What
is good for the goose is good for the gander.
Ideally
we would rid the world of these nasty weapons for ever, but the
United States would not stand for that.
Cluster
bomb claims in Syria
An
international human rights group claims it has obtained new evidence
that Syrian troops are using cluster bombs — widely banned
munitions that pose a grave risk to civilians because they burst into
bomblets over large areas and often linger on the ground, detonating
only when touched.
26
April, 2012
Steve
Goose of US-based Human Right Watch said cluster bombs "have
been comprehensively banned by most nations, and Syria should
immediately stop all use of these indiscriminate weapons that
continue to kill and maim for years." HRW had previously
reported cluster bomb remnants found in Homs and nearby Hama this
summer.
"Syria's
disregard for its civilian population is all too evident in its air
campaign, which now apparently includes dropping these deadly cluster
bombs into populated areas," said Goose, who is HRW's arms
director. Syrian government officials had no immediate comment.
There
were also new signs of the mounting tensions between Turkey and
Syria, two former allies who have become bitter foes since the
outbreak of the 19-month-old rebellion against President Bashar
Assad.
Turkish
Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu announced that Turkey is barring
Syrian civilian flights from Turkey's airspace, a day after Syria
issued such a ban for Turkish commercial aircraft. Davutoglu said
Syria is "abusing" civilian flights by using them to
transport military equipment.
Last
week, Turkey forced a Syrian plane coming from Russia to land and
confiscated what it said was military equipment on board. Russia said
the plane was carrying spare radar parts, while Syria accused Turkey
of piracy.
After
a week of exchanges of fire across the volatile border, a Turkish
newspaper reported that Turkey has reinforced four naval bases along
its Mediterranean coast north of Syria. In an unattributed report,
the Hurriyet daily said Turkey sent frigates with cannons, as well as
anti-ship and anti-aircraft missiles to the naval bases.
Turkey
has been retaliating for Syrian shells and mortar rounds hitting
Turkish soil.
Despite
Turkey's recent measures, Syrian opposition leaders say Ankara and
other foreign backers of the rebels are not doing enough to help them
break the battlefield stalemate. Abdelbaset Sieda, head of the
largest opposition group, the Syrian National Council, said the
international community is doing nothing more than managing the
Syrian conflict.
The
international community must establish safe havens in Syria and
enforce no-fly zones to help the rebels counter the regime's
airstrikes on rebel-held areas, Sieda told reporters in Istanbul,
Turkey. This would also cut down on the number of Syrians seeking
refuge abroad and "resolve the humanitarian crisis, especially
with winter approaching," he said.
The
idea of safe havens has found little international support. Foreign
backers of the rebels fear being dragged deeper into the conflict.
Over the summer, the Assad regime stepped up airstrikes in an attempt
to dislodge rebel fighters from urban strongholds, sharply driving up
daily casualty tolls.
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In
its report on cluster bombs, Human Rights Watch said Syrian activists
posted at least 18 videos from October 9-12 showing remnants of the
bombs in or near several towns, which included the central city of
Homs, the northern cities of Idlib and Aleppo, the countryside in
Latakia, and the eastern Ghouta district near the capital Damascus.
Many
were on a north-south highway that has been the scene of fighting in
recent days.
Cluster
bombs are of particular concern because they scatter small bomblets
over a wide area. Many of the bomblets do not immediately explode,
posing a threat to civilians long afterward.
Human
Rights Watch said the munitions in the video were Soviet-made. Before
its collapse, the Soviet Union was a major arms supplier to Syria.
It
is nearly impossible to independently verify such reports in Syria,
where journalists' movement is restricted and the government keeps a
tight-lid on news related to the revolt, which it blames on a foreign
conspiracy.
The
report said the cluster bomb canisters and submunitions displayed in
the videos "all show damage and wear patterns produced by being
mounted on and dropped from an aircraft." Some residents
confirmed in interviews that helicopters dropped cluster bombs near
their homes on October 9, the group said.
The
group did not have information if the munitions had caused any
casualties.
Human
Rights Watch "is deeply concerned by the risks posed by the
unexploded submunitions (bomblets) to the civilian population, as men
and even children can be seen in the videos handling the unexploded
submunitions in life-threatening ways," according to the report.
HRW
said it had confirmed that the fragments shown in the videos were
RBK-250 series cluster bomb canisters and AO-1SCh fragmentation
bomblets.
The
military publisher Jane's Information Group says Syria possesses
Soviet-made RBK-250 cluster bombs, the report said. It said there was
no information available on Syria's acquisition of the weapons.
More
than 32,000 people have been killed in Syria since a revolt against
Assad erupted. Hundreds of thousands of Syrians have fled the
fighting between the rebels and the army, which has been using
missiles, tanks and warplanes in strikes that devastated whole
neighborhoods.
Earlier
Sunday, Syrian gunmen fired on a bus transporting workers to a
blanket factory, killing four and wounding eight, a Syrian official
said. He said the attack happened at the entrance of Homs. He gave no
other details and spoke anonymously as he was not authorized to make
statements to the media.
The
Syrian state news agency said a suicide bomber crashed an
explosives-laden sedan into a coffee shop at a Damascus residential
neighborhood, causing damage but no fatalities. SANA said the
explosion took place at dawn on the capital's Mazzeh highway. An
Associated Press reporter at the site says the blast destroyed a
balcony and ripped off a building facade.
Hours
afterward, a second blast rocked the same area, seriously wounding a
journalist, the agency said. It said an unidentified armed group
detonated an improvised explosive device attached to the car of the
journalist, Ayman Youssef Wannous, who works for a private Syrian
magazine.
In
neighbouring Jordan, Syrian refugee Mustafa Ali Kassim, 24, died of
shrapnel wounds inflicted when the Syrian army opened fire at his
group of 229 Syrian refugees while crossing a border fence into
Jordan before dawn Sunday, said Syrian refugee camp spokesman Anmar
Hmoud.
For
background on how the United States and Australia sought to weaken a
clsuter bomb treaty
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