Human Rights Watch
report
NEW YORK (Human
Rights Watch) – New evidence has emerged that the Syrian air force has used
cluster
munitions in recent days, Human Rights Watch said today. Many of the
strikes were near the main highway that runs through Maarat al-Nouman, the site
of a major confrontation between government and rebel forces this week.
Videos posted online by
Syrian activists on October 9-12 showed cluster munition remnants reportedly in
or near the towns of Tamane’a, Taftanaz, al-Tah, and Maarat al-Nouman, in the northern
governorate of Idlib, Eastern Bouwayda and al-Salloumiyeh in Homs governorate,
Tel Rifaat in Aleppo governorate, the countryside in Latakia governorate, and
Eastern Ghouta, near Damascus.
The cluster bomb
canisters and sub-munitions shown in the videos all show damage and wear
patterns produced by being mounted on and dropped from an aircraft.
Residents from Taftanaz
and Tamane’a confirmed in interviews with Human Rights Watch that helicopters
dropped cluster munitions on or near their towns on October 9. Human Rights
Watch does not yet have any information on casualties caused by the recent
cluster munition strikes.
“Syria’s disregard for
its civilian population is all too evident in its air campaign, which now
apparently includes dropping these deadly cluster bombs into populated areas,”
said Steve Goose, arms director
at Human Rights Watch. “Cluster bombs have been comprehensively banned by most
nations, and Syria should immediately stop all use of these indiscriminate
weapons that continue to kill and maim for years.”
Human Rights Watch is
deeply concerned by the risks posed by the unexploded sub-munitions to the
civilian population, as men and even children can be seen in the videos
handling the unexploded sub-munitions in life-threatening ways.
Syrian activists have
posted at least 18 videos on YouTube showing the aftermath of the cluster
munition strikes in recent days. They are the latest in a continuous stream of
videos showing ongoing fighting, and the Human Rights Watch interviews with
residents of two of the affected towns corroborate the use of cluster
munitions.
Eliot Higgins, who
blogs on military hardware and tactics used in Syria under the pseudonym “Brown
Moses,” compiled a list of the videos
showing cluster munition remnants in Syria’s various governorates. Human Rights
Watch reached residents in Taftanaz and Tamane’a who confirmed the strikes on
their town, but has not been able to reach residents in the other towns
featured in the online videos.
Human Rights Watch has
confirmed that the remnants shown in the videos are RBK-250 series cluster bomb
canisters and AO-1SCh fragmentation bomblets. Jane’s Information Group, a
publishing company specializing in military topics, lists Syria as possessing
RBK-250/275 and RBK-500 cluster bombs. These cluster bombs and explosive sub-munitions
are Soviet-made, but there is no information available on how or when Syria
acquired them.
In July, Human Rights
Watch identified an RBK-250 series cluster bomb canister and AO-1SCh bomblets,
apparently found in Jabal Shahshabu, Hama province, from a video. Video footage
posted in August from Talbisah in Homs governorate and from Abu Kamal in Deir
Ezzor governorate also show cluster munition remnants. The August cluster
munition strike on Abu Kamal appears to have involved a different type of sub-munition,
the PTAB 2.5M, which is an anti-tank bomblet.
A resident of Taftanaz
told Human Rights Watch that Syrian forces had been attacking the town for the
past six weeks and that on October 9 a helicopter “dropped a [bomb] and as it
fell it broke into half and released smaller [bomblets]. I heard one [initial]
explosion. But after the sub-munitions were released I heard several [further]
explosions.” The strike hit a field of olive trees south of Taftanaz, two to
three kilometers from the airport. There were apparently no casualties. The
resident said he saw around 30 unexploded bomblets when he went to the site.
Another
resident of Taftanaz interviewed separately described another cluster strike
north of the town.
He told Human Rights
Watch:
On
October 9, I heard a big explosion followed by several smaller ones coming from
Shelakh field located at the north of Taftanaz. We went to see what happened.
We saw a big [bomb] cut in half and several [bomblets] that were not detonated.
I personally found one that was not exploded. There were small holes in the
ground. The holes were dispersed and spread around over 300 meters.
According to the
resident, soldiers from the rebel Free Syria Army informed him that 20
unexploded bomblets were found in Taftanaz.
A resident of Tamane’a
told Human Rights Watch that around noon on October 9, a low-flying helicopter
“released a [bomb] that split in half and released smaller [bomblets]” and “the
[bomb] split open between two schools, Intermediate and Elementary, very close
to each other. The schools are called Zaid Abil-harissa and Mustapha el-Bakri
respectively… in Ibn Batouta neighborhood.”
The resident said, “The
[bomblets] that exploded were the ones that hit the ground on the tip; we
collected the ones that didn’t explode, their tip didn’t touch the ground.”
A video
posted online on October 10 clearly shows remnants of an RBK-250 cluster bomb
and AO-1SCh bomblets at al-Tah, another location near Tamane’a.
These unexploded sub-munitions
are armed and can explode at the slightest touch or movement, yet civilians can
be seen in some of the videos carrying the sub-munitions around, banging them
on objects, and throwing them on the ground. A video
filmed at Tamane’a shows several men handling unexploded AO-1SCh bomblets, an
act that is extremely hazardous. A Tamane’a resident told Human Rights Watch
that people have been taking the bomblets and remnants as “souvenirs.” In a separate video
from August, a young child is filmed holding an unexploded sub-munition.
“The cluster munition
strikes and unexploded ordnance they leave behind pose a huge danger to
civilian populations, who often seem unaware how easily these sub-munitions
could still explode.” Goose said. “There is an urgent need for the government
to facilitate risk education and emergency clearance efforts.”
Human Rights Watch also
called on television stations widely watched inside Syria, such as al-Jazeera and al-Arabiya, to run announcements alerting the population to the
risks of handling these munitions.
Cluster munitions can
be fired by rockets, mortars, and artillery or dropped by aircraft, including
helicopters. They explode in the air, sending dozens, even hundreds, of sub-munitions
or “bomblets” over an area the size of a football field. These bomblets often
fail to explode on initial impact, leaving duds that act like landmines and
explode when handled.
A majority of the
world’s nations have comprehensively banned the use of cluster munitions
through the Convention on Cluster Munitions, which became binding international
law on August 1, 2010. Syria is not a party to the convention and did not
participate in the 2007-2008 Oslo Process that led to the creation of the
treaty, which bans cluster munitions and requires clearance of contaminated
areas and assistance to victims. A total of 77 countries are party to the
Convention on Cluster Munitions while another 34 have signed but not yet
ratified.
Human
Rights Watch is a founding member of the international Cluster Munition
Coalition, the civil society campaign behind the Convention on Cluster
Munitions.