{"id":1634,"date":"2014-03-24T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2014-03-24T00:00:00","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=1634","title":{"rendered":"Unlawful Air Attacks Terrorize Aleppo"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>\new  satellite imagery, videos and eyewitness accounts reveal the indiscriminate  nature of the government&rsquo;s large-scale air campaign on opposition-held parts of  Aleppo since November 2013. The attacks on populated areas in Aleppo and its  countryside continue despite a UN Security Council resolution on February 22,  2014, demanding all parties cease &ldquo;indiscriminate employment of weapons in  populated areas, including shelling and aerial bombardment, such as the use of  barrel bombs.&rdquo;\n<\/p>\n<p>\nThe  air attacks on Aleppo and its countryside have killed and wounded large numbers  of civilians and led to large-scale displacement. One local group estimated  that the attacks have killed 2,321 civilians in Aleppo governorate between  November 1, 2013, and March 21, 2014.<br \/>\n&ldquo;New satellite photos and witness accounts show the brutality unleashed on  parts of Aleppo,&rdquo; said&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/www.hrw.org\/bios\/sarah-leah-whitson\">Sarah  Leah Whitson<\/a>, Middle East director at Human Rights Watch. &ldquo;Use of barrel  bombs in residential neighborhoods has done the expected: killed hundreds of  civilians and driven thousands from their homes. If these indiscriminate dumb  weapons managed to hit a military target, it would be sheer luck.&rdquo;\n<\/p>\n<p>\nUsing  satellite imagery analysis, Human Rights Watch identified at least 340 distinct  sites in Aleppo city&rsquo;s opposition-held neighborhoods that were damaged between  early November and February 20, the date of the most recent image reviewed. The  majority of these identified sites have damage signatures that are strongly  consistent with the detonation of barrel bombs &ndash; unguided high explosive bombs,  which 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.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nDamage  sites were widely distributed across almost all neighborhoods under opposition  control, with a majority falling in heavily built-up residential areas far from  the frontline. In most of the cases about which Human Rights Watch spoke to  witnesses, the witnesses said there were no military targets nearby, reflecting  the indiscriminate nature of the strikes.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nIn  mid-March &ndash; after the Security Council called for an end to barrel bomb attacks  &ndash; refugees newly arrived in Turkey, and other people displaced inside&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/www.hrw.org\/middle-eastn-africa\/syria\">Syria<\/a>, described to a  Human Rights Watch researcher recurrent, almost daily indiscriminate air  attacks on residential and commercial areas in Aleppo, mostly by barrel bombs,  far, they said, from any conceivable military target. The residents spoke  consistently about seeing helicopters drop barrel bombs over them, the  characteristic noise of the bombs while dropping and of seeing unexploded  bombs, and remnants of what were clearly barrel bombs.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nA  barrel bomb attack in Hraytan, northwest of Aleppo, on December 19, decapitated  Noura al-Abdu, aged 13, and severely injured a nine-year-old girl. She told  Human Rights Watch that she was going down the stairs in her building when the  bomb fell, severing her leg above the knee, and killing her relative. &ldquo;We heard  the helicopter but I couldn&rsquo;t make it down in time [to hide],&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;The  barrel came and killed Noura and took my legs.&rdquo;\n<\/p>\n<p>\nThe  repeated use of barrel bombs and other unguided high explosive bombson heavily  built-up residential areas shows that these are not isolated incidents but  suggest a strategy of deliberately attacking such areas. For instance,  satellite imagery shows over 30 probable air strike damage sites in the  residential neighborhoods of Masaken Hanano and Jouret Awad in Aleppo city,  destroying more than 100 buildings. Human Rights Watch was unable to reach  witnesses from Jouret Awad, but two witnesses from Masaken Hanano told Human  Rights Watch that while there was an opposition barracks in the neighborhood  that neither these barracks nor any other military target were near the areas  struck by barrel bombs.