Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
International

Canada Urged To Press Saudi Arabia On Alleged Cluster Bomb Use In Yemen

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 May, 2015 10:47 AM
    OTTAWA — Advocates against the use of cluster bombs say Canada has an obligation to publicly warn Saudi Arabia, its military partner in a bombing campaign in Syria, to refrain from using banned munitions.
     
    The issue has come to light because of a report earlier this month by the U.S. group Human Rights Watch that said a Saudi-led coalition may have used the banned weapons while bombing Shiite rebels in Yemen.
     
    Canada and Saudi Arabia, along with the United States, are among the half-dozen countries in another coalition that is currently engaged in bombing missions against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant in Syria.
     
    Steve Goose of Human Rights Watch says Canada has an international legal obligation to speak out because it ratified the United Nations treaty to ban cluster bombs.
     
    The Harper government faced widespread international criticism for undermining the cluster bomb treaty, which it took more than six years to ratify.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    U.S. Military To Ask Canada For New Missile Sensors In The Arctic

    U.S. Military To Ask Canada For New Missile Sensors In The Arctic
    WASHINGTON — The U.S. military is preparing to ask that new sensors be installed in the Canadian Arctic that would be able to track different types of incoming missiles.

    U.S. Military To Ask Canada For New Missile Sensors In The Arctic

    Indian Student's Body Stuck In New Zealand For Want Of Funds

    Indian Student's Body Stuck In New Zealand For Want Of Funds
    The body of an Indian student who died here last week after being pulled out from the sea, has got stuck in New Zealand with his family unable to raise the money needed to transport the body home.

    Indian Student's Body Stuck In New Zealand For Want Of Funds

    Once An Afterthought In Trial Planning, Guinea May Provide Ebola Vaccine Answers

    Once An Afterthought In Trial Planning, Guinea May Provide Ebola Vaccine Answers
    TORONTO — When research teams planning clinical trials of Ebola vaccines were divvying up West Africa last fall, no one wanted Guinea.

    Once An Afterthought In Trial Planning, Guinea May Provide Ebola Vaccine Answers

    'Women Love Me': 'Hot Yoga' Guru Bikram Choudhury Denies Allegations Of Sexual Assault

    'Women Love Me': 'Hot Yoga' Guru Bikram Choudhury Denies Allegations Of Sexual Assault
    Bikram Choudhury, the Indian-American founder of the signature "hot yoga" bearing his name with celebrity followers around the world, has denied accusations of rape or sexual assault by six of his former students.

    'Women Love Me': 'Hot Yoga' Guru Bikram Choudhury Denies Allegations Of Sexual Assault

    Top Physics Honour For Indian-Origin Student In Britain

    Top Physics Honour For Indian-Origin Student In Britain
    An Indian-origin teenaged student in Britain has won a top prize and 500 pounds for his research on Albert Einstein's special relativity theory.

    Top Physics Honour For Indian-Origin Student In Britain

    A Torture-denouncing CIA Agent Shares His Tales Following Two Years In Jail

    A Torture-denouncing CIA Agent Shares His Tales Following Two Years In Jail
    ARLINGTON, Va. — John Kiriakou claims to have achieved an exceedingly rare double-distinction for a federal inmate upon his incarceration: being greeting warmly by black nationalists from the Nation of Islam, and invited to dinner by white supremacists.

    A Torture-denouncing CIA Agent Shares His Tales Following Two Years In Jail