Serious questions are being asked about the UK's involvement in the civil war in Yemen that has so far killed more than 3,200 civilians - 60% by airstrikes.
The UK is reported to have approved £2.8bn in military sales to Saudi Arabia since the start of the conflict last year.
The Government has also admitted to sending personnel to Saudi to provide "advice and help on the rules of war".
Human Rights Watch (HRW) says it appears to have made little difference as the Saudi-led coalition has carried out "dozens of strikes that have been disproportionate and indiscriminate".
Belkis Wille, Yemen and Kuwait researcher for HRW, told Sky News that airstrikes have continued to target civilians.
"So, really I have to ask the question - what are these trainers doing?" she said. "We demand that the UK Government answer as to what their role is in these trainings and why we haven't seen an improvement on the ground."
She added: "There's a bigger question of whether there’s actually complicity on the side of the UK Government if they've been sitting there in that war room as these strikes have been called in."
A UN panel of experts has recorded at least 119 illegal strikes by the Saudi coalition that have killed hundreds of Yemeni civilians.
Schools, hospitals, factories and medical facilities have all been destroyed. Last year, Yemen's only ceramics factory was completely demolished, killing a civilian in what human rights groups said was an unlawful strike on a non-military target.
The remnants of the four missiles that hit the factory are still there, kept locked up by the owner. Among the shrapnel are missile components clearly bearing the marking of UK manufacturer Marconi Dynamics.
Rights groups documented the strike and traced the weapon to Marconi last year. HRW's UK director David Mepham said: "The latest revelations show UK policy to be both misleading and seriously ineffective."
Sky News was given exclusive access to a weapons storage facility near the Yemeni capital Sana'a where officials from the UN-trained Yemen Mine Action Centre showed us what they said were weapons dropped by Saudi coalition planes.
Officials say dozens of different types of bombs, rockets and missiles have been collected in the past few months in Sana'a and surrounding areas, where Houthi rebels are stationed.
Although Sky News cannot verify exactly where these weapons were found or who used them, we did discover a warhead from a UK-made missile.
Arms researchers at HRW and Amnesty helped us identify the warhead as belonging to an ALARM anti-radiation missile meant to target radar emissions as part of the suppression of enemy air defences.
HRW also confirmed this specialty item is used by the Saudi Air Force.
For many Yemenis it feels like the Saudi-led coalition is punishing them, trying to destroy their economy by targeting businesses and factories.
But it is not just infrastructure that is being hit. Sadiq Rubeid, 25, lost his entire family when his father, a pro-Houthi judge, was targeted in an airstrike in the middle of the night when his family including three young children were sleeping.
Everyone except Mr Rubeid died. He lost his parents, nieces, nephew and his wife, who was seven months pregnant. Saudis claim only places hiding missiles are targeted, but Mr Rubeid denies there were any weapons in the house.
At least 800 children have been killed in the war, according to Amnesty. In Sana'a's main hospital we met 13-year-old Mohamed Ghaleb who survived a strike near his home that killed his grandparents.
Quiet and shy, Mohamed only perked up when he started talking about football and his love for Real Madrid. His legs are completely burnt and deformed and doctors say he will never walk again let alone play football.
Abdul Bari Faqih, a Yemeni driver, is another one of the 30,000 people that have been injured in this war. He was transporting gas cylinders when a missile struck his car in a residential area in the capital.
"The day the strike hit I felt it, I heard it. I heard parts of the car being blown away," he told Sky News.
"All I could see was fire all around me. I said, 'Oh God please forgive me, give me mercy from this fire'.
"I said the death prayer and asked God to accept me into heaven."
It has been a year since Saudi and nine Arab allies launched a war on Yemen and imposed a siege that has helped create a humanitarian catastrophe, driving 2.5 million people from their homes.
Both the coalition and the Houthis have been accused of committing war crimes and pressure is mounting on the US and Europe to stop arming the Saudis and their allies.
The EU parliament has already voted in favour of an arms embargo, but the vote was non-binding and most member states have not acted on it.
The Arab world's poorest country is on its knees, facing starvation and collapse as the international community continues not just to ignore but to fuel this conflict.
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