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nAccording  to the Violations Documentation Center (VDC), a Syria-based monitoring group,  there were more than 266 airstrikes on Aleppo and its countryside between  November 1, 2013, and January 31, 2014, killing at least 1,380 civilians,  including 441 children, 78 women, and 14 combatants. Based on interviews with  doctors and hospitals, VDC estimates that more than 20,000 were wounded as a  result of these attacks. The organization has recorded 2,321 fatalities from  airstrikes in the same region between November 1 and March 21. The Syrian  Network for Human Rights (SNHR), another local group, has reported that the  government&rsquo;s airstrikes on Aleppo city and surrounding rural areas killed  2,426, including 2,401 civilians, between November 23, 2013, and February 24,  2014.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nThe  air campaign has also displaced large parts of the civilian population from  opposition-held Aleppo. A Syrian relief coordinator in the Turkish border town  of Kilis who was registering refugees living in urban areas told Human Rights  Watch in mid-March that approximately 5,000 to 6,000 families from Aleppo had  sought refuge in Kilis since the government&rsquo;s air offensive intensified in  November 2013.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nIn  a resolution adopted unanimously on February 22, the UN Security Council  demanded that all parties &ldquo;immediately cease all attacks against civilians,&rdquo;  referring explicitly to ending &ldquo;the indiscriminate employment of weapons in  populated areas, including shelling and aerial bombardment, such as the use of  barrel bombs.&rdquo; The council also explicitly expressed &ldquo;its intent to take  further steps in the case of non-compliance with this resolution.&rdquo;\n<\/p>\n<p>\nMilitary  commanders should not, as a matter of policy, order the use of explosive  weapons with wide-area effects in populated areas due to the foreseeable harm  to civilians, Human Rights Watch said.By using barrel bombs on densely  populated areas, Syrian government forces used means and methods of warfare  that could not distinguish between civilians and combatants, making attacks  indiscriminate and therefore unlawful.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nGiven  Syria&rsquo;s continuing indiscriminate air war against civilian areas, the Security  Council should impose an arms embargo on Syria&rsquo;s government, as well as on any  groups implicated in widespread or systematic human rights abuses, and refer  the situation to the International Criminal Court (ICC), Human Rights Watch  said. Such an embargo would limit the Syrian government&rsquo;s ability to conduct  aerial attacks, including by ensuring that Syria does not receive new  helicopters or have its current helicopters serviced overseas.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nFurther,  in light of compelling evidence that the Syrian army and security forces are  responsible for ongoing war crimes and crimes against humanity against Syria&rsquo;s  people, companies and individuals that continue to provide arms, ammunition or  materiel to Syria or to opposition forces that have been implicated in crimes  against humanity or war crimes risk complicity in these crimes, Human Rights  Watch warned.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nUnder  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 could face  prosecution, Human Rights Watch said.&ldquo;For three years the Syrian government has  declared open season on civilians with almost no consequences,&rdquo; Whitson said.  &ldquo;The UN Security Council should respond to this disregard of its resolution,  including by imposing an arms embargo, to show there will be penalties for  widespread human rights violations.&rdquo;&nbsp;\n<\/p>\n<p>\n<strong>For more detailed accounts, see below.<\/strong>&nbsp;<br \/>\n<strong>Satellite Imagery and  Video Analysis<\/strong><strong>&nbsp;<\/strong><br \/>\nHuman Rights Watch identified at least 340 distinct damage sites in Aleppo  city&rsquo;s opposition-held neighborhood damaged between early November and February  20, 2014, by analyzing four satellite images recorded over the city between  October 31, 2013, and February 20, 2014. The heaviest concentration of the 340  distinct damage sites identified in Aleppo city were in the neighborhoods of  al-Marjet, Jouret Awwad, al-Myassar, Helwaniye\/Tariq al-Bab, Salheen,  al-Sakhour, al-Heidariyya, Dahret Awwad, and Masaken Hanano.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nBoth  the level and the location of this destruction varied from the damage Aleppo  had seen prior to this government offensive. Approximately 300 major damage  sites were identified from earlier dates of satellite imagery recorded between  mid-2012 to October 31, 2013, a number now exceededin less than four months.  