{"id":1162,"date":"2013-03-14T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2013-03-14T00:00:00","guid":{"rendered":""},"modified":"-0001-11-30T00:00:00","modified_gmt":"-0001-11-30T00:00:00","slug":"","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/dchrs.org\/?p=1162","title":{"rendered":"Government bombs rain on civilians"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>14 March 2013<br \/>\n  <strong>introduction <\/strong><br \/>\n  Civilians continue to be at the receiving end of  increasingly frequent indiscriminate attacks by Syrian government forces.  Imprecise weapons designed for the battlefield are killing, maiming and  displacing growing numbers of civilians \u2013 many of them children. Unguided  air-delivered bombs, artillery, rockets, and ballistic missiles which cannot be  aimed at specific targets and do not distinguish between military targets and  civilian objects, and internationally banned cluster munitions are being used  daily against civilian residential areas in towns and villages, in utter  disregard for the most fundamental principles of international humanitarian  law. <\/p>\n<p>Government forces also continue to commit other grave  violations, including war crimes, notably they frequently arbitrarily detain,  torture, disappear and extrajudicially execute men and boys suspected of  support for armed opposition groups fighting the state or of support for  political opposition to the government of President Bashar al-Assad.<\/p>\n<p>In a recent two-week investigation in northern Syria Amnesty  International visited 17 towns and villages in the Idlib, Jabal al-Zawiya and  Jisr al-Shughour areas and Aleppo city, and carried out field investigations  into indiscriminate attacks which killed more than 310 civilians (including  more than 157 children and 52 women) and injured hundreds of others. The  organization&rsquo;s findings show that the frequency and scale of such attacks \u2013  which constitute war crimes &#8211; has increased in recent months, with disastrous  consequences for the civilian population. <\/p>\n<p>In all of these cases the attacks were either direct attacks  on civilians or indiscriminate; all available information indicates that there  were no obvious military targets or military operations or confrontations at or  near the sites of the attacks at the time of the attacks. The attacks were  indiscriminate as the nature of the weapons and munitions used means that they  cannot be aimed at specific targets. Even giving government forces the benefit  of the doubt, and assuming that they believed that there were actually military  targets in the areas attacked, the routine and repeated use of inappropriate  battlefield weapons in residential areas or inherently indiscriminate weapons  has meant that civilians were unlawfully killed and injured and civilian  objects needlessly destroyed or damaged. These and other attacks investigated  in previous months show a pattern of government forces targeting towns and  villages which are under the control of armed opposition groups, invariably killing  and injuring civilians. And in many such cases government forces carried out  direct attacks on civilians and civilian objects \u2013 one of the gravest  violations of international humanitarian law. <\/p>\n<p>The number of civilians displaced by the conflict has skyrocketed  in recent months, with several thousands of Syrians and others fleeing to other  countries every day and many more moving from place to place within Syria in  search of safe shelter. With Turkey having imposed strict restrictions on the  entry of Syrian refugees in recent months, tens of thousands have been left  stranded in dire humanitarian and health conditions in makeshift camps on the  Syrian side of the border with Turkey. <\/p>\n<p><strong>FROM SHOOTING PEACEFUL DEMONSTRATORS TO AIR BOMBARDMENTS  AND BALLISTIC MISSILES STRIKES AGAINST CIVILIANS <\/strong><br \/>\n  Syrian government forces have been targeting civilians from  the outset of the protest movement which began two years ago. Indeed, such  attacks were at the core of government policy in dealing with the initially  peaceful protests. At first security forces and state-armed pro-government <em>shabiha<\/em> militias randomly fired live rounds into crowds of peaceful protesters, killing  and injuring both demonstrators and bystanders alike.<br \/>\n  Protestors and their supporters were hunted down, with many  killed and others arrested, disappearing into the black holes of Syrian  state-run prisons and detention centres where torture and other ill-treatment  is rife. Hundreds have never emerged alive.<br \/>\n  As the weeks and months passed, armed opposition groups  formed to counter government repression, and the situation gradually evolved  into an internal armed conflict which has spread across much of Syria. However,  peaceful protesters and armed insurgents have not been the only, or even the  main, targets. Rather, the authorities embarked from early on in the crisis on  a policy of brutal attacks which amount to collective punishment and which  appear aimed at terrorizing into submission peaceful protestors as well as  members of armed opposition groups and those around them \u2013 including those  whose connections to the uprising and subsequent conflict are purely  circumstantial, such as residents of areas which have come to be under the  control of opposition forces. <br \/>\n  As the conflict spread, Syrian armed forces and pro-government  militias carried out destructive incursions in town and villages, where they  extrajudicially executed captured opposition fighters, their relatives and  other civilian residents, and burned and vandalized residents&rsquo; homes and  businesses. <br \/>\n  Mainly since 2012, government forces have increasingly  resorted to shelling civilian residential areas which had come under the  control of opposition forces with tank rounds, mortars and artillery. As armed  opposition groups gained control of more territory and drove government forces  out of a growing number of towns and villages, around August 2012 government  forces began resorting to air bombardments. Air strikes have since increased,  and continued to be systematically directed against towns and villages under  the control of armed opposition groups. Air attacks have seldom targeted  opposition forces&rsquo; positions in these areas, and have often struck residential  neighborhoods, killing and maiming civilians not involved in the conflict. The  increased frequency of such attacks since the last quarter of 2012 has resulted  in a dramatic increase in civilian deaths and injuries, and in the displacement  of hundreds of thousands of people. <br \/>\n  The choice of munitions and the means of delivery used to  bomb towns and village has been a