Al-Jazeerah History
Archives
Mission & Name
Conflict Terminology
Editorials
Gaza Holocaust
Gulf War
Isdood
Islam
News
News Photos
Opinion
Editorials
US Foreign Policy (Dr. El-Najjar's Articles)
www.aljazeerah.info
|
|
New Spate of Syrian Government Barrel Bomb
Attacks, Defying UN Resolution,
a
Human Rights Watch Statement
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, February
28, 2015
The Syrian government has carried out hundreds of new indiscriminate
attacks over the past year with air-delivered munitions, including
improvised weapons such as barrel bombs, Human Rights Watch said today. The
attacks have had a devastating impact on civilians, killing or injuring
thousands of people.
Human Rights Watch documented the attacks in
Aleppo governorate in northern
Syria and in Daraa governorate in the south based on witness statements,
satellite imagery analysis, and video and photographic evidence. Although
the United Nations Security Council condemned the attacks in a resolution
adopted a year ago, it has not responded directly to the new wave of
attacks.
“For a year, the Security Council has done nothing to stop
Bashar al-Assad’s murderous air bombing campaign on rebel-held areas, which
has terrorized, killed, and displaced civilians,” said
Nadim Houry, deputy Middle East and North Africa director at Human
Rights Watch. “Amid talk of a possible temporary cessation of strikes on
Aleppo, the question is whether Russia and China will finally allow the UN
Security Council to impose sanctions to stop barrel bombs.”
In an
interview with the BBC on February 10, 2015, President Assad claimed
that his forces were not using barrel bombs in spite of a wealth of evidence
to the contrary.
The Security Council will meet on February 26 for
its next round of reporting on resolution 2139 of February 22, 2014, which
demanded that all parties to the conflict in
Syria end the indiscriminate use of barrel bombs and other weapons in
populated areas. Non-state armed groups have also conducted indiscriminate
attacks, including with car bombs and explosive weapons in government held
areas. The Security Council should impose an arms embargo on the government
as well as rebel groups implicated in widespread or systematic
indiscriminate attacks, Human Rights Watch said.
By examining
satellite imagery, Human Rights Watch identified at least 450 distinct major
damage sites in 10 towns and villages held by rebel groups in Daraa and over
1,000 in Aleppo between February 22, 2014, and January 25, 2015. These
impact sites have damage signatures strongly consistent with the detonation
of large, air-dropped munitions, including improvised barrel and
conventional bombs dropped by helicopters. Damages that possibly result from
the use of rockets, missiles, or fuel-air bombs are also likely in a number
of instances.
Human Rights Watch also examined dozens of
videos uploaded to YouTube of major impact sites, as well as videos of
Syrian Mi-17 helicopters dropping both improvised barrel and conventional
bombs on populated areas of Aleppo, the city of Daraa, and the town of Dael,
in Daraa governorate. By matching video landmarks with satellite imagery and
3D models, Human Rights Watch determined the location, approximate time of
day, and date of the attacks.
Human Rights Watch in October 2014
interviewed 20 residents of Daraa governorate who witnessed or were injured
in barrel bomb attacks and six doctors providing treatment in Jordan to
those injured in the attacks on Daraa. These interviews provided new
information on the impact of such attacks on Daraa residents.
One of
the doctors treating wounded Syrians from Daraa in a hospital in Amman told
Human Rights Watch in late 2014 that women and children make up two-thirds
of the victims they receive and that most were being injured by fragments of
explosive weapons. A doctor at a second Amman hospital receiving Syrians
with war wounds said that during the same period, 50 or 60 percent of the
injured seeking treatment at the hospital were women and children and that
the injuries were predominately fragmentation wounds from explosive weapons.
The government attacks have led to the death and injury of thousands of
civilians in rebel held territory. The Violations Documentation Center
(VDC), a local monitoring group, has
documented 609 civilian deaths, including 203 children and 117 women, in
Daraa from aerial attacks between February 22, 2014, and February 19, 2015.
During the same period they have
documented 2,576 civilian deaths in Aleppo governorate from aerial
attacks, including 636 children and 317 women. While deaths from aerial
attacks are not exclusively from barrel bombs, residents from rebel held
territory in Daraa and Aleppo told Human Rights Watch that barrel bombs
account for a majority of air strikes.
In a report released on
February 22, the Syrian Network for Human Rights reported that 6,163
civilians, including 1,892 children and 1,720 women, have been killed in
government barrel bomb attacks since the passage of UN Security Council
Resolution 2139.
