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UN SG: US drone strikes must comply with international law
UN SG: US drone strikes must comply with international law
Endia Vereen at 10:28 AM ET
[JURIST] UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon [official profile] on Tuesday insisted that US drone strikes
[JURIST backgrounder] must operate within international law. The
secretary-general hailed the country's lead role in UN peacekeeping
operations and addressed the controversial weapons in a speech
[text] at the National University of Science and Technology in
Islamabad, stating, "[a]s I have often and consistently said, the use of
armed drones, like any other weapon, should be subject to long-standing
rules of international law, including international humanitarian law.
This is the very clear position of the United Nations. Every effort
should be made to avoid mistakes and civilian casualties."
In June Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif [BBC profile] directed the Pakistan Foreign Office [official website] to contact US Ambassador Richard Hoagland to criticize US drone strikes. Sharif communicated that Pakistan disapproves
[NPR report] of the drone strikes and considers them a violation of the
country's sovereignty and territorial integrity. Sharif stated it is
crucial to create a joint strategy to prevent US drone strikes. The use
of drone strikes by the US has come under attack recently. In May Chief
Justice Dost Muhammad Khan of the High Court of Peshawar in Pakistan
ruled that US drone strikes in the region are illegal [JURIST report]. In March Judge Merrick Garland of the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit [official website] reversed a lower court opinion [opinion, PDF] that permitted the CIA [official website] to refuse to confirm or deny
[JURIST report] whether it has records pertaining to the use of
unmanned drones to kill suspect terrorists. Also in March US Attorney
General Eric Holder wrote a letter
[JURIST report] to Senator Rand Paul suggesting that a drone strike on
US soil would be legal only in extraordinary circumstances, following a
lengthy filibuster by the senator in the confirmation of John Brennan as
CIA director.
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