key factor in the indiscriminate nature of  such attacks. The bombs used \u2013 both the Soviet-made general purpose bombs, and  the seemingly locally made &ldquo;barrel bombs&rdquo; (large barrels filled with explosive  and metal fragments to increase lethality), and, especially since October 2012,  internationally banned cluster bombs \u2013 are unguided \u2013 that is they cannot be  accurately aimed at specific targets. It is thus no surprise that civilians  have borne the brunt of such attacks. Since December 2012, in addition to  air-delivered cluster bombs, government forces have also been using notoriously  inaccurate medium-range ground-launched &ldquo;Sakr&rdquo; rockets containing cluster  sub-munitions (as described below). <br \/>\n  The latest and most lethal weapons deployed so far are surface-to-surface  ballistic missiles which were used in February 2013 in attacks against  residential districts in Aleppo city with disastrous consequences \u2013 both in  terms of the large numbers of fatalities and casualties and unprecedented scale  of destruction they caused. <br \/>\n  Attacks with such missiles were first reported in December  2012, but mostly landed outside population centres. Amnesty International has not been able to  conclusively identify the type of missiles used in these or other attacks, but  all available information indicates that ballistic missiles were used. All the  survivors and other residents interviewed by Amnesty International said that  they had not seen or heard any aircraft prior to the strikes; the scale of the  destruction from the three attacks documented is far greater than that caused  by any air strikes previously seen in Syria. Syrian activists based in the city  of Yabroud (about 80 km north of Damascus) reported seeing ballistic missiles  being launched from the area shortly before twin strikes in the Aleppo  districts of Tariq al-Bab and Ard al-Hamra at about 6pm on 22 February. Despite the Syrian  authorities&rsquo; denial that they have used ballistic missiles, the use of such  weapons has been documented. <br \/>\n  <strong>Ballistic missile strikes destroying entire families and  neighborhoods in seconds <\/strong><br \/>\n  More than 160 residents of three districts of eastern Aleppo  were killed and hundreds injured, and scores of homes were destroyed in three  ballistic missiles attacks on 18 and 22 February 2013. Though not the first  such attacks, these were by far the most deadly and destructive. <br \/>\n  Sabah Mairi, a 31-year-old mother of five who survived the  carnage of the double strike which killed at least 117 residents of the  adjoining Ard al-Hamra and Tariq al-Bab districts in the early evening of 22  February 2013, told Amnesty International about her loss: &ldquo;<em>We were at home,  my family and mother and sisters. I did not hear any noise from a plane.  Suddenly I lost the ground from under my feet. My children were killed, my daughters,  Isra&rsquo;, Amani and Aya, aged 4, 6 and 11, my husband, my mother, my 14-year-old  sister Nour, and my other sister&rsquo;s children, Ahmad, Abdallah and Mohammad, aged  18 months, and 3 and 4 years. They were all killed, what is left for me in this  life<\/em>? <em>Only my boy survived; now he is all I have. May God help us!<\/em>&rdquo; <br \/>\n  Another resident told Amnesty International that he lost his  brother Hussein Khalaf, his brother&rsquo;s wife Fatima, and their five children \u2013  twins Nour and Reem, 5; Asma&rsquo;, 3; Iman, 10; and Mahmud, 13 \u2013 and Fatima&rsquo;s  brother, who had just got married: &ldquo;<em>What can I say? I have no words to  describe what happened; it was a massacre. Whole families were massacred, in  their homes. How can this be allowed to happen?<\/em>&rdquo; <br \/>\n  Almost a month later the bodies of several of those killed  in the strikes have not yet been found. Among those missing were several  members of the al-Hussein (Tarzan) family. A member of the family told Amnesty  International: &ldquo;<em>My cousin Zeinab al-&lsquo;Alu, 30, the wife of Jasem al-Hussein  (Tarzan) and her five children were all killed and her sister-in-law Reem,  Mohamed al-Hussein (Tarzan)&rsquo;s wife, and her four children were also killed. She  was 33 and was pregnant. The oldest of the nine children was Zeinab&rsquo;s daughter,  Nisrin, who was 11, and the youngest was Reem&rsquo;s son, Lu&rsquo;ay, not even one year  old. The bodies of some of the children have not been found yet. Their home was  exactly in the place where the missile struck and was pulverized. The body of a  child was found in another street nearby, thrown from the force of the  explosion; I am not sure if it was confirmed that it was Ibrahim, aged seven,  Zeinab&rsquo;s oldest son. Some of the bodies could not be identified, they were in  shreds.<\/em>&rdquo; <br \/>\n  On 2 March 2013, in one of Amnesty International&rsquo;s visits to  the area, relatives of some of those who perished in the attack were still  searching for the missing ones, digging in the enormous mountains of rubble  with nothing more than shovels; they had just recovered the arm of a child. One  of them told Amnesty International: &ldquo;The world has forgotten us. Our children  get slaughtered every day and the world does nothing. Here we have lost our  families and homes and everything and have received no help at all.&rdquo; <br \/>\n  Hammoudeh al-Hussein, 40, who lost his wife and five of  their seven children (four daughters and a son) in the attack and who was  himself injured, told Amnesty International: &ldquo;<em>I heard my daughter Amani call  her little brother and then I don&rsquo;t remember anything. I don&rsquo;t know how long I  lay under the rubble before I was pulled out. The bodies of my wife and my  daughter Amani were not found until six days later. I lost my wife and five of  my children. God left me two of my children and I don&rsquo;t know how we can rebuild  our lives. I have nothing to give to my children.<\/em>&rdquo; <br \/>\n  Nearby, in the Tariq al-Bab area, where some 14 people were  killed in a similar attack only minutes before the Ard al-Hamra strike, a  resident pointed to a place in the rubble where she said that a family of seven  were killed. <br \/>\n  Another resident, Ayham al-Hammoud told Amnesty  International: &ldquo;<em>My baby daughter, Ghazal, who was eight months old, was  killed and my four-year-old son and my mother were injured. My brother lost his  wife, Siham. She left behind six children, the youngest one is a baby, still  breastfeeding. My cousin Ibrahim, aged 10, was also killed<\/em>.