As the United States embarks on a heavy air assault against Islamic State and Khorasan targets in Syria, human rights groups are urging world leaders to keep both the intensifying refugee crisis, and the ongoing abuses of Middle Eastern partners high on their list of priorities.
“What we’re talking about now is a conversation that risks eclipsing what needs to be the immediate focus — protecting civilians,” said Sunjeev Bery, Middle East & North Africa advocacy director at Amnesty International USA. “One major challenge is the thousands of Kurdish refugees blocked from entering Turkey … Another concern is that some of the parties the U.S. government has allied with have problematic human rights records.”
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President Obama and several U.S. lawmakers on Tuesday hailed the fact that military strikes in Syria, which began at 8:30 p.m. Monday night (3:30 a.m. Tuesday local time) were supplemented with operational assistance from five Arab nations: Bahrain, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE.) Of the group, the UAE’s government is so far the only one to publicly confirm its role. Other nations, including Egypt, have expressed support for the strikes but were not directly involved.
Shortly before leaving the White House for the United Nations in New York Tuesday, President Obama said that “America is proud to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with these nations,” in that it signifies “this is not America’s fight alone.” Lawmakers on both sides of the aisle, including Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein and Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell, made similar statements praising the coalition.
PHOTO ESSAY: Tens of thousands of Syrian refugees flee to Turkey
But human rights advocates who closely follow abuses by some of these Middle Eastern governments argue that the U.S.’s enthusiasm for the partnership is misplaced and could potentially strengthen the conditions that allowed the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria ( ISIS,) also known as ISIL, to flourish in the first place.
“This campaign and the kind of hysteria about ISIS’s spread in general has the potential to allow oppressive governments to re-legitimize authoritarianism after whatever freedoms were won during the Arab Spring,” said Erin Evers, Iraq researcher at Human Rights Watch. “Obviously, ISIS’s abuses are horrible and should be condemned in the strongest terms. And if there’s any way to get justice and accountability, then that needs to happen. But these abuses can’t be an excuse for incredibly abusive regimes.”
In Saudi Arabia, Amnesty International has tracked a recent surge in executions reportedly on the basis of forced confessions extracted through torture. According to Human Rights Watch, Bahrain not only has a long history of torturing detainees, but also threatens legal action against people who discuss it. UAE authorities have jailed scores of prisoners of conscience for alleged links to the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt. The same is true of Qatar, where in one instance the country’s highest court last year upheld a 15-year prison sentence for a man who wrote a poem considered critical of the ruling family. Qatar also enforces one of the worst sponsorship systems in the region, now on display in the 2022 World Cup construction, which leaves migrant laborers — mainly from India, Nepal, and Pakistan — vulnerable to exploitation and abuse.
“It’s important that coalition claims not be used by some of the other governments to whitewash their own terrible human rights records,” stressed Bery.