And the pattern of these sites shifted, with earlier sites more concentrated in  certain neighborhoods and closer to disputed areas, and the newer sites  revealing wide scale destruction of neighborhoods that had been relatively  undamaged and were further from active conflict.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nAlthough  some of the damage sites identified in the satellite imagery were likely caused  by the effects of other explosive weapons, such as prolonged artillery shelling  and a handful of apparent attacks by guided munitions, a substantial majority  of these 340 sites have damage signatures strongly consistent with the  detonation of high explosive unguided bombs.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nBarrel  bombs, and other high explosive unguided bombs, tend to create larger zones of  building destruction than is typically seen with other types of air strikes and  artillery fire, often with irregularly shaped blast craters of shallow depth  with &ldquo;scalloped edges.&rdquo;\n<\/p>\n<p>\nHuman  Rights Watch has further determined from a review of YouTube videos, satellite  imagery and testimony that a small number of damage sites identified near front  line positions since the&nbsp;beginning&nbsp;of the government offensive  are&nbsp;likely&nbsp;attributable to opposition forces. In one documented case  opposition forces dug tunnels&nbsp;under government-held positions near the  citadel and detonated two large explosive charges destroying multiple buildings  and possibly damaging the&nbsp;ancient&nbsp;citadel between February 2 and 20,  2014.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nBarrel  bombs account for much, if not most, of the damage that Syria&rsquo;s aerial campaign  has inflicted on Aleppo&rsquo;s residential neighborhoods, Human Rights Watch has  concluded, based on its examination of satellite imagery, video footage, and  witness testimony.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nHuman  Rights Watch reviewed over 70 videos posted to YouTube during this period, to  verify the use of barrel bombs by government forces, assess the scale of  damages and establish the presence of civilians at the time of the attacks.  When possible, the video recording locations and impact sites as seen in videos  were determined by matching common landmarks with satellite imagery.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nMany  videos reviewed clearly show government helicopters releasing one or more  barrel bombs over residential areas in Aleppo, as distinguished by their large  shape and usually unstable motion while in free fall. Barrel bombs also are  distinguished because they are often pushed out or dropped from the back ramp  of the helicopter. Human Rights Watch also reviewed videos of the unexploded  barrel bombs on the ground.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nIn  one case, a&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/youtu.be\/8OJbxlwp39U\" target=\"_blank\">video<\/a>&nbsp;posted  to YouTube on February 2, shows a government Mi-8\/Mi-17 &ldquo;Hip&rdquo; multipurpose  helicopter dropping three barrel bombs on the neighborhood of Tariq al-Bab  during a 10-minute period. Human Rights Watch identified both the exact video  recording position as well as the location of the first barrel bomb impact site  shown in the video by matching it with common landmarks in satellite imagery. A  second&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/youtu.be\/Dr898oXkjsw\" target=\"_blank\">video<\/a>&nbsp;of  the aftermath of the first attack posted to YouTube on the same day shows the  destruction of at least three buildings, as well as a large civilian presence  at the time of the attack. Human Rights Watch determined the incident occurred  between January 31 and February 2 based on satellite imagery.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nCaption:  Video of Government Mi-8\/Mi-17 helicopter dropping &nbsp;barrel bombs on  residential areas matched to satellite imagery.&nbsp;<br \/>\n<a href=\"http:\/\/www.hrw.org\/news\/2014\/03\/24\/www.hrw.org\/sites\/default\/files\/related_material\/impact_sites.pdf\">Download  PDF (11MB) for high-resolution &gt;&gt;<\/a><br \/>\n<strong>Witness Accounts<\/strong>&nbsp;<br \/>\nHuman Rights Watch also interviewed 30 Aleppo residents, most of them after  they escaped the city, about air strikes between December 2013 and March 2014,  and corroborated their statements wherever possible by analyzing video and  photographs posted on the Internet. All those interviewed described helicopters  hovering high over their neighborhoods and dropping barrel bombs.