&rdquo; <br \/>\n  In the Jabal Badro district of Aleppo, where the first of  the three attacks occurred, in the evening of 18 February 2013, Hussein  al-Saghir, a 15-year-old boy showed Amnesty International a point in the mountain  of rubble, where their home used to be: &ldquo;<em>Five of my brothers were killed,  Hassan, 12; Abd al-Qader, 15; the twins Mahmoud and Rabi&rsquo;a, 19; Abbas, 20 and  his wife (their children were saved); Ahmad, 25, and his wife Hamida and their  3 small children. The youngest child, Mohammad Ali was only 3 days old and his  sisters, Warda, 18 months and Fathiya, 3 years. My brother Mahmoud was pulled  from under the rubble and he survived but his wife, Amina, 20 and their two  small children, Qasem, 12 months and Warda, two years, were killed. My mother  was badly injured and is now in hospital in Turkey. She does not know that her  sons are dead. All my extended family lived here, we had 10 houses. My uncle,  Mohamed Ali, lost 27 members of his family. He has lost his mind; he doesn&rsquo;t  know anything anymore. He is in the countryside; everyone who survived has gone  to stay with relatives or friends somewhere. Here there is only rubble left<\/em>&rdquo;. <br \/>\n  It is difficult to determine the exact extent of the  material loss caused by these three strikes as the task of cataloguing the  material damage has not yet been carried out, as survivors of the attacks are  for now focused on trying to find missing relatives, caring for the wounded and  the orphans, and simply trying to survive after having lost everything. There  is however no doubt about the massive scale of the destruction, with scores of  homes having been completely destroyed and\/or damaged beyond repair. Some  houses, those closer to the point of impact of the strike, have been completely  destroyed \u2013 walls and content reduced to fine dust \u2013 making it difficult to  know where the houses stood before. Other houses, much further away (100 metres  or more) from the strike location, also incurred serious structural damage,  some beyond repair and many residents who survived the strike are now living in  badly damaged and unsafe homes.<br \/>\n  <strong>Frequent use of internationally banned cluster bombs in  residential neighbourhoods <\/strong><br \/>\n  &ldquo;<em>Inas, two years; Heba, 8; Rama, 5; Nizar, 6; Taha, 11  months; Mohamed, 18 months. They were all killed; why? Why bomb children<\/em>?&rdquo;  As he spoke to Amnesty International, these children&rsquo;s relative was still  trying to find out about the fate of other members of his family, including  four children, who had been injured and rushed off, some of them to hospitals  across the border in Turkey. <br \/>\n  A dozen other civilians were killed and scores more injured  in this multiple cluster bomb attack on a densely populated housing estate in  the Masaken Hanano district of Aleppo on 1 March 2013 at about 11.30 am. Among  those killed were Mahmud al-&lsquo;Asal and his 16-year-old son Iyad; 10-year-old  Noura Ibrahim; and 60-year-old Adnan Kamil. Medical workers at one of the field  hospitals said that three of the bodies they had received were in shreds and  had not yet been identified. <br \/>\n  When an Amnesty International delegate visited the site, two  hours after the attack, she found nine Russian-made RBK bombs \u2013 one only metres  from the front door of one of the buildings; three in a small garden between  the buildings; one on the roof of a building; two in a small empty space  between buildings; one in the middle of an alley; and one in another garden.  Scores of unexploded PTAB-2.5M sub-munitions (bomblets) contained in the  cluster bombs were littering the pavements, alleys and gardens between the  buildings and the rooftops. Some of the lethal bomblets had penetrated through  the walls of the buildings, exploding inside people&rsquo;s homes, and in several  places the buildings&rsquo; walls were peppered with shrapnel holes. <br \/>\n  On the pavements and in the alleys between the buildings  there were pools of blood and pieces of human flesh of the residents who were  killed and injured in the attack. Some residents were fleeing the area,  terrified of further strikes. <br \/>\n  A 10-year-old girl showed Amnesty International the spot  where her three-year-old brother, Ibrahim, was standing, just outside the  family&rsquo;s ground floor apartment, when he was struck on the head by shrapnel  from one of the scores of cluster sub-munitions (bomblets) which exploded all  over the housing estate. <br \/>\n  In an apartment in one of the buildings 18-year-old Mahmoud,  lay on the floor with shrapnel lacerations to his face, legs and arms. Blood  was seeping through the bandages Shaking and visibly in shock, he said: &ldquo;<em>I  was sitting outside my home with my friends; the little ones were playing  around us. There were explosions; the children were screaming and then I don&rsquo;t  remember anything<\/em>.&rdquo; Relatives said the youth was found in pool of blood. He  was taken to a field hospital, where he was given basic treatment and released.  Field hospitals have few human or material resources, and have to release  patients as quickly as possible because they fear attacks \u2013 hospitals have been  bombed in the past year. <br \/>\n  Amnesty International recorded the names of 60 people, more  than half of them children, who were being treated in field hospitals in Aleppo  city. They included seven-year-old Abdo al-Dik, who suffered deep lacerations  to his abdomen and legs. His three-year-old brother Nizar was killed in the  attack and another brother, aged six, was still missing several hours after the  strike. Six-year-old Mustafa Ali, who had sustained shrapnel injuries to the  head, neck and shoulders, did not know what had happened to the relatives he  was visiting when the bombs struck. Noura, a 20-year-old woman, sustained  multiple fractures to her left leg when a cluster sub-munitions exploded inside  her ground-floor apartment. <br \/>\n  Six days later, on the morning of 7 March a double cluster  bomb strike on a southern district of Sarmin, a small town in the Idlib  governorate, killed a 10-year-old girl, Amani al-Sheikh Ahmad, and a  25-year-old mother of two, Rania Kashtu, and injured more than 10 civilians,  including several children. Residents told Amnesty International that the double  air strikes happened at about 10 am. <br \/>\n  A resident told Amnesty International: &ldquo;<em>There were so  many injured, they had horrible cuts and pieces of flesh missing. Little  children were screaming in so much pain; it was heartbreaking, and the medics  in the field hospital didn&rsquo;t know who to attend to first.