Destroying Mosul to Save It: Possible US-Backed
War Crimes in Iraq Exposed
As Trump applauds victory against ISIS in
devastated Iraqi city, Amnesty International
details horrific death toll and suffering of
civilian population
By Julia Conley
July 11,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
-
As Iraqi forces celebrate their victory
over the Islamic State (ISIS) in Mosul, a
damning new
report by Amnesty International sheds light
on the killing of Iraqi civilians at the hands
of the U.S.-led coalition which "may constitute
war crimes"—and demands that the coalition
acknowledges the loss of civilian life and takes
steps to lessen non-military casualties.
Thousands of civilians have been killed in
Mosul and millions have been displaced since
ISIS took control of the city in June 2014. The
crimes of the group have been well documented by
Amnesty International and other human rights
groups. The report notes that ISIS deliberately
put thousands of civilians in harm's way, using
them as human shields in the city's conflict
zones, and killing people who attempted to
escape.
The report also focuses on the human cost of
the U.S.-led coalition's actions in Mosul.
Amnesty interviewed 150 witnesses, experts and
analysts about dozens of attacks, and focused on
a pattern of attacks that took place between
January and July 2017.
"The horrors that
the people of Mosul have witnessed and the
disregard for human life by all parties to this
conflict must not go unpunished," says Lynn
Maalouf, Amnesty's director of research for the
Middle East. "Entire families have been wiped
out, many of whom are still buried under the
rubble today. The people of Mosul deserve to
know, from their government, that there will be
justice and reparation so that the harrowing
impact of this operation is duly addressed."
The coalition's attacks were largely carried
out with Improvised Rocket Assisted Munitions (IRAMs),
explosives with unsophisticated targeting
abilities, which "wreaked havoc in
densely-populated west Mosul and took the lives
of thousands of civilians," according to the
report. Air strikes by U.S. planes were also
frequent during this time period, and the report
says the coalition did little to protect
civilians from these attacks.
"They did air-drop leaflets into
[ISIS]-controlled areas of the city,
instructing civilians to stay away from
[ISIS] or to hang children's clothes on the
roof to mark civilian homes. These warnings,
however, took little account of the
realities of living under [ISIS]. Staying
away from [ISIS] was impossible for west
Mosul residents and fighters would execute
anyone caught with a flyer in their hands.
Houses with children's clothes on the roof
were still hit by air strikes."
"ISIS's use of people as human shields does
not lessen the legal obligation of
pro-government forces to protect civilians,"
says Maalouf. "Military planners should have
taken extra care in the manner in which they
used their weapons to ensure that these attacks
were not unlawful."
Amnesty International is demanding that Iraqi
forces and the U.S.-led coalition limit the use
of IRAMs in the fight against ISIL; it says the
weapons "should never be used in densely
populated civilian areas." It also joins other
human rights groups in calling for an urgent
increase in funding for humanitarian assistance
for those who have fled the fighting in Mosul.
The report also notes that the coalition must
publicly acknowledge the human cost of the
fighting in Mosul. In his official
statement on the retaking of Mosul by the
Iraqi forces, President Donald Trump made no
mention of civilian deaths that resulted from
coalition attacks, instead acknowledging only
the Iraqis who have been killed and displaced by
ISIS.
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