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Human Rights Watch - Press Release
December
18, 2002
U.S.
Cluster Bombs Killed Civilians in Afghanistan
New Report Illustrates Dangers
for Iraq
(Washington, D.C., December 18, 2002)
- During its air war in Afghanistan, the United States dropped
nearly a quarter-million cluster bomblets that killed
or injured scores of civilians, especially children, both during and after
strikes, Human Rights Watch said in a new report released today.
The 65-page report,
Fatally Flawed: Cluster Bombs and Their Use by the United States
in Afghanistan, says that although the United States made some
efforts to reduce the civilian harm caused by its cluster bombs
in Afghanistan, the fundamental problems of the weapon remained.
Human Rights Watch
found that the United States did not take all feasible precautions
to avoid civilian casualties, as required by international
humanitarian law, when it used cluster bombs in or near populated
areas. U.S. cluster bombs also left an estimated 12,400 explosive
duds - de facto antipersonnel landmines - that continue to
take civilian lives to this day.
Human Rights Watch
has previously documented the harm to civilians from U.S. cluster
bombs in the 1991 Gulf War and 1999 Yugoslav air campaign.
The new Human Rights Watch report found that the humanitarian
side effects of cluster bombs were less serious in Afghanistan
than in these earlier conflicts, in part due to the smaller
number of bombs used.
"As war looms
in Iraq, the United States should learn from the lessons of
its Afghanistan air war," said Bonnie Docherty, researcher
in the Arms Division of Human Rights Watch and the author of
the report. "It should not use cluster bombs at all until
the dud rate has been brought way down. At the very least,
it should never use cluster bombs near inhabited towns and
villages."
The new report
presents the findings of a month-long mission to Afghanistan.
It also compares recent use of cluster bombs to that in the
Gulf War and Kosovo.
In Afghanistan,
the United States restricted cluster bomb targets more than
in the past and employed new technology, notably the wind corrected
munitions dispenser, to improve the accuracy of these weapons.
It also used fewer cluster bombs, dropping 1,228 cluster bombs,
which contained 248,056 bomblets, in Afghanistan. Allied forces
dropped 61,000 bombs with twenty million bomblets in the Gulf
War and 1,765 bombs with 295,000 bomblets in Yugoslavia.
But the same problems
were found in Afghanistan as in other instances of cluster
bomb use: lack of accuracy in targeting during attacks, large
numbers of explosive duds remaining after attacks, and difficulties
in clearance. These problems suggest that this weapon has fundamental
flaws and should be specifically regulated under international
law.
"We are not
arguing for a ban on cluster bombs," said Docherty. "What
we want is better targeting and technology in order to reduce
the humanitarian side effects."
States parties
to the Convention on Conventional Weapons met in Geneva last
week at a United Nations-sponsored conference and agreed to
negotiate on general issues related to explosive remnants of
war, such as clearance and warnings to civilians. They refused,
however, to enter into specific negotiations on cluster bombs
or other submunitions.
In Afghanistan,
the United States ignored a critical lesson of past wars by
using cluster bombs in or near populated areas. Use in populated
areas poses dangers to civilians because of the difficulty
in accurately targeting cluster bombs and their bomblets and
the wide and imprecise area they cover.
The Human Rights
Watch report analyzes three examples of such strikes, during
which at least twenty-five civilians died and many more were
injured. At least twelve civilians died and many more were
injured when five cluster bombs landed on the village of Ishaq
Suleiman, near Herat. The United States had used older, less
accurate munitions to attack a nearby military base.
Cluster bombs continue
to endanger civilians long after being dropped. Many of the
bomblets did not explode on impact as designed but were still
volatile and ready to explode when touched. They have caused
casualties among shepherds, farmers, and other civilians and
have interfered with the country's agriculture.
As of November
2002, the International Committee of the Red Cross had identified
127 civilian casualties to cluster bomb duds—a number
it stressed was only a partial tally of the total killed and
injured since many go unreported. An astonishing 69% of the
casualties were children.
The clearance of
cluster bomblets in Afghanistan has moved relatively rapidly,
but explosive duds remain in several regions of the country.
Human Rights Watch said that the United States could have contributed
more effectively to clearance because the list of strikes it
provided the United Nations was both inaccurate and inadequate.
"Countries
that use cluster bombs bear a special responsibility to clear
bomblets," said Docherty. "Otherwise they will be
causing casualties for years to come."
The report is available
at http://hrw.org/reports/2002/us-afghanistan/
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