The Security Council should impose an arms embargo
on Syria’s government and any groups implicated in widespread or systematic
human rights abuses. Such an embargo would limit the Syrian government’s
ability to conduct aerial attacks that violate international law, including
by prohibiting providing Syria with new helicopters or providing outside
support for servicing them. The Security Council should also impose a travel
ban and an asset freeze on individuals credibly implicated in grave abuses,
and refer the situation to the International Criminal Court, Human Rights
Watch said.
Under international law, providing weapons to forces or
armed groups in Syria that are likely to be used in the commission of crimes
against humanity may amount to assisting in the commission of those crimes.
Any arms supplier could bear potential criminal liability as an accessory to
those crimes and face prosecution, Human Rights Watch said.
“One year
on, the onus is on Assad’s protectors on the Security Council to stop the
slaughter of Syrian civilians by their government,” Houry said. “Other
countries, including Western and emerging powers, should increase the
pressure on Russia and China to stop blocking international action to curb
the Syrian government’s deadly crimes.”
For more details about Human
Rights Watch’s findings, please see below.
For more Human Rights
Watch reporting on Syria, please visit:
http://www.hrw.org/middle-eastn-africa/syria
For more
information, please contact: In New York, Nadim Houry, (Arabic, French,
English): +961-3-639-244 (mobile); or
houryn@hrw.org. Follow on Twitter @nadimhoury In New York, Lama Fakih
(English, Arabic): +1-646-515-1468 (mobile); or fakihl@hrw.org.
Follow on Twitter @lamamfakih In New York, Philippe Bolopion (French,
English): +1-212-216-1276; or +1-917-734-3201 (mobile); or
bolopion@hrw.org. Follow on Twitter
@Bolopion In New York, Fred Abrahams (English, German):
+49-176-314-652-69 (mobile); or
abrahaf@hrw.org. Follow on Twitter @fredabrahams In New York, Peggy
Hicks (English): +1-212-216-1818; or +1-646-509-1818 (mobile); or
hicksp@hrw.org
Barrel Bomb
Attacks In both Aleppo and Daraa, Human Rights Watch documented repeated
barrel bomb attacks since the passage of Security Council Resolution 2139 on
February 22, 2014, striking near or on
medical facilities, and in
residential areas with schools, mosques, and markets, and without
discernible military targets in the vicinity.
Barrel bombs are unguided high explosive weapons that are cheaply made,
locally produced, and typically constructed from large oil drums, gas
cylinders, and water tanks, filled with high explosives and scrap metal to
enhance fragmentation, and then dropped from helicopters usually flying at
high altitude.
Human Rights Watch has previously documented the
destructive effect of barrel bomb attacks on civilian life in Aleppo in
March,
April, and
July 2014.
Military commanders should not order the use of
explosive weapons with wide-area effects in populated areas because they are
inherently indiscriminate, Human Rights Watch said.
The overall
distribution and intensity of major damage sites in Aleppo, the city of
Daraa, and in Dael, Nawa, Inkhil, and Jassem in Daraa governorate suggests
that government forces targeted the entirety of the populated towns with
explosive weapons over the course of months. Based on its review of
satellite imagery of the city of Daraa, Human Rights Watch has concluded
that neighborhoods in the central and southern parts of the city known to be
under rebel control suffered the most damage, including Daraa al-Balad,
Daraa Mahatta, Tariq al-Sadd, Al-Manshiyah, and Palestinian camp.
“Area bombardment” is prohibited under international humanitarian law. Such
attacks by artillery or other means treat as a single military objective a
number of clearly separated and distinct military objectives in an area
containing a concentration of civilians and civilian objects.
Failure
to Comply with the Security Council Resolution In addition to demanding
that all parties in Syria cease indiscriminate attacks in populated areas,
UN Security Council Resolution 2139 strongly condemns the arbitrary
detention and torture of civilians in Syria, as well as the kidnappings,
abductions, and forced disappearances. The resolution demands the immediate
end of these practices and the release of all arbitrarily detained people,
starting with women and children, as well as sick, wounded, and elderly
people, and including UN personnel and journalists. The resolution also
calls on the parties to cease unlawful restrictions on the delivery of
humanitarian assistance.
In light of the Syrian government’s failure
to comply with the February resolution, the council passed resolution 2165
on July 14, authorizing UN agencies and their implementing partners to
deliver aid across Syria’s borders and conflict lines. Despite expressing
“its intent to take further steps in the case of non-compliance with this
resolution,” the council has not passed any follow up resolutions on
detainees, indiscriminate attacks, or the government’s use of
unlawful sieges on areas with civilians.