<\/em>&rdquo; Footage of the  aftermath of the bombing shows a number of unexploded AO-1 SCH fragmentation  bomblets, the other  type of cluster sub-munitions contained in the RBK bombs which are frequently  dropped by Syrian aircraft. <br \/>\n  In al-Najiya, a small village near the town of Jisr  al-Shughour, several residents were killed and injured by cluster bombs in  recent months. A 13-year-old girl, Nour Mustafa al-Keis, was killed and her  three sisters, baby brother and mother were injured when cluster bombs rained  on the village on 15 January 2013. Nour&rsquo;s mother told Amnesty International: &ldquo;<em>I  was coming back home with the children, we had been visiting our relatives here  in the village, just a few streets away. It was about 1.30 pm. We were in the  centre of the village when we heard a plane circling above, then it bombed but  not immediately above us, but the bombs came to us, in the little street  between the houses. Everything was full of smoke, I could not see anything, I  could not see my children. When I found Nour she was lying face down in a pool  of blood<\/em>&rdquo;. Nour&rsquo;s mother and siblings are still suffering from multiple  shrapnel injuries to their faces and bodies, and some 10 other villagers were  also injured in the attack, some seriously. <br \/>\n  In the same village, an elderly widow, Fatima Bakkour, was  killed in her bed when a cluster bomblet went through the roof and exploded  into her home in the afternoon of 9 February 2013. One of the volunteers who  tried to rescue the woman told Amnesty International: &ldquo;<em>One of the bombs went  through the roof and into Fatima&rsquo;s home right above her bed. We tried to save  her but the bomb had caused a huge wound by her waist and abdomen and she died  almost immediately, as we were evacuating her from her home.<\/em>&rdquo; <br \/>\n  In Salqeen, a town in the west of the Idlib governorate, 18  people were killed and dozens more injured, most of them children, on 18  January 2013 in a cluster bomb attack in the centre of the town. Among the  victims were two 10-year-old schoolchildren, Rawan Yaser Darukh and Abd  al-Rahman Aasous. Rawan was killed and her siblings and cousins were injured  when a cluster bomblet exploded as they were playing outside the family&rsquo;s  grocery store. Abd al-Rahman&rsquo;s parents told Amnesty International that the boy  had been playing in the street downstairs from their apartment when the  explosions happened: &ldquo;<em>Neighbours rescued him and brought him upstairs but he  was already dead; he had gushing wounds to the head<\/em>&rdquo;. The strikes took  place just after Friday prayer, with cluster bomblets exploding all along a  main street lined with shops. Amnesty International counted more than 20  locations where cluster bomblets exploded and interviewed a dozen of people  injured in the attack, most of them children. A fruit seller who was also  injured in the strike told Amnesty International: &ldquo;<em>My neighbour Saad Rashid  Aktaa and I were coming back from Friday prayers and we had almost arrived at  my fruit stall when the explosion happened. Sa&rsquo;ad was killed. He left behind  five children who are now orphans. I was injured by shrapnel in the legs<\/em>&rdquo;. <br \/>\n  The first recorded use of cluster bombs by Syrian government  forces was in the Jabal Chahchaboun area of Hama Province on 10 July 2012. Since October 2012 cluster  bombs have been used with increasingly frequently all over the country. The  cluster bombs and rockets used by Syrian government forces are unguided, that  is they cannot be aimed at specific targets; they disperse large numbers of  bomblets (cluster sub-munitions) over large areas &#8211; a radius of hundreds of  metres. A high percentage of these bomblets do not explode on impact and leave  a deadly legacy for the civilian population as they may explode at any time if  picked up or accidentally touched \u2013 they effectively become anti-personnel mines.  It is because of these characteristics that cluster bombs are internationally  banned. <br \/>\n  <strong>Unexploded cluster bombs \u2013 a deadly legacy<\/strong> <br \/>\n  Shafiq Hatem Sheikh Yassin, an 18-year-old first year  agriculture student was killed in the courtyard of his home when he picked up a  cluster sub-munition which had landed unexploded just before 1pm 24 February  2013 in Mar&rsquo;aand, a small village in the countryside around Jisr al-Shughur.  His mother told Amnesty International: &ldquo;<em>When the cluster bomb fell into the  courtyard we were all there; we did not know what it was and that it could  explode. We went out and Shafiq remained in the courtyard and he picked it up  (the bomblet) and it exploded and killed him. Why throw such bombs which kill  innocent people in their homes?<\/em>&rdquo; <br \/>\n  A neighbour of the family showed Amnesty International three  unexploded PTAB-2.5M sub-munitions in her shed, in a precarious and unsteady  location, with the firewood. She said her children had collected them from the  many that lay scattered around after the cluster bomb attack on the village and  brought them home, not realizing how dangerous they are. After their neighbour  Shafiq was killed by the same kind of bomblets, the family realized the danger  lurking in their home and wanted to be rid of the deadly bomblets. <br \/>\n  Mousa Ramadan Hassoun, a 16-year-old 10th grade student from  Darkoush, a village between Jisr al-Shughour and the Turkish border, was killed  on 20 February 2013 when he picked up one of the unexploded cluster bomblets  which had been fired into the outskirts of the village. One of his cousins who  was also injured in the explosion, told Amnesty International: &ldquo;<em>Me and Mousa  and our 12-year-old cousin were grazing the sheep half a way up the hill and we  found some objects &#8211; shaped like cylinders, a bit bigger than cups of coffees,  each with a white ribbon attached to it. There were lots of them. We picked up  one each but then me and my little cousin put them down and left them there.  Mousa put the one he picked up in his pocket, on the right pocket of his  jacket. He walked maybe 200-300 metres and it exploded in this pocket. His  right arm was cut off and his abdomen was cut open. He died immediately. I was  injured in the legs from the explosion but our little cousin was saved because  he was further away<\/em>.&rdquo; <br \/>\n  The cluster bomblets which killed Mousa Ramadan Hassoun and  injured his cousin were <br \/>\n  of a different type kind from those used in the other  attacks mentioned in this report. They are smaller and darker, each with a  white ribbon attached to it, and belong to the family of Dual-Purpose Improved  Conventional Munitions (DPICM). They are delivered by 122 mm rockets which are  launched from BM-21 multiple launchers, usually mounted on trucks and  notoriously inaccurate.