We know what the regime is like. Starving a country, bombing its hospitals and strafing its schools has been minor fare
for the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. The population of Yemen has found this out to their colossal cost. Add to this the
killing of dissident journalists, the enthusiastic employment of capital punishment, and an assortment of other merry
brutalities, the House of Saud comes across as a fine specimen of barbaric endeavour. At least, as many of their
supporters will say, they like international sporting events, and are willing to throw money at, if not completely
purchase, full events.
The killing of hundreds of Ethiopian migrants and asylum seekers attempting to cross the Yemen-Saudi border between
March 2022 and June 2023 on what is sometimes termed the “Eastern Route” or “Yemeni Route”, adds another notch to the
belt of bloodstained achievements for Riyadh. According to Human Rights Watch (HRW), “Saudi 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.”
This is all the more galling for the fact that such human travellers must already encounter the dangers of the sea route
from the Horn of Africa to Yemen, where they transit through to Saudi Arabia.
HRW’s “They Fired Upon Us Like Rain”: Saudi Arabian Mass Killings of Ethiopian Migrants at the Yemen-Saudi Border, is a self-explanatory document of brutal recounting by the human rights organisation, based on the interviews of 42
Ethiopian and asylum seekers. In addition to the interviews, HRW also based its report on findings drawn from an
examination of 350 videos and photographs which were posted on social media platforms.
The examination had been conducted by members of the Independent Forensic Expert Group (IFEG) of the International
Rehabilitation Council for Torture Victims. In terms of injuries, IFEG members reached the conclusion that some
exhibited “clear patterns consistent with the explosion of munitions with capacity to produce heat and fragmentation”;
others had “characteristics consistent with gunshot wounds”.
The 2023 report by the organisation notes some staggering instances of violence against those seeking refuge. “People
travelling in groups, from four to five people to up to several hundred describe being attacked by mortar projectiles
and other explosive weapons by Saudi border guards once they had crossed the border from Yemen into Saudi Arabia.”
The allegations are biting in their cruelty, and bring to mind the fact that killings of this sort have happened before
along this notorious route. Saudi border guards, it would seem, went so far as to deploy an array of weapons against
such migrants, showing a keen interest targeting Ethiopians. Some 750,000 live and work in the kingdom. Movement through
the borders is based on the less than scrupulous calculations and account keeping of smugglers.
Those interviewed in the camp of Saada, base for tens of thousands awaiting their chance to enter Saudi Arabia, note how Saudi border guards tended to patrol the border equipped with “large vehicles” that could have been rocket launchers.
“Many migrants,” the report also notes, “said they saw cameras tracking their movements mounted on what looked like
‘street lamps’ on the Saudi side of the border.”
Some of the brutalities are calculatingly perverse. According to HRW, some Saudi border guards dared to discriminate,
bothering to first ask “survivors in which limb of their body they preferred to be shot, before shooting them at close
range.” Such viciousness sounds boardroom, spreadsheet and planned, which is exactly the sort of matter that should
leave a trail right to the Kingdom’s central authorities. But it could also be burgeoning sadism at work, an instant
where the powerful can determine what bit of maiming might excite them.
For Ethiopians moving through the precarious route, the circumstances of misery have been frequent. While Riyadh engages
in its own complement of viciousness, the Yemeni guards have also had a hand in raping and torturing asylum seekers from the Horn of Africa. Houthi forces have not been averse to targeting
immigration centres in Sana’a.
The spectacle recounted by HRW is grotesque. But so are acts involving the turning back of refugee-laden boats or
repulsing migrant vessels in the Mediterranean, and conspiring to frustrate the international right to asylum which has
been in print since 1951. Little wonder that little mention was made of the killings when they were made aware to envoys from France, Germany, The Netherlands, Sweden and the European Union, not to mention the Biden
administration. (The US State Department insists that it “quickly engaged senior Saudi officials to express our concern” on receiving news on the gruesome details.)
In August 2001, the Australian government, a most eminent practitioner in the field of subverting international refugee
law, did not deploy rocket launchers against those seeking asylum off Christmas Island on the Norwegian vessel, the MV Tampa. But they did deploy fully armed members of the Special Air Services regiment, an elite force that would go on to, some
years later, inflict atrocities upon Afghans in an unwinnable war.
This HRW Report adds another bloodied entry to the chronicles of the Kingdom’s brutality. The organisation claims that
the killings continue. The sanguinary story is a telling one for those who continue to conduct relations with Riyadh
without murmur or concern, delighted by the riches of its Sovereign Wealth Fund. Its officials know all too well that
cash and the expediency of security softens a prickly conscience.
Dr. Binoy Kampmark was a Commonwealth Scholar at Selwyn College, Cambridge. He currently lectures at RMIT University.
Email: bkampmark@gmail.com