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nIn  all but one case of barrel bomb attacks that residents described to Human  Rights Watch, witnesses said there were no military targets nearby at the time  of the attack. One witness from Masaken Hanano told Human Rights Watch that  fighters from armed opposition groups were sleeping in residential buildings in  the neighborhood at the time of the attack, but that they were not near the  strike site and were not hit.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n<strong>Attacks since the UN Resolution<\/strong>&nbsp;<br \/>\n<em>Hraytan<\/em>&nbsp;<br \/>\nAccording to witnesses who spoke to Human Rights Watch, on February 23 a barrel  bomb hit a family compound approximately 100 meters from Hraytan public square  killing three civilians, including a child, and injuring two more. Human Rights  Watch spoke with several members of the Masri family, whose house was hit, who explained  that Hassan Mahmoud Masri, approximately 70 years old, was killed in the attack  along with his five-year-old grandson, and neighbor Fouad Ali Belkesh. The  Violations Documentation Center&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/www.vdc-sy.info\/index.php\/ar\/details\/martyrs\/113182#.Uy_jm6iSySp\">identifies<\/a>&nbsp;Hassan&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/www.vdc-sy.info\/index.php\/ar\/details\/martyrs\/113180#.UyrYsqiSySo\">Masri<\/a>,&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/www.vdc-sy.info\/index.php\/ar\/details\/martyrs\/113184#.UywIgT-Sw1I\">Ghaith  Masri<\/a>, a child, and&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/www.vdc-sy.info\/index.php\/ar\/details\/martyrs\/113182#.UyrYtaiSySo\">Belkesh<\/a>as  having been killed by barrel bomb strikes on Hraytan on February 23.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nAccording  to the relatives, the attack also injured Masri&rsquo;s two adult daughters, one of  whom lost her right arm. Human Rights Watch reviewed a video taken of the  aftermath of the attack shortly after it took place with a family member who  identified the&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=cCAprLxw9ic\">victims<\/a>.  This relative also explained that there were no military positions near the  home or the town square, which he described as an active commercial area.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n<em>Anzarat<\/em>&nbsp;<em>Neighborhood&nbsp;<\/em><br \/>\nIn the last days of February two barrel bombs struck a residential building in  the Anzarat neighborhood at approximately 11:00 a.m., witnesses said. &ldquo;Wajih,&rdquo;  (names in quotes have been changed to protect the identifies of the witnesses)  one of the residents of the building, originally from Azaz, which he had fled  to escape government shelling, told Human Rights Watch that the attack took  place while he, his wife and five children, the youngest just 20 days old, were  home. He said that his wife, father, and brother were all injured in the  attack, along with another woman who lost her arm and eye. He said that he also  saw two people killed in the attack, a man who lived in his building and a  45-year-old woman.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n&ldquo;The  barrel destroyed our building,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;My youngest was nearly dead for 30  minutes but they revived him. My wife was injured on her mouth, right hand, and  waist from shrapnel. The barrel fell just 15 meters in front of the house and  the house collapsed &hellip;We left the same day, and so did most other people.&rdquo;<br \/>\nHe  told Human Rights Watch that the nearest front line was four kilometers away,  and that their home was in a residential area with schools and mosques in it,  but no military sites, checkpoints, or fighters.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n<em>The HaidariyehRoundabout<\/em>&nbsp;<br \/>\nThe Syrian Air Force has repeatedly hit the Haidariyeh roundabout, a key  intersection on one of the main roads connecting opposition-controlled Aleppo  to the countryside. The roundabout is also a gathering point for buses serving  the Aleppo countryside, so it is usually crowded with civilians, residents told  Human Rights Watch. Human Rights Watch has previously&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/www.hrw.org\/news\/2013\/12\/21\/syria-dozens-government-attacks-aleppo\">reported<\/a>&nbsp;on  attacks in Haidariyeh including on December 15 and 16. Three witnesses also  told Human Rights Watch that the roundabout was attacked more recently.