<strong> <\/strong>The remains of the rockets seen by Amnesty International  in Darkoush were branded with the logo of the Egyptian &ldquo;Sakr&rdquo; factory (a  subsidiary of the Egyptian state-owned Arab Organization for  Industrialization). According to the specifications, these rockets carry 72 to  98 cluster sub-munitions and can be launched by single, quadruple and  multi-tube launchers, including the conventional BM-21 multiple launcher. <strong> <\/strong>These  cluster-submunition rockets have been used by the Syrian army since at least  December 2012. In February 2013 government forces began deploying yet another  type of cluster bombs, larger and containing a greater number of cluster  sub-munitions.<br \/>\n  On 26 February 2013 residents of Darkoush showed Amnesty  International the remains of several 122 mm &ldquo;Sakr&rdquo; rockets which had struck in  and around the village in previous days and weeks, littering the areas with  cluster sub-munitions. They said that dozens of unexploded bomblets had been  cleared from the areas inside the village by local fighters and volunteers, but  were concerned that the fields around the village were more difficult to clear  because the bomblets get hidden in the tall grass, where they pose a particular  threat for shepherds and farmers. <br \/>\n  <strong>INDISCRIMINATE AIR BOMBARDMENTS \u2013 A DAILY OCCURRENCE <\/strong><br \/>\n  &ldquo;<em>When the village was being shelled, last summer, we  would try to stay in the most inner room on the ground floor of the house,  because it was safer. Then the air bombardment began and really there was  nothing I could do to keep the children safe. So we left and came here, but the  situation is so bad here that I don&rsquo;t know what is worse \u2013 to stay here in this  bad situation of to go back and die in my home<\/em>&rdquo;. A resident of Kafr Rouma,  a village in the south of the Idlib governorate, now sheltering in one of the  IDP camps along the Turkish border. <br \/>\n  &ldquo;<em>First we went to hide in the old Roman caves in the  countryside and then we even dug caves in the village next to the houses, but  the bombardments are so fierce, they flatten whole houses, even sturdy houses,  so the caves don&rsquo;t afford much protection. And we can&rsquo;t keep the children in  the caves all the time and often you don&rsquo;t hear the plane before the  bombardments and there is no time to escape. What can I do to keep my children  safe?&rdquo;<\/em> A resident of Haas village, in Jabal al-Zawiya. <br \/>\n  In the town of Salqeen, in the west of Idlib governorate,  more than 20 residents were killed as a result of an air strike which destroyed  four small houses and several apartments on both sides of a narrow street in  the Bazaar district on 1 October 2012. Among those killed were Ghassan Droubi,  14; Mohammad Hassan Ramadan, 13; Mohamed Kayali, 15; Abu Ibrahim Sinnu and his  15-year-old son Mustafa; Siham Naddu, in her mid 50s, her 14-year-old son, her  granddaughters Masha&rsquo;il and Fatima, aged 8 and 4, her grandsons Abdallah and  Mohamed, aged 10 and 6, and her relative Fatima Khalilu, a mother of seven. <br \/>\n  Hassan Mohammad al-Dha&rsquo;if, aged two, and his four-year-old  sister Aya were killed while playing outside their home in the village of Haas,  in Jabal al-Zawiya, on 14 February 2013. The children&rsquo;s aunt told Amnesty  International: &ldquo;<em>There is no safety anywhere. It was lunchtime and the  children were playing outside, between the houses, when two missiles from a  plane struck our relatives&rsquo; houses on the other side of the street. My daughter  and my niece were both injured and my cousin and I were also injured<\/em>.&rdquo; <br \/>\n  A few streets away a week later, on 21 February, at around  the same time, 12-year-old Bitoul Abd al-Hamid al-Farhat was killed in yet  another air strike which also injured her mother, her seven-year-old sister and  her three brothers, aged 18 months to nine years. <br \/>\n  A baby boy, Ahmad Ibrahim Tweish, and his four sisters \u2013  Sarah, 6, Amira, 9 and twins Rama and Rim, 12, were among some 20 civilians,  most of them children, who were killed in a single air bombardment in Maaret  al-Na&rsquo;aman on 6 November 2012. Ibrahim Tweish, the children&rsquo;s father told  Amnesty International: &ldquo;<em>It was about 3.30 or 3.45 pm and I was in the street  near the house when the bomb struck. It was as if the world collapsed around  me. My five children were killed and my wife seriously injured, and our next  door neighbours were all killed; most of them were women and children, one of  them a newborn baby girl, and her grandmother who was disabled and could not  walk. It was a massacre, bodies were torn to shreds. Three of the bodies have  not yet been found.<\/em>&rdquo; <br \/>\n  The indiscriminate nature of the air strikes being launched  daily against towns and villages makes it impossible for the civilian  population to take protective measures \u2013 short of leaving the country. <br \/>\n  <strong>DISREGARD FOR INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN LAW (THE LAWS OF  WAR) <\/strong><br \/>\n  The Syrian government has repeatedly denied that its forces  carry out indiscriminate attacks or deliberately target civilian residential  areas, and has often stated that its forces only target armed insurgents. Such  assertions are flatly contradicted by the reality on the ground. The cases  contained in this report and hundreds of other cases investigated by Amnesty  International in previous months, and the many attacks witnessed by the  organization&rsquo;s delegate on the ground, are evidence that indiscriminate attacks  and direct attacks on civilians and civilians objects are widespread as well as  systematic and have been consistently increasing over the past year.<br \/>\n  Where armed confrontations do occur in populated residential  areas, the warring parties must take all feasible precautions to minimize harm  to civilians. They must take precautions to protect civilians and civilian  objects under their control against the effects of attacks by the adversary,  including by avoiding &#8211; to the maximum extent feasible &#8211; locating military  objectives within or near densely populated areas. International humanitarian  law also expressly prohibits tactics such as using &ldquo;human shields&rdquo; to prevent  an attack on military targets. However, failure by one side to separate its  fighters from civilians and civilian objects does not relieve its opponent of  its obligation under IHL to direct attacks only at combatants and military  objectives and to take all necessary precautions in attack to spare civilians  and civilian objects. <br \/>\n  All over Syria both government forces and armed opposition  groups are present and often operate in civilian residential areas. A  fundamental rule of international humanitarian law is that all parties to a  conflict \u2013 in this case Syrian government forces and opposition fighters  (members of the FSA and other armed opposition groups, regardless of whether or  not they are affiliated to the FSA) \u2013 must at all times distinguish between  civilians (and civilian objects) and combatants (and military objectives).  