A new report by Human Rights Watch has accused Saudi Arabia of mass killings of migrants on the Yemeni route. According to the report, hundreds if not thousands of migrants, most of them Ethiopians escaping a war-torn country, were killed in indiscriminate firing and explosions.
The report is based on interviews of over 38 Ethiopian migrants and their family members who tried to cross into Saudi Arabia between March 2022 and June 2023. The report also said that the killings were taking place even as the report was being compiled. HRW also said they analysed hundreds of photos, videos, and satellite imagery to come to conclusions.
The report titled They Fired On Us Like Rain, tells in graphic detail about the migrants' fraught journey from Ethiopia, through Yemen, and finally at the border with Saudi Arabia.
🧵1/8 Saudi border guards have killed at least 100s of Ethiopian migrants who tried to cross the Yemen-Saudi border in the last year. @hrw interviewed dozens of victims, verified >300 videos + analysed 100s of km2 of satellite imagery. Read: https://t.co/rfRjYxYbIt pic.twitter.com/5iTG1iIyA9
— Sam Dubberley (@samdubberley) August 21, 2023
3/6 #Ethiopians traveling in smaller groups said once they crossed the border guards shot at them. In some instances, #Saudi border guards 1st asked survivors of explosive weapons attacks in which limb of their body they preferred to be shot, before shooting that limb. pic.twitter.com/95hu08d0WX
— Nadia Hardman (@Nadia_Hardman) August 21, 2023
With regards to Saudi Arabia, it has previously refuted allegations of mass killings saying that they have no evidence of it happening whatsoever. While the oil-rich nation continues to be accused of violating human rights at home and abroad, it has also sought to distract the world from the accusations by hosting a range of international events from Formula One motorsport to purchasing Newcastle United, an English Premier League Football team.