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nTwo  residents told Human Rights Watch on March 17 that the roundabout was attacked  about 20 days beforehand. One resident, &ldquo;Samer,&rdquo; said that three barrel bombs  struck the roundabout one right after the other, killing civilians who were in  taxis and microbuses there. A second witness, &ldquo;Nidal,&rdquo; speaking about the same  attack, said that while he was leaving Aleppo for the countryside, barrels  struck the roundabout, hitting microbuses that were parked there. &ldquo;A Suzuki  full of displaced people was hit in the Haidariyeh roundabout and other  microbuses were also hit with a barrel bomb. Thirteen people from the same  family died,&rdquo; he said.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nWajih  also told Human Rights Watch that on March 13 while he was on his way back to  Aleppo, the roundabout was again struck by two barrel bombs on the Haidariyeh  bus gathering point, where cars and microbuses were parked. He could not  estimate the number of dead, but said that large numbers of residents in cars  that were hit were killed.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n<em>Anadan<\/em>&nbsp;<br \/>\nIn an aerial attack on the evening of March 12 two bombs fell on east Anadan, a  town northwest of Aleppo, killing members of the al-Ateek family. A witness  from Anadan who saw first responders taking the injured to hospitals and  collecting corpses, told Human Rights Watch that Ahmed al-Ateek&rsquo;s family of  five was killed in the aerial attack by barrel bombs that fell on their home  and that approximately 30 other people were injured in the strikes. He  described the area as residential and told Human Rights Watch that armed groups  are not present in the vicinity. The Violations Documentation Center&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/www.vdc-sy.info\/index.php\/ar\/martyrs\/1\/c29ydGJ5PWEua2lsbGVkX2RhdGV8c29ydGRpcj1ERVNDfGFwcHJvdmVkPXZpc2libGV8ZXh0cmFkaXNwbGF5PTB8c3RhdHVzPTF8cHJvdmluY2U9Nnxjb2RNdWx0aT0xM3xzdGFydERhdGU9MjAxNC0wMy0xMnxlbmREYXRlPTIwMTQtMDMtMTJ8Mz0lRDglQjklRDklODYlRDglQUYlRDglQTclRDklODZ8\">identified<\/a>four  members of the al-Ateek family who were killed on March 12 in Anadan in an  airstrike: Hassan al-Ateek, Zalegat al-Ateek, and two children, Khadija  Mohammed al-Ateek and Imad Mohammed al-Ateek.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n<strong>Earlier Barrel Bomb&nbsp;Attacks&nbsp;<\/strong>&nbsp;<br \/>\n<em>Hraytan<\/em>&nbsp;<br \/>\nOn December 19, a Syrian government helicopter dropped at least two bombs that  witnesses described as barrel bombs in the town of Hraytan, to the northwest of  Aleppo city. The second of these bombs decapitated Noura al-Abdu, aged 13, and  injured a second girl, &ldquo;Wafa&rdquo;, aged nine. &ldquo;I was in the market when the attack  happened,&rdquo; Wafa&rsquo;s mother told Human Rights Watch. &ldquo;I heard about it just 10  minutes afterwards. People were talking, and saying that a barrel had just  fallen in our street &hellip; by the time I got home they had already taken her [to  the hospital].&rdquo;\n<\/p>\n<p>\nWafa  explained that she was going down the stairs in her building when the bomb  fell, severing her leg above the knee, and killing her relative. &ldquo;We heard the  helicopter but I couldn&rsquo;t make it down in time [to hide],&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;The  barrel came and killed Noura and took my legs.&rdquo;\n<\/p>\n<p>\nWafa&rsquo;s  mother explained that one leg was severed in the initial attack, but that the  other, which was also injured, was later amputated at a hospital in Turkey. She  told Human Rights Watch that they knew a barrel bomb caused the injuries because  a relative saw the bomb falling towards them from a helicopter.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nShe  said that there were no armed opposition military positions in their town but  that there was an opposition-run police station there, although this was one  kilometer away. While this was the first barrel bomb to hit their neighborhood,  Wafa&rsquo;s mother explained that it is not the first time their neighborhood has  been bombed, despite it being a residential area.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nHuman  Rights Watch also reviewed five videos taken shortly after the attack. In&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/watch?v=iA4CSjLTwf4%20\">one<\/a>of these videos a  girl seen being carried by a man was identified by the videographer as Noura.