Attacks may only be directed against combatants and military objectives. In  case of doubt, individuals and objects should be presumed to be civilian (and  immune from attack). <br \/>\n  Intentional attacks directed against civilians not taking  part in hostilities, indiscriminate attacks (which do not distinguish between  civilian and military targets), and disproportionate attacks (which may be  expected to cause incidental harm to civilians that would be excessive in  relation to the concrete and direct military advantage anticipated) are  prohibited and constitute war crimes. These rules apply equally to all parties  to armed conflicts (whether government forces or non-state armed groups) at all  times without exception. <br \/>\n  When parties are fighting in the vicinity of civilians they  must choose appropriate means and methods of attack. This requirement rules out  the use of certain types of weapons and tactics. The use of means and methods  of combat that cannot be directed at a specific military objective may result  in indiscriminate attacks and is prohibited. The widespread use by Syrian  government forces of battlefield weapons that have a wide impact radius and\/or  wide margin of error, or cannot be directed at specific targets, as well as  their use of internationally banned cluster bombs, in populated residential  areas has resulted in large numbers of civilian casualties. Attacks &#8211; such as  those documented in this report &#8211; which government forces carry out<strong> <\/strong>knowing<strong> <\/strong>that they will cause massive civilian casualties and destruction of  civilian objects, flagrantly violate the prohibition of indiscriminate attack  and constitute war crimes. Shelling and bombardments of residential areas in  which there are no opposition fighters or military objectives constitute direct  attacks on civilians and are war crimes. <br \/>\n  Opposition fighters, while mostly fighting with short-range  light weapons, have at times also used imprecise mortars or inherently  indiscriminate rockets in populated residential areas, putting civilians at  risk and in contravention of the prohibition of indiscriminate attacks. <br \/>\n  The fact that one of the parties to a conflict is  systematically violating the rules of IHL does not in any way excuse the commission  of similar violations by other parties. In this regard, Amnesty International  reiterates its warning to all Syrian armed opposition groups and their  leadership that, as they seek to procure or manufacture longer-range weapons,  they should be fully aware that the prohibition of indiscriminate attacks  applies equally to them. Any use of artillery, mortars, and unguided rockets in  populated residential areas violates this prohibition and may constitute a war  crime for which they will be held accountable. <br \/>\n  <strong>ARBITRARY ARRESTS, ENFORCED DISAPPEARANCES, TORTURE AND  EXTRAJUDICIAL EXECUTIONS CONTINUE \u2013 ALEPPO&rsquo;S &lsquo;RIVER OF DEATH&rsquo; <\/strong><br \/>\n  Young men and boys in Aleppo are continuing to be subjected  to enforced disappearances after being detained by government forces. Many have  been missing for months; for some there is no news of their fate and  whereabouts while for others families have managed to unofficially obtain some  information \u2013 usually by paying corrupt security officials or thanks to  contacts in the security forces. <br \/>\n  Bodies of those who had disappeared in the custody of the  various Syrian security agencies have regularly been found dumped in public  places, often handcuffed behind their backs, with torture marks, and with  gunshot wounds, most often to the head. In a previous visit to Aleppo in August  2012 Amnesty International documented several cases of young men and boys who  had been arrested in the streets or at their homes, extrajudicially executed  and their bodies then dumped in public places, often around the headquarters of  the notorious Air Force Intelligence, which has proven track record of such  practices. <br \/>\n  In the past two months a new and disturbing pattern has  emerged: bodies of men and boys who had disappeared in previous days or weeks  are being washed up in Aleppo&rsquo;s Kweik River, most with their hands tied behind  their backs and shot in the back of the head, apparently at close range. Some  also have marks which suggest they were tortured before death.<br \/>\n  The first incident occurred on 29 January 2013, when 82  bodies appeared in a stretch of the river in a part of the district of Bustan  al-Qasr under the control of armed opposition groups, having floated there from  an area under the control of government forces a few hundred metres upstream. <br \/>\n  Since then, more than 90 other bodies have been recovered  from the same spot in the river \u2013 all having floated there from the government  controlled area upstream. They mostly appeared in small numbers until 10 March,  when 23 bodies were found, followed by another 10 the following day. <br \/>\n  On 3 March an Amnesty International delegate examined one of  the bodies which had just been recovered from the river. On the face something  had been written with a blue marker but had been partially erased by the water  and mud (the body was floating face-down when it was found); on the forehead  was written &ldquo;Assad&rdquo; and on the left cheek &ldquo;Surya&rdquo; (Syria); the writing on the  right check and the chin could not be deciphered. <br \/>\n  The victim, Ahmad Ali Salah Hamwi, was only identified two  days later, together with the body of his 12-year-old son, Hassan, which had  been recovered from the river the following day, with three other bodies. <br \/>\n  Most bodies are buried without being identified as there are  is no functioning morgue or electricity to keep the bodies refrigerated. Local  volunteers keep photographs of the bodies found in the river in a small office  in the area, where families whose relatives are missing can go and look at the  photos. <br \/>\n  Among the bodies found on 29 January was a 15-year-old boy,  &lsquo;Abd al-Majid Reem Batsh and his 38-year-old uncle Majid Nunu. One of their  relatives told Amnesty International: &ldquo;<em>&rsquo;Abd al-Majid lived with his  grandmother because his parents are working in Libya. On Sunday (27 January) he  went with his uncle Majid [to the government-controlled areas] to register the  birth of Majid&rsquo;s new baby. They never returned home and on Tuesday (29 January)  their bodies were found in the river. The boy had torture marks on his face and  had been shot in the heart; his uncle had been shot in the head<\/em>&rdquo;. <br \/>\n  The body of another child, believed to be nine-year-old  Mahmoud Abd al-Bari, was found in the river on 10 March 2013, together with 22  other bodies \u2013 the largest number of bodies found in a single day since 29  January. <br \/>\n  Among those whose bodies were found in the river since 29  January was Mohammad Shaaban Mustafa, a 47-year-old railway worker. On the  morning of 13 February he left his home in Bustan al-Qasr and went to work in  the Baghdad Station area (under government control), as he did every day, but  never returned home. His body washed up on the river the following morning with  a large gunshot wound in the head.