Iran's supreme leader accuses Saudis of 'genocide' in Yemen
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei escalates rhetoric over Riyadh’s
intervention in sectarian fighting between government and Shia rebels
Yemen air strike
The scene of an air
strike in al-Jiraf district in Sanaa, Yemen. Photograph: Rex Shutterstock
Saeed Kamali Dehghan
Thursday 9 April 2015 13.50 EDT Last modified on Thursday 9
April 2015 20.02 EDT
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Iran’s supreme leader has accused Saudi Arabia of committing
genocide in Yemen and said air strikes against Houthi rebels are doomed to
fail, in a sharp escalation of tensions between the two rivals over the outcome
of yet another bruising conflict in the Middle East.
In Iran’s most critical comments yet, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei
said the Saudi-led campaign against the Houthis was a mistake and warned that
the intervention will ultimately backfire on Riyadh.
Tehran’s foreign ministry also summoned the Saudi envoy over
claims that Iran was meddling in Yemen. Saudi Arabia and its Sunni Arab allies
accuse Shia Iran of militarily backing the Houthis, who call themselves Ansar
Allah (“supporters of Allah”) and belong to the Zaydi sect of Shia Islam.
The Saudis are attempting to halt an advance by the Houthis
and reinstate ousted president Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi, who fled first to the
main southern city of Aden, and then to Riyadh. Houthi fighters, who control
the capital city Sana’a, have spread out across the country and are now engaged
in heavy street fighting in Aden.
Khamenei’s stark warning came as the UN secretary general
said that air strikes and rebel advances in Yemen “have turned an internal
political crisis into a violent conflict that risks deep and long-lasting
regional repercussions”. Ban Ki-moon told reporters: “The last thing the region
and our world need is more of the chaos and crimes we have seen in Libya and
Syria.”
The US secretary of state, John Kerry, alluded to the
Saudis’ concerns, saying Washington would not stand by as Iran wreaks havoc in
the Middle East. Khamenei said the US, which is supporting the Saudi campaign,
was siding with the oppressor rather than the oppressed.
Relations between Iran and the US have improved over matters
such as the Iranian nuclear programme and the fight against Islamic State in Iraq,
but they have opposing views on other issues, such as the Syrian civil war, in
which Tehran backs Bashar al-Assad.
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There are increasing fears in the Middle East that the
fighting in Yemen might spiral out of control, with deeper Saudi involvement
provoking the Iranians to follow suit, leading to a full-scale proxy war of an
even more sectarian nature. Iran dispatched a destroyer and another warship to
waters off Yemen on Wednesday.
“By invading Yemen, Saudis are making a mistake, setting a
bad precedent in the region,” Khamenei said. “It’s a huge crime to kill
children, destroy houses and obliterate a country’s infrastructure … This is a
crime and genocide which can be prosecuted internationally.
“They will not win, they will suffer loss and damage … Their
aggression is not acceptable and I warn that they should stop their crimes in
Yemen.”
Khamenei compared Saudi Arabia to Israel, Tehran’s sworn
enemy, saying that their military campaign in Yemen was similar to Israel’s in
Gaza.
But Saudis and the US say Iran also plays a major role in
Yemen, a charge Tehran vehemently denies. Speaking on US TV, Kerry said on
Wednesday that Washington closely monitors Iranian movement in the Yemeni
conflict. The United Arab Emirates’ foreign minister Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed
al-Nahyan, has echoed Kerry’s sentiments.
“There have been – there are, obviously – flights coming
from Iran. Every single week there are flights from Iran and we’ve traced it
and know this,” Kerry told PBS television. “Iran needs to recognise that the
United States is not going to stand by while the region is destabilised or
while people engage in overt warfare across lines, international boundaries, in
other countries.”
Iran’s president, Hassan Rouhani, has also called the
military intervention in Yemen a mistake, but in milder terms.
“A great nation like Yemen will not submit to bombing. Come,
let us all think about ending war. Let us think about a ceasefire,” he said.
“Let us accept that the future of Yemen will be in the hands of the people of
Yemen, not anyone else.”
At least 643 people, including children, have died and
thousands wounded since the violence erupted in Yemen last year. On Thursday
alone, at least 20 Houthi rebels were killed in southern Yemen in eight dawn
air raids by Saudi fighter jets. According to the UN agency for children’s
rights, Unicef, about 30% of fighters in the armed groups were minors. “We are
seeing children in battle, at checkpoints and unfortunately among [those]
killed and injured,” Julien Harneis, Unicef’s representative in Yemen, said on
Thursday.
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei Facebook Twitter Pinterest
Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei: ‘This is a crime and genocide which can be prosecuted
internationally.’ Photograph: STR/AP
Saudi Arabia, which launched their air strikes last month,
is backed by Turkey, Egypt, Qatar and the UAE, who all fear Iranian control of
Yemen. Gulf Arabs often complain about Iran’s increasing influence in Iraq and
Syria, though the exact extent of Iranian support for rebel forces in Yemen is
unclear.
The Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, met Rouhani and
Khamenei in Tehran last week to discuss Yemen, among other regional issues. He
published an article on Thursday warning that the Islamic world is at the risk
of “disintegration” due to sectarian conflicts between Sunnis and Shias in the
region.
“You can have a different denomination [of Islam] but if you
seek to impose one denomination on another you will break up the ummah [Islamic
community],” he warned.
Adam Baron from the European Council on Foreign Relations
struck a cautious note on the notion that the conflict in Yemen is an
Iranian-Saudi proxy war. “Houthis are not Iranian proxies: the fact of the
matter is that Houthis are motivated and deeply rooted in Yemen and their
decision-making is largely, if not entirely, rooted in Yemeni local issues,” he
said.
“I do not see this as a proxy war. That being said, I think
what we are seeing is a regionalisation of an internal political conflict. It
was sort of started by Iran but the main catalyst for the regionalisation of
this is the Saudi military campaign.
“The reason why we are seeing such language from the supreme
leader is that his hands – or rather the Iranian government’s hands – are
pretty tied at this point. In terms of providing financial or military support
for the Houthis, it’s very hard to see how they would be able to do it. Making
these strong statements are almost their only option.”
Baron said Khamenei and Erdogan were speaking about a
potential political solution to the Yemeni crisis on Wednesday. “I’m under the
impression that that is in Tehran’s interest and Riyadh’s, as well as all
Yemeni factions and regular Yemenis.”
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