Human Rights Watch has
also documented the repeated failure of various rebel groups, including
members of the Free Syrian Army (FSA) and the Islamic Front, as well as
extremist groups such as the Islamic State and Jabhat al-Nusra, to comply
with the Security Council’s demands on indiscriminate attacks, detainees,
and humanitarian assistance.
Attacks on or Near Medical Facilities
A doctor with the Aleppo City Medical Council, an independent nonprofit
organization providing medical services in the city of Aleppo, told Human
Rights Watch that government forces attacked some of their medical
facilities using barrel bombs. He said that barrel bombs hit two well-marked
hospitals in the al-Shaar and Hanano neighborhoods of Aleppo on April 13 and
21 respectively. The location of the two hospitals, whose existence predates
the conflict, would be known to the government. The doctor told Human Rights
Watch that the government forces began repeatedly striking hospitals with
aerial attacks around January 2014 and struck hospitals that contained no
military targets in Hanano, al-Sukari, al-Sakhour, and al-Shaar.
On
July 22, in the rebel held village of Jassem, Daraa governorate, “Wassim”
(all names have been changed to protect the witnesses), 24, told Human
Rights Watch that government forces dropped four barrel bombs, each on the
perimeter of the Amal hospital, one of which injured him: The Amal
hospital is about a two-minute walk from the place that I was hit. Four
barrels fell. One on the bakery, one on our street, one 25 meters away from
my uncle’s house, and the fourth 25 meters from the first. Two dropped and
then two more, in two rounds. It was 3:30 in the afternoon [and the bombs
fell in a busy market area]…. My neighbor evacuated me and took me to the
Amal hospital, which is about 300 meters away. They hit all around the
hospital. The hospital has also been hit before. The VDC has
identified eight people killed in the strike, including three children
and three women. Wassim independently gave the names of several of those the
VDC identified, including Mohamed Khaled al-Halaki, his wife, three
children, and sister. He said others were killed but he did not know their
names. Mohamed’s children were Khalid, who was in first grade, Heba, 5, and
Ghia, the youngest, who was 2 or 3 years old, he said.
Wassim said
that some FSA fighters who were getting food in the market were also injured
in the second barrel bomb attack. He said there were no checkpoints near the
strike site and that fighting at the time was two kilometers away on the
outskirts of the village. Human Rights Watch reviewed three videos published
on YouTube showing the immediate
aftermath of the attack at one of the affected locations, including the
injured and
material destruction.
Human Rights Watch identified the exact
location of the site by matching features in the videos with satellite
imagery recorded both before and after the attack. Analysis of satellite
imagery recorded on August 15 showed evidence of multiple damage sites
consistent with the detonation of large, air-dropped weapons including
barrel bombs. Impact sites were concentrated in the center of Jassem in the
vicinity of the Amal hospital, consistent with witness statements.
According to witnesses and a VDC
report, a government air strike also damaged al-Radwan Hospital in
Jassem on May 15, reportedly with targeted missiles. Human Rights Watch
reviewed a
video posted on YouTube appearing to show the same hospital, with a
commentary that said it showed the aftermath of an aerial attack on a field
hospital there on May 15, and identified evidence in satellite imagery
recorded after the attack confirming the exact location of the video and
that the hospital was damaged.
Attacks on or Near Schools and School
Buses Human Rights Watch also interviewed “Samih,” a 50-year-old
humanitarian worker from Nawa who fled the fighting there for the nearby
town of Dael. On March 26, he said he witnessed the aftermath of an attack
in Dael in which the government forces dropped four barrel bombs in
residential areas. Two barrel bombs struck schools, one hit the road leading
to Tafas, and the fourth landed near a residence in the middle of the
village, he said. The fourth barrel bomb hit a small school bus, killing or
wounding about a dozen children, including Samih’s nephew and niece, who
both lost their legs. Samih said the village was held by rebel fighters he
described as from the Free Syrian Army, but he said no fighters were based
in the village.
Samih told Human Rights Watch he was at home during
the attack but he saw the helicopter in the sky that dropped the barrels. He
said he went to the nearby field hospital shortly after the attack to assist
the injured. In all, 11 people were killed, including 7 children, and 28
people were wounded, he said: Most of the dead were children who were in
the service [small school bus] hit by the barrel.… There were 16 in the
service … Bisan Khalil al-Kankari, 10, was killed.… Three other kids from
one family … [my niece] lost both her legs below the knee … [and my nephew]
was injured in the face and lost both of his legs. Human Rights Watch met
Samih’s niece and nephew, who had injuries consistent with Samih’s
descriptions. The VDC also identified Bisan as one of the victims of the
attack and published a photo showing her
injuries.