<br \/>\n  The bodies are first sighted at a point very close to the  government-controlled area but it is too dangerous to try to recover them from  there because the area is exposed to government sniper fire. Instead local  volunteers wait for the bodies to float another 300 metres or so downstream  where they can be recovered more safely. <br \/>\n  An Amnesty International delegate visited the area when bodies  were recovered and examined the bodies and the sites where the bodies are first  sighted and where they area recovered. The organization has received the names  of more than 60 men and boys whose bodies were recovered from the river and has  spoken to relatives of a number of victims. Most do not want to testify  publicly or even to have their names or the names of their deceased relatives  mentioned for fear of possible repercussions for themselves and their relatives  who live or work in government controlled areas. <br \/>\n  The victims who were identified either lived in, or had  strong ties to, areas controlled by armed opposition groups, but went missing  in government-controlled areas or while going to\/returning from  government-controlled areas. Many, according to their families, were not  involved in politics or in the opposition activities and may have been targeted  simply because they lived or spent time in opposition-controlled areas \u2013 a  factor which may have been interpreted by government forces as evidence that  the victims belong to or support the armed opposition groups which control  parts of the city. <br \/>\n  <strong>CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS <\/strong><br \/>\n  Amnesty International and other international human rights  organizations, as well as several UN mechanisms have repeatedly documented  crimes against humanity, war crimes and other grave violations of international  humanitarian law committed by Syrian government forces. The victims have been  mostly civilians not involved in the conflict as well as members of the armed  opposition. <br \/>\n  This briefing provides fresh evidence that such crimes under  international law are widespread as well as systematic, and are being  perpetrated on an ever increasing scale and as part of state policy. These  crimes appear aimed at terrorizing and collectively punishing communities  living in areas under the control of armed opposition groups \u2013 who are  seemingly suspected of supporting the armed opposition for the mere reason that  they have remained living in these areas when these were taken over by one or other  of the armed opposition groups operating in the country. <br \/>\n  <strong>To the Syrian authorities <\/strong><br \/>\n  Amnesty International has repeatedly called on the Syrian  authorities to:<br \/>\n  end to indiscriminate attacks against civilian areas. The  increase in the scope and scale of indiscriminate attacks and direct attacks on  civilians by government forces in recent months is yet more evidence of the  Syrian government&rsquo;s contempt for international law, and demonstrates just how  urgent the need is for decisive international action by the international  community to curb the spiraling violations which are being committed daily with  utter impunity; <br \/>\n  end arbitrary arrests, enforced disappearances, torture and  other ill-treatment and extrajudicial executions and make clear to all  government forces and militias that such violations will not be tolerated;<br \/>\n  provide full co-operation and unimpeded access to the  independent international Commission of Inquiry to investigate all alleged  crimes under international law and violations and abuses of international human  rights law;<br \/>\n  allow international human rights monitors and humanitarian  agencies prompt and unfettered access to Syria.<br \/>\n  <strong>To the UN Security Council<\/strong> <br \/>\n  As a first and urgent step, Amnesty International is calling  on the UN Security Council to: <br \/>\n  refer the situation in Syria to the Prosecutor of the  International Criminal Court (ICC). Such a step would make clear to all sides  that those who order or carry out war crimes and crimes against humanity will  be held accountable for their actions; <br \/>\n  immediately impose an arms embargo on Syria with the aim of  stopping the flow of weapons to the Syrian government, and establish an  effective mechanism to monitor compliance;<br \/>\n  demand prompt and unfettered access to Syria for the UN  independent international Commission of Inquiry, humanitarian and human rights  organizations and international journalists;<br \/>\n  implement an asset freeze against President Bashar al-Assad  and his senior associates who may be involved in ordering or perpetrating  crimes under international law. <br \/>\n  <strong>To all Governments<\/strong> <br \/>\n  Amnesty International is calling on all governments to:<br \/>\n  accept a shared responsibility to investigate and prosecute  crimes against humanity and other crimes under international law committed in  Syria or anywhere in the world. In particular, seek to exercise universal  jurisdiction over these crimes before national courts in fair trials and  without recourse to the death penalty; <br \/>\n  as part of this shared responsibility, establish joint  international investigation and prosecution teams to investigate crimes under  international law committed in Syria to improve the effectiveness of  investigation, improve the chances of arrest and co-ordinate prosecutions.