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n<em>Tariq al-Bab<\/em>&nbsp;<br \/>\nIn a December 28 attack, a civilian witness who saw a helicopter overhead and  then the destruction caused by its bombing, told Human Rights Watch that barrel  bombs struck the western part of the vegetable market in the Tariq al-Bab  neighborhood between midday and 3 p.m. &ldquo;They bomb areas like this where people  gathering so that they will leave,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;There are no [armed opposition]  military positions there.&rdquo;\n<\/p>\n<p>\nHe  estimated that the closest military target was about five kilometers away. The  witness believed that dozens of market-goers were killed in the attack. The  Syrian Network for Human Rights has&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/docs.google.com\/file\/d\/0B5pudHajcbMuazNWM2s5d3c0YUk\/edit\">identified<\/a>36  individuals, including seven children, who were killed by barrel bombs in the  Tariq al-Bab vegetable market on December 28. The Violations Documentation  Center has&nbsp;<a href=\"http:\/\/www.vdc-sy.info\/index.php\/ar\/martyrs\/1\/c29ydGJ5PWEua2lsbGVkX2RhdGV8c29ydGRpcj1ERVNDfGFwcHJvdmVkPXZpc2libGV8ZXh0cmFkaXNwbGF5PTB8c3RhdHVzPTF8cHJvdmluY2U9Nnxjb2RNdWx0aT0xM3xzdGFydERhdGU9MjAxMy0xMi0yOHxlbmREYXRlPTIwMTMtMTItMjh8Mz0lRDglQjclRDglQjElRDklOEElRDklODJ8\">identified<\/a>&nbsp;20  victims, including four children.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n<em>Masaken Hanano Neighborhood<\/em>&nbsp;<br \/>\nHuman Rights Watch has identified a total of 35 distinct impact sites in the  Masaken Hanano neighborhood in north-eastern Aleppo between early November 2013  and February 20, 2014. A majority of the attacks occurred between February 6  and 20. Most of the sites have damage signatures strongly consistent with the  use of barrel bombs and possibly conventional bombs dropped by helicopters.  Impact sites are almost exclusively located in neighborhoods with a high  density of residential buildings. In addition to the 35 main damage sites,  multiple impact craters from artillery shelling were also identified,  indicating that both government ground and air forces have targeted the  district.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nCaption:  The map illustrates 17 probable air strike \/ barrel bomb impact sites  (highlighted in red) concentrated in the middle of a large residential area on  the eastern side of Masaken Hanano. All but one attack in this section occurred  in February 2014.&nbsp;\n<\/p>\n<p>\nHuman  Rights Watch spoke to two witnesses from Masaken Hanano who described two  separate barrel bomb attacks on the neighborhood in February in which civilians  were killed or injured.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n&ldquo;Bassel,&rdquo;  a media activist from Masaken Hanano, told Human Rights Watch that on February  6, he documented a barrel bomb attack in the eastern section of the  neighborhood. Before the attack he saw a helicopter hovering over the  neighborhood and then received a call from a friend who told him the helicopter  had dropped a barrel bomb there. He said that on arriving at the scene  approximately 20 minutes after the barrel bomb struck, he saw 14 civilians who  were killed, including four women and two children, two buildings destroyed and  several others damaged, and six to seven destroyed cars. Bassel identified 11  of the victims by name: Abdul Kader Tabakh, Mohammed Rihawe, Abd al-Mohsen  al-Hamawi, Mohamed Mahmoud Tedabli (16), Ahmad Ramadan al-Sharif, Bushra Abdulkader  Tabakh, Shahla Abdulkader Tabakh, Hiba Abdulkader Tabakh, `Ala&rsquo; Tabakh, Ameen  Abdulkader Tabakh (6), and Sama al-Hassan (6).\n<\/p>\n<p>\n&ldquo;One  man was holding a dead child who looked around five years old to me,&rdquo; he told  Human Rights Watch. Others were injured. &ldquo;The injuries that I saw were mainly  severed legs and hands, and injuries caused by shrapnel,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t  remember the number of injured but I saw at least 20.&rdquo; He told Human Rights  Watch a second barrel was dropped on the northern section of the neighborhood  on the same day, killing civilians, but that he did not document it. Bassel  said that there was no armed opposition group presence at the time, whether  fighters, checkpoints, or a military base, and that the frontline was 10  kilometers away.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n&ldquo;Mansour,&rdquo;  a media activist from the neighborhood, told Human Rights Watch that on  February 10 at around 8:30 a.m. a helicopter dropped four barrel bombs in the  southern part of the neighborhood near the cemetery in al-Ahmadiya. He said  that he was meters from where one of the bombs dropped on a residential street  and that he saw one man and woman on the street injured by that bomb. Mansour  told Human Rights Watch that while there was an opposition barracks in Masaken  Hanano, the frontline was five kilometers away near the Syrian government&rsquo;s  80th&nbsp;Brigade base.