Amnesty International said Monday a US-made bomb was used in an air strike on a hospital in Yemen, urging Washington and London to stop supplying the Saudi-led coalition with weapons.
The August 15 attack hit a hospital supported by Doctors Without Borders (MSF) at Abs in the northern province of Hajja and killed 19 people, including an MSF staffer.
The rights watchdog said a “US-made precision-guided Paveway-series aerial bomb” was used, according to independent experts who assessed photographs of a bomb fin taken at the site.
“It is outrageous that states have continued to supply the Saudi Arabia-led coalition with weapons, including guided and general purpose aerial bombs and combat aircraft,” said Amnesty’s MENA Research and Advocacy chief Philip Luther.
He said there was “stark evidence that those arms are being used to attack hospitals and other civilian objects and in other serious violations of international humanitarian law”.
“This attack highlights, yet again, the desperate need for a comprehensive embargo on all weapons that could be used by any of the warring parties in Yemen and for an international investigation to bring those responsible for unlawful attacks to justice,” Luther added.
The Saudi-led coalition said it had launched an “independent” investigation into “reports” of the air strike on the Abs hospital. MSF withdrew its staff from six hospitals in northern Yemen after the air strike.