Samih said the four adults killed were the driver of
the small school bus, two brothers, and the wife of a local doctor. A video
published on YouTube also says it shows one of the male victims of the
strikes that day and identifies him as Iyad Mohammed Mustafa al-Sherif, but
it is not clear where in Dael he was at the time.
Samih told Human
Rights Watch there was no fighting in Dael at the time of the attack. He
said that the police station is approximately two kilometers from where the
small school bus was struck and that there were no checkpoints inside the
village that could have been targets. He said the nearest military position
was one kilometer to the north.
Human Rights Watch reviewed three
videos published on YouTube reportedly showing the immediate aftermath of
barrel bomb detonations in Dael on
March 16,
June 29, and
July 7, as well as a video recorded on
March 31 showing a Mi-17 helicopter dropping a single barrel bomb. The
videos also show apparent civilians, including children, elderly men, and a
woman in the immediate vicinity of the attacks.
Human Rights Watch
identified the exact location of each of these sites by matching features in
the videos with satellite imagery recorded before and after the attack.
Analysis of satellite imagery recorded on August 15 showed evidence of over
30 major damage sites consistent with the detonation of large, air-dropped
weapons including barrel bombs.
Other Attacks in Residential Areas,
Near Mosques A 51-year-old farmer, “Talal,” from Inkhil, an area under
the control of rebel groups, said he had witnessed numerous barrel bomb
attacks. He described one case in which a barrel bomb was dropped on a
residence near the al-Omari Mosque on March 6: I was on the road from
Jassem [when the explosion happened and then] … I went to the place of the
explosion. There was shrapnel 500 meters away. In the house next to where
the barrel fell, two women were injured. I took them to the field
hospital.... No one died … the house where the two barrels fell was empty
because of the war. I heard the sound [of the barrel falling] and saw the
helicopter.… It fell close to al-Omari Mosque. Talal told Human Rights
Watch there was no fighting around the strike site at the time and that the
nearest military position was a Free Syrian Army position 500 meters to the
north.
The following month, on April 2 or 3, Talal said, he witnessed
another barrel bomb attack in Inkhil. The attack stuck a resident’s house,
killing a 22-year-old man whom Talal described as a civilian. “A big barrel
hit, the second barrel didn’t explode … I was 200 meters away. I saw the
helicopter and the barrel and then the second barrel,” he said. “We went to
the house … [and then] took him to Jassem but he died on the road.” He said
several other villagers were injured: “There were 13 injured that I saw,
five kids, two women, and three or four old men. Eleven houses were
affected.” A witness said there was no fighting in the middle of the village
where the bombs were dropped.
Human Rights Watch identified multiple
damage sites consistent with the detonation of barrel or other conventional
bombs immediately next to and in the vicinity of the al-Omari Mosque in
Inkhil with satellite imagery recorded both before and after the attack.
Analysis of satellite imagery recorded on August 15 showed evidence of
multiple damage sites consistent with the detonation of large, air-dropped
weapons concentrated in the center of Inkhil, consistent with witness
statements.
In another case, “Yousef,” from Tel Shehab, a village in
Daraa, said his wife was killed and two children maimed in a barrel bomb
attack on February 22, 2014. He said that one barrel bomb fell on his home
at the edge of the village, while he was five or six meters away, followed
by three other barrels dropped by the same helicopter: I didn’t think it
[the barrel] would fall on the house…. There was one helicopter that dropped
four barrels. I saw the barrels falling and heard the barrels. I had
difficulty breathing from the debris of the explosion. I leapt to the ground
and ate dirt. The first barrel hit the house. The whole house was destroyed.
The three other barrels fell around the house 200-300 meters away but didn’t
explode. Yousef’s wife, who was in the house with their two children, was
killed. “When I saw the plane I told them [the kids] to go inside,” he said.
Human Rights Watch met Yousif’s children and observed their injuries. His
son, 9, was injured in the attack, and doctors had to amputate both legs
below the knee. His daughter, 7, had one leg amputated above the knee.
Yousef told Human Rights Watch that his brother was also injured in the
attack, but he believed he had survived. The VDC, however, identified his
brother (name withheld) as having been killed in the attack. At least two
other children were injured in the attack, Yousef said.
Yousif said
there were no known military positions near the strike site and no fighters
in the vicinity at the time. The nearest location with FSA fighters, a
nearby village, was 2 kilometers away and the closest front line was 12
kilometers away.
***
Share this article with your facebook friends
|
|
|