mid-2019. According to聽, then CEO聽of EOS, the equipment was being supplied for US programs to support the Saudi Ministry of Interior for its border operations.

The timing of the EOS exports coincided with the Saudi Ministry of Interior's 2019 deployment of a new security force, the聽, to support Saudi border guards.

, an associate research fellow at the Italian Institute for International Political Studies and an expert on Yemen, the Gulf monarchies and Arab military forces, wrote about the creation of the al-Afwaj Regiment.

In a聽聽she describes the militarisation of the Saudi-Yemeni borderland: 鈥淭his regiment is tasked with preventing smuggling, trafficking and infiltrators. Two years prior, a Green Berets team of the US Special Forces arrived in Saudi Arabia to train Saudi ground troops responsible for securing the border. Meanwhile, US intelligence analysts are cooperating with the Saudis in Najran to locate Houthis鈥 missile sites in Yemen.鈥

The delivery of the EOS weapons systems into this location at this time raises serious questions about whether any of this equipment may have been used in the atrocities HRW has documented.

The Department of Defence did not respond to questions from聽91自拍论坛. Dr Andreas Schwer, chief executive of EOS, also failed to respond.

A spokesperson from the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade did say: 鈥湴粘蟊鹛鼳ustralian Government is concerned by the reports of violence against Ethiopian migrants crossing the Saudi-Yemen border in a HRW report released in August 2023.

鈥淎ustralian officials raised this report directly with the Saudi Government and with the Saudi Human Rights Commission, emphasising Australia鈥檚 commitment to international humanitarian law.鈥

In calling for a UN investigation into the Yemen-Saudi borderland atrocities, the HRW report concluded:聽鈥淚f there is no justice for what appear to be serious crimes against Ethiopian migrants and asylum seekers, it will only fuel further killings and abuses.鈥

As concerns grow about Australian weapons聽exports, it would be appropriate for an urgent and transparent investigation, with the results reported to parliament.

[Suzanne James has a background in writing policy, governance, risk management and regulatory compliance frameworks. is an , specialising in the connections between the weapons industry and government.]

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