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Bombing of Yemen

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Dear Ministry of Defence,

What part do Britain/UK play in the Saudi bombing of Yemen? - including financing, training, supplying and all factors.
Is Yemen and ally or enemy?

Yours faithfully,

Phil Collyer

IPP-FOI-Group (MULTIUSER), Ministry of Defence

1 Attachment

 
Dear Mr Phil Collyer,
 
Please find attached our response to your recent enquiry.
 
Kind regards,
 
IPP-FOI Group
 

Dear IPP-FOI-Group (MULTIUSER),

Thank you for the late reply for which I note there was no explanation or apology.
It was stated that the UK is not at war with Yemen and as such Yemen is not considered an enemy, yet the UK personnel provide information, advice and assistance limited to this particular objective ie to mitigate the threat from the Houthi missiles against Saudi Arabia.
How many of these missile attacks have there been in 2018?
Are Saudi Arabia an ally?
Do we have any agreements with Saudi Arabia to protect them?
What is the UK National Interest in stopping the missile attacks?
Are the Saudis using any military hardware supplied by UK, if so what?
What types of inforamtion, advice and assistance are given to Saudi?
Are UK personnel involved in targetting Houthi?
Where might I find any information on what military hardware that Uk has supplied to Saudi?

23 May 2018
Volume 641
The Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs (Boris Johnson)

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The conflict in Yemen is now in its fourth year. Houthi rebels took the capital Sana’a by force in 2014 and displaced the legitimate Government of Yemen, as recognised by the UN Security Council. Coalition action is designed to facilitate the restoration of effective governance.

The Houthis have consistently failed to adhere to UN Security Council resolutions, including by launching missile attacks against Saudi Arabia and shipping in the Bab al-Mandab strait. Saudi Arabia continues to be the subject of regular missile attacks from the Houthis in Yemen. Since November 2017, Riyadh has been targeted on at least six occasions. In addition, the Houthis continue to launch frequent rocket attacks against the southern cities of Jizan, Najran and Khamis Mushayt. The Houthis have stated their intention to continue these attacks against Saudi Arabia and to launch additional attacks against neighbouring countries, seriously endangering regional security. The UK supports the legitimate right of Saudi Arabia to respond to this critical threat. The UK has a national interest in stopping Houthi missile attacks that serve only to escalate the conflict and worsen the humanitarian situation.

The United Kingdom remains committed to supporting the legitimate security needs of Saudi Arabia and guarding against the danger of regional escalation. The UK has now agreed to work with the Saudis to mitigate the threat from these missiles. This will involve UK personnel providing information, advice and assistance limited to this particular objective. To be clear, the UK is not a member of the Saudi-led coalition. We do not have any role in setting coalition policy, or in executing air strikes. All UK military personnel in Saudi Arabia remain under UK command and control.​

The UK’s partnership with Saudi Arabia also demands that we provide them with honest advice. We regularly remind the Saudi Government, and other members of the military coalition, of the importance of compliance with international humanitarian law. I did so most recently with Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on 17 May. The UK Government take their arms export responsibilities very seriously and operate one of the most robust arms export control regimes in the world. All export licence applications are assessed on a case-by-case basis against the consolidated EU and national arms export licensing criteria, taking account of all relevant factors at the time of the application. The criteria state that the Government will not grant a licence if there is a clear risk that the items might be used in a commission of a serious violation of IHL.

This war has gone on for too long. The UK continues to lead diplomatic efforts to bring an end to the conflict. We are committed to supporting the work of the UN special envoy for Yemen. We have been clear that there can be no military solution. We continue to encourage all parties to return to negotiations and engage in the UN-led political process in good faith, to work towards a political settlement.

Meanwhile, the people of Yemen continue to suffer. As well as pressing hard for a comprehensive political solution, we are addressing the humanitarian crisis. This is a key priority for the UK. On 3 April, we pledged an additional £170 million to Yemen to cover the financial year 2018-19. This makes the UK the fourth largest humanitarian donor to Yemen. UK funding will meet the immediate food needs of 2.5 million Yemenis, and comes on top of over £400 million in bilateral support since the conflict began in 2015.

Yemen is a priority for the Government. The solution remains political, not military. As the UN special envoy said to the Security Council on 17 April, there is a risk that military escalation by all sides may undermine the prospects for peace. The legitimate national security interests of Saudi Arabia and neighbouring countries must be preserved. At the same time there is a need for all sides to get behind the UN special envoy’s plans for stopping the conflict and reaching a comprehensive political settlement. This is the best way to protect the people of Yemen and address their needs. We intend that our additional support to Saudi Arabia will help to provide enough reassurance regarding their national security to enable them to focus their efforts on supporting a political solution.

[HCWS716]

Yours sincerely,

Phil Collyer

Dear Ministry of Defence,

Further to my last correspondence , I am now asking for an internal review of your first reply.

This commons written response contained in this article https://archive.is/GjL4K
appears to show that the UK is training Saudi Pilots at RAF Valley Anglesey.
If this is correct, then this should have been detailed in the reply to my FOI "What part do Britain/UK play in the Saudi bombing of Yemen? - including financing, training, supplying and all factors.
Is Yemen and ally or enemy? "
You also state that it is not an FOI, well it is and please provide the recorded information available for it.
I ask for an internal review

1599px-Hawk_Aircraft_over_RAF_Valley_MOD_45151330
Training jet over RAF Valley, Anglesey, Wales

A written answer to a parliamentary question has revealed that the UK is training Saudi pilots at RAF Valley on the North Wales island of Anglesey/Ynys Mon.