<\/p>\n<p>   For  example, see, among other Amnesty International reports:  HYPERLINK  &quot;http:\/\/www.amnesty.org\/en\/news\/syria-all-out-repression-armed-conflict-aleppo-2012-08-01&quot;  http:\/\/www.amnesty.org\/en\/news\/syria-all-out-repression-armed-conflict-aleppo-2012-08-01 and  HYPERLINK  &quot;http:\/\/www.amnesty.org\/en\/news-and-updates\/report\/climate-fear-syrias-hospitals-patients-and-medics-targeted-2011-10-25&quot;  http:\/\/www.amnesty.org\/en\/news-and-updates\/report\/climate-fear-syrias-hospitals-patients-and-medics-targeted-2011-10-25 <br \/>\n    Amnesty International has received the names of over 980 individuals reported  to have died in custody since the uprising began in March 2011. For information  concerning torture and other ill-treatment in Syrian prisons and detention  centres, see Amnesty International, Deadly detention: Deaths in custody amid  popular protest in Syria, Index MDE 24\/035\/2011, August 2011,  HYPERLINK  &quot;http:\/\/www.amnesty.org\/en\/library\/info\/MDE24\/035\/2011\/en&quot; http:\/\/www.amnesty.org\/en\/library\/info\/MDE24\/035\/2011\/en and &ldquo;I wanted to die&rdquo;:  Syria&rsquo;s torture survivors speak out, Index: MDE 24\/016\/2012, March 2012,  http:\/\/www.amnesty.org\/en\/library\/info\/MDE24\/016\/2012\/en <br \/>\n   See  for example:  HYPERLINK  &quot;http:\/\/www.amnesty.org\/en\/news\/syria-fresh-evidence-armed-forces-ongoing-crimes-against-humanity-2012-06-13&quot;  http:\/\/www.amnesty.org\/en\/news\/syria-fresh-evidence-armed-forces-ongoing-crimes-against-humanity-2012-06-13 <br \/>\n   See  for example:  HYPERLINK  &quot;http:\/\/www.amnesty.org\/en\/news\/syria-civilians-bear-brunt-battle-aleppo-rages-2012-08-23&quot;  http:\/\/www.amnesty.org\/en\/news\/syria-civilians-bear-brunt-battle-aleppo-rages-2012-08-23 and  HYPERLINK &quot;http:\/\/www.amnesty.org\/en\/news\/syria-new-evidence-high-civilian-death-toll-campaign-indiscriminate-attacks-2012-09-19&quot;  http:\/\/www.amnesty.org\/en\/news\/syria-new-evidence-high-civilian-death-toll-campaign-indiscriminate-attacks-2012-09-19 <br \/>\n   On  12 December 2012 US and NATO officials were quoted saying that Syrian  government forces had used SCUD-type surface-to-surface ballistic missiles (see  for example:  HYPERLINK  &quot;http:\/\/www.bbc.co.uk\/news\/world-middle-east-20705519&quot; http:\/\/www.bbc.co.uk\/news\/world-middle-east-20705519 ,  HYPERLINK  &quot;http:\/\/www.reuters.com\/article\/2012\/12\/12\/us-syria-crisis-idUSBRE8AJ1FK20121212&quot;  http:\/\/www.reuters.com\/article\/2012\/12\/12\/us-syria-crisis-idUSBRE8AJ1FK20121212 ,  HYPERLINK  &quot;http:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2012\/12\/13\/world\/middleeast\/syria-war-developments-assad.html?hp&amp;_r=1&amp;&quot;  http:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/2012\/12\/13\/world\/middleeast\/syria-war-developments-assad.html?hp&amp;_r=1&amp; <br \/>\n   The  Yabroud Local Coordination Committee posted a message on its Facebook page at  17.27 on 22 February 2013 stating that &ldquo;three SCUD missiles had been launched  northward&rdquo;. See:   HYPERLINK  &quot;https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/Yabroud.Revolution\/posts\/546049868749112&quot; https:\/\/www.facebook.com\/Yabroud.Revolution\/posts\/546049868749112 <br \/>\n   See  for example, Eliot Higgins&rsquo; (who writes the Brown Moses Blog) compilation of  videos showing the use of such missiles:   HYPERLINK &quot;http:\/\/www.youtube.com\/playlist?list=PLPC0Udeof3T7n60nL2ptkGgfjEztggeT9&quot;  http:\/\/www.youtube.com\/playlist?list=PLPC0Udeof3T7n60nL2ptkGgfjEztggeT9 and  HYPERLINK  &quot;http:\/\/brown-moses.blogspot.co.uk\/2013\/01\/video-and-picture-evidence-of-scud-type.html&quot;  http:\/\/brown-moses.blogspot.co.uk\/2013\/01\/video-and-picture-evidence-of-scud-type.html <br \/>\n    HYPERLINK  &quot;http:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=9vhHKZ1T2Uk&amp;feature=youtu.be&quot; http:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=9vhHKZ1T2Uk&amp;feature=youtu.be <br \/>\n    Amnesty International visited the area and examined the unexploded  sub-munitions at the beginning of September 2012. <br \/>\n   The  Convention on Cluster Munitions (  HYPERLINK &quot;http:\/\/www.clusterconvention.org\/&quot; http:\/\/www.clusterconvention.org\/ ) was adopted in 2008 and it  entered into force in 2010. It prohibits all use, production, transfer and  stockpiling of cluster munitions. <br \/>\n    HYPERLINK  &quot;http:\/\/www.aoi.com.eg\/aoieng\/military\/mil_pro.html&quot; http:\/\/www.aoi.com.eg\/aoieng\/military\/mil_pro.html <br \/>\n    HYPERLINK  &quot;http:\/\/brown-moses.blogspot.co.uk\/2013\/03\/evidence-of-new-larger-cluster-bombs.html&quot;  http:\/\/brown-moses.blogspot.co.uk\/2013\/03\/evidence-of-new-larger-cluster-bombs.html <br \/>\n   For  a more detailed explanation of how international law applies to the parties to  the non-international conflict in Syria see Syria: Deadly Reprisals: Deliberate  killings and other abuses by Syria&rsquo;s armed forces, pp 51-60  (http:\/\/www.amnesty.org\/en\/library\/asset\/MDE24\/041\/2012\/en\/30416985-883b-4e67-b386-0df14a79f694\/mde240412012en.pdf) <br \/>\n    See:  HYPERLINK  &quot;http:\/\/www.amnesty.org\/en\/news\/syria-civilians-bear-brunt-battle-aleppo-rages-2012-08-23&quot;  http:\/\/www.amnesty.org\/en\/news\/syria-civilians-bear-brunt-battle-aleppo-rages-2012-08-23 and  http:\/\/www.amnesty.org\/en\/library\/asset\/MDE24\/073\/2012\/en\/e39a6aa0-f700-4c4c-84c5-fb73edd3abac\/mde240732012en.pdf <\/p>\n<p>Source URL: <a href=\"https:\/\/www.amnesty.org\/en\/library\/asset\/MDE24\/009\/2013\/en\/35417144-d872-46b4-8d8a-9ed0d8bcd9f8\/mde240092013en.html\">https:\/\/www.amnesty.org\/en\/library\/asset\/MDE24\/009\/2013\/en\/35417144-d872-46b4-8d8a-9ed0d8bcd9f8\/mde240092013en.html<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>14 March 2013 &#8211; Civilians continue to be at the receiving end of  increasingly frequent indiscriminate attacks by Syrian government forces.  Imprecise weapons designed for the battlefield are killing, maiming and  displacing growing numbers of civilians \u2013 many of them children. Unguided  air-delivered bombs, artillery, rockets, and ballistic missiles which cannot be  aimed at specific targets and do not distinguish between military targets and  civilian objects.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1162","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/dchrs.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1162","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/dchrs.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/dchrs.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dchrs.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dchrs.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=1162"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/dchrs.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1162\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/dchrs.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=1162"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dchrs.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=1162"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dchrs.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=1162"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}