December, 16 2015, 01:00pm EDT
For Immediate Release
Contact:
Reprieve’s London office can be contacted on: communications [at] reprieve.org.uk / +44 (0) 207 553 8140. Reprieve US, based in New York City, can be contacted on Katherine [dot] oshea [at] reprieve.org / +1 917 855 8064.
Fallon Refuses to Say Whether US and UK Drone programs 'the Same'
The UK Defence Secretary today refused to answer questions from Members of Parliament on whether there were any differences between the US' long-running covert drone programme, and the UK's own targeted killing programme, announced by the Prime Minister as a "new departure" earlier this year.
For over a decade, the CIA and the US' secretive Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) have been using unmanned aircraft to carry out 'targeted killings' in countries such as Pakistan and Yemen, where the US is not at war, as part of a global 'war on terror' without boundaries.
WASHINGTON
The UK Defence Secretary today refused to answer questions from Members of Parliament on whether there were any differences between the US' long-running covert drone programme, and the UK's own targeted killing programme, announced by the Prime Minister as a "new departure" earlier this year.
For over a decade, the CIA and the US' secretive Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) have been using unmanned aircraft to carry out 'targeted killings' in countries such as Pakistan and Yemen, where the US is not at war, as part of a global 'war on terror' without boundaries.
Announcing the UK's "new departure" on drones on 7 September this year, David Cameron said that a "targeted strike" had been carried out in "a country where we are not involved in a war," and admitted that this was "the first time in modern times" that this had happened. He suggested that there would be no geographical limit to such activity, claiming that he would "be prepared to take that action...whether the threat is emanating from Libya, from Syria or anywhere else."
Today, Defence Secretary Michael Fallon was asked by the Chair of the Joint Committee on Human Rights (JCHR), Harriet Harman, "can you just say as a matter of fact comparing the two [the US and UK drone policies], where you think the differences are, or if they're the same?" Mr Fallon replied "I don't want to draw comparisons between our policy and their policy."
The US drone programme has resulted in the deaths of hundreds of civilians and has been widely criticised by senior US military figures: General Michael Flynn, former head of the US Defence Intelligence Agency, has described it as a "failed strategy," while General Stanley McChrystal has warned it creates "resentment" towards "American arrogance."
Commenting, Kat Craig, legal director at international human rights organisation Reprieve, which has investigated civilian casualties caused by the US programme and is assisting MPs seeking clarification of the new UK 'Kill Policy' said: "This appearance raised more questions about the UK's new 'Kill Policy' than it answered. It is hardly surprising Mr Fallon was so reluctant to answer this question, when the UK policy is in effect a carbon copy of the US drone programme. Both are highly secretive, legally dubious, and subject to almost zero accountability either by politicians or the courts. It is bewildering that the UK is following the US lead on a programme which even senior US military figures have described as a 'failed strategy' which has not made us safer. At the very least, Mr Fallon should come clean with the public that this is the way the UK Government is headed, so we can have a real debate."
Reprieve is a UK-based human rights organization that uses the law to enforce the human rights of prisoners, from death row to Guantanamo Bay.
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"My heart—and the heart of every transgender advocate fighting this fight—is heavy with the weight of what these laws mean for people's everyday lives."
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Prelogar asked the justices to "think about the real-world consequences of laws like S.B. 1," highlighting the case of a plaintiff identified as Ryan Roe.
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Tennessee is home to about 3,100 transgender teenagers, and about 110,000 transgender youths between the ages of 13-17 live in the 24 states where gender-affirming care is restricted.
More than 20 states have laws that could be impacted by the court's ruling in United States v. Skrmetti.
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A ruling in the case is expected in June.
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