A question put to the Ministry of Defence by Plaid Cymru MP Jonathan Edwards about the security risk posed by the training brought a response from defence minister Mark Lancaster that dismissed any security risk as ‘negligible’:

Saudi Arabia has been severely criticised for the civilian devastation caused by relentless bombing raids on Yemen.

Lloyd Russell-Moyle

Labour MP Lloyd Russell-Moyle made a direct link between the UK’s training and civilian deaths today in an infuriated response to Middle East minister Alastair Burt’s claim that the UK is not a party to the military assault on Yemen:

We arm the Saudis. We maintain the air force. We have British soldiers embedded in the control centres. We command the war flight paths. We train Saudi pilots in Wales – the only thing we don’t do is press the button to drop the bomb.

Can we just not be honest? We are party to this war. We have decided to cosy up to a regime that dismembers its own civilians in consulates of NATO allies.

Devastation in Yemen

Russell-Moyle was referring to the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, who was killed in a Saudi consulate in Turkey. The Tories have come under increased pressure to cease its cooperation with the Saudi government as a consequence, but have shrugged off the deaths of large numbers of civilians in Yemen and the threat to at least eight million Yemenis through famine and disease as a result of the brutally one-sided ‘conflict’.

Yours faithfully,

Phil Collyer

CIO-FOI-IR (MULTIUSER), Ministry of Defence

Dear Mr Collyer,

 

Acknowledgement of Request for a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
Internal Review

 

We acknowledge receipt of your email below and we can confirm that an
internal review will be conducted of your request for information of 28
August, our reference FOI2018/10903.

 

The Department's target for completing internal reviews is 20 working days
from date of receipt and we therefore aim to complete the review and
respond to you by 28 November 2018. While we are working hard to achieve
this, in the interests of providing you with a realistic indication of
when you should expect a response, we should advise that the majority are
currently taking between 20 and 40 working days to complete.

 

The review will involve a full, independent reconsideration of the
handling of the case as well as the final decision.

 

Regards

MOD Information Rights Compliance Team

 

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Phil Collyer left an annotation ()

Saudi pilots trained by the RAF as more than 100 learn how to fly in the UK https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politics/s...

Dear CIO-FOI-IR (MULTIUSER),

Your review has taken over 2 months now, when will i receive an answer?

Yours sincerely,

Phil Collyer

CIO-FOI-IR (MULTIUSER), Ministry of Defence

Dear Mr Collyer,

Thank you for your email. Unfortunately our investigation is still ongoing and we are not in a position to provide you with the substantive internal review response just yet. We will aim to provide you with an update, or the review, by 8 February 2019.

However, if you are dissatisfied with the handling of your complaint, you have an absolute right at any time to contact the Information Commissioner under the provisions of Section 50 of the Act. Further details of the role and powers of the Commissioner can be found on her website at: https://ico.org.uk. Her address is: Information Commissioner’s Office, Wycliffe House, Water Lane, WILMSLOW, Cheshire, SK9 5AF.

We apologise for the delay and any inconvenience caused.

Regards,
MOD Information Rights Compliance Team

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CIO-FOI (MULTIUSER), Ministry of Defence

Dear  Mr Collyer,

 

 

 1. The Central MOD FOI team are conducting an audit of our case
management system used to record requests made under the Freedom of
Information Act. We have identified your request detailed below,
logged under our reference number: FOI2018/12823. Our records for this
request indicate that you have not received a substantive response
from the Department.

 

 2. Your request was received on 15 October 2018 and sought the following
information:

 

“UK personnel provide information, advice and assistance limited to this
particular objective ie to mitigate the threat from the Houthi missiles
against Saudi Arabia.
How many of these missile attacks have there been in 2018?
Are Saudi Arabia an ally?
Do we have any agreements with Saudi Arabia to protect them?
What is the UK National Interest in stopping the missile attacks?
Are the Saudis using any military hardware supplied by UK, if so what?
What types of inforamtion, advice and assistance are given to Saudi?
Are UK personnel involved in targetting Houthi?
Where might I find any information on what military hardware that Uk has
supplied to Saudi?”

 3. As such, in respect of your request, my team will engage with the
relevant area of the Department to establish the status of your
request, including whether any recorded information is held and if
this can be provided within cost limits and if any exemptions under
the Act are engaged.

 

 4. However, before my team commences this work, given the passage of time
from your original request I would like you to confirm that you still
require the Department to complete the consideration of the request
detailed above under the Act.

 

 5. To enable my team to progress the audit of our outstanding cases, in
the event that we do not receive a response from you within 20 days
from receipt of this letter, we will assume that you no longer wish to
pursue this request. 

 

 6. Finally, if you have any queries or concerns regarding the content of
this letter please contact this office in the first instance.

 

 

 

 

Yours sincerely

 

Mr Paul Daly

 

A/Hd Information Rights

Defence Digital

 

 

We don't know whether the most recent response to this request contains information or not – if you are Phil Collyer please sign in and let everyone know.