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n<em>Nayrib Neighborhood&nbsp;<\/em>&nbsp;<br \/>\nIn mid-February at around 5:30 p.m. a bomb that witnesses described as a barrel  bomb struck a one-story home in the Nayrib neighborhood of Aleppo city, killing  a mother and her three children and injuring a fourth child. The witnesses  interviewed by Human Rights Watch were unable to recall the exact date. The  children&rsquo;s father told Human Rights Watch that his wife, Diyah Wawee, and  Hasan, 18 months, Abdelkarim, 3, and Ahmed, 10, were killed in the attack and  that their fourth son was injured. He also told Human Rights Watch that the  same bomb killed his brother&rsquo;s son, Mohammed, 10, and daughter, Fatima, 2, and  a third child, Mohammed al-Ali Wawee. He said that the bomb hit their homes in  a residential area where no military targets were present.\n<\/p>\n<p>\n<em>Hendarat Palestinian camp in Aleppo<\/em>&nbsp;<br \/>\nHuman Rights Watch spoke to four men from the Hendarat Palestinian refugee  camp, northeast of Aleppo city, who said they had fled the area with their  families because of the government&rsquo;s barrel bomb attacks on the camp.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nAccording  to the men, surrounding neighborhoods were hit with barrel bombs in the days  before the camp itself was struck on February 21, after which more than 200  camp residents from 48 families decided to flee to Turkey. One man, &ldquo;Omar,&rdquo;  told Human Rights Watch that this was the third mass displacement from the camp  because of the war, and that almost none of the original 7,000-8,000  inhabitants remained.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nA  second resident, &ldquo;Bassam,&rdquo; told Human Rights Watch that three barrel bombs  struck part of the camp on February 21 (the Mashrou` section), at around 11:20  a.m., before Friday prayer. He said that one of these strikes killed a girl and  her mother as they were walking near the water tank in the neighborhood.<\/p>\n<p>Omar and two other residents also spoke to Human Rights Watch about the attack  on February 21. None of the residents knew the names of the women and girl  victims, and believed they were Syrians who had moved in to escape government  attacks in other parts of Aleppo governorate.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nThe  residents also told Human Rights Watch that there were no military positions  inside of the camp, characterizing it as a residential area far from the  frontlines. The camp, they told Human Rights Watch, is administered by a local  opposition Sharia council, which the residents described as civilian. The  Sharia council was not in the Mashrou` area of the camp that was hit.\n<\/p>\n<p>\nSource URL:<br \/>\n<a href=\"http:\/\/www.hrw.org\/news\/2014\/03\/24\/syria-unlawful-air-attacks-terrorize-aleppo\">http:\/\/www.hrw.org\/news\/2014\/03\/24\/syria-unlawful-air-attacks-terrorize-aleppo<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>ew satellite imagery, videos and eyewitness accounts reveal the indiscriminate nature of the government&rsquo;s large-scale air campaign on opposition-held parts of Aleppo since November 2013. The attacks on populated areas in Aleppo and its countryside continue despite a UN Security Council resolution on February 22, 2014, demanding all parties cease &ldquo;indiscriminate employment of weapons in populated areas, including shelling and aerial bombardment, such as the use of barrel bombs.&rdquo; <\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":10,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1634","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/dchrs.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1634","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\/10"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dchrs.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=1634"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/dchrs.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1634\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/dchrs.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=1634"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dchrs.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=1634"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/dchrs.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=1634"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}