<br><br>---------- Forwarded message ----------<br><span class="gmail_quote">From: <b class="gmail_sendername">Human Rights Watch</b> <<a href="mailto:hrw-news@topica.email-publisher.com">hrw-news@topica.email-publisher.com
</a>><br>Date: Jul 24, 2006 8:29 PM<br>Subject: Israeli Cluster Munitions Hit Civilians in Lebanon<br>To: <a href="mailto:monacojerry@gmail.com">monacojerry@gmail.com</a><br><br></span>Israeli Cluster Munitions Hit Civilians in Lebanon
<br>Israel Must Not Use Indiscriminate Weapons<br><br>(Beirut, July 24, 2006) – Israel has used artillery-fired cluster munitions in<br>populated areas of Lebanon, Human Rights Watch said today. Researchers<br>on the ground in Lebanon confirmed that a cluster munitions attack on the
<br>village of Blida on July 19 killed one and wounded at least 12 civilians,<br>including seven children. Human Rights Watch researchers also<br>photographed cluster munitions in the arsenal of Israeli artillery teams on
<br>the Israel-Lebanon border.<br><br>"Cluster munitions are unacceptably inaccurate and unreliable weapons<br>when used around civilians," said Kenneth Roth, executive director of<br>Human Rights Watch. "They should never be used in populated areas."
<br><br>According to eyewitnesses and survivors of the attack interviewed by<br>Human Rights Watch, Israel fired several artillery-fired cluster munitions<br>at Blida around 3 p.m. on July 19. The witnesses described how the
<br>artillery shells dropped hundreds of cluster submunitions on the village.<br>They clearly described the submunitions as smaller projectiles that<br>emerged from their larger shells.<br><br>The cluster attack killed 60-year-old Maryam Ibrahim inside her home. At
<br>least two submunitions from the attack entered the basement that the Ali<br>family was using as a shelter, wounding 12 persons, including seven<br>children. Ahmed Ali, a 45-year-old taxi driver and head of the family, lost
<br>both legs from injuries caused by the cluster munitions. Five of his<br>children were wounded: Mira, 16; Fatima, 12; 'Ali, 10; Aya, 3; and `Ola,<br>1. His wife Akram Ibrahim, 35, and his mother-in-law `Ola Musa, 80,<br>
were also wounded. Four relatives, all German-Lebanese dual nationals<br>sheltering with the family, were wounded as well: Mohammed Ibrahim,<br>45; his wife Fatima, 40; and their children 'Ali, 16, and Rula, 13.<br><br>Human Rights Watch researchers photographed artillery-delivered cluster
<br>munitions among the arsenal of Israel Defense Forces (IDF) artillery<br>teams stationed on the Israeli-Lebanese border during a research visit on<br>July 23. The photographs show M483A1 Dual Purpose Improved<br>Conventional Munitions, which are
U.S.-produced and -supplied, artillery-<br>delivered cluster munitions. The photographs contain the distinctive marks<br>of such cluster munitions, including a diamond-shaped stamp, and a shape<br>that is longer than ordinary artillery, according to a retired IDF
<br>commander who asked not to be identified.<br><br>The M483A1 artillery shells deliver 88 cluster submunitions per shell, and<br>have an unacceptably high failure rate (dud rate) of 14 percent, leaving<br>behind a serious unexploded ordnance problem that will further endanger
<br>civilians. The commander said that the IDF's operations manual warns<br>soldiers that the use of such cluster munitions creates dangerous<br>minefields due to the high dud rate.<br><br><br>Lebanese security forces, who to date have not engaged in the fighting
<br>between Israel and Hezbollah, also accused Israel of using cluster<br>munitions in its attacks on Blida and other Lebanese border villages.<br>These sources also indicated they have evidence that Israel used cluster<br>
munitions earlier this year during fighting with Hezbollah around the<br>contested Shebaa Farms area. Human Rights Watch is continuing to<br>investigate these additional allegations.<br><br>Human Rights Watch believes that the use of cluster munitions in
<br>populated areas may violate the prohibition on indiscriminate attacks<br>contained in international humanitarian law. The wide dispersal pattern of<br>their submunitions makes it very difficult to avoid civilian casualties if
<br>civilians are in the area. Moreover, because of their high failure rate,<br>cluster munitions leave large numbers of hazardous, explosive duds that<br>injure and kill civilians even after the attack is over. Human Rights Watch
<br>believes that cluster munitions should never be used, even away from<br>civilians, unless their dud rate is less than 1 percent.<br><br>Human Rights Watch conducted detailed analyses of the U.S. military's<br>use of cluster bombs in the 1999 Yugoslavia war, the 2001-2002
<br>Afghanistan war, and the 2003 Iraq war. Human Rights Watch research<br>established that the use of cluster munitions in populated areas in Iraq<br>caused more civilian casualties than any other factor in the U.S.-led<br>
coalition's conduct of major military operations in March and April 2003,<br>killing and wounding more than 1,000 Iraqi civilians. Roughly a quarter of<br>the 500 civilian deaths caused by NATO bombing in the 1999 Yugoslavia
<br>war were also due to cluster munitions.<br><br>"Our research in Iraq and Kosovo shows that cluster munitions cannot be<br>used in populated areas without huge loss of civilian life," Roth said.<br>"Israel must stop using cluster bombs in Lebanon at once."
<br><br>Human Rights Watch called upon the Israel Defense Forces to<br>immediately cease the use of indiscriminate weapons like cluster<br>munitions in Lebanon.<br><br>Background<br><br>Israel used cluster munitions in Lebanon in 1978 and in the 1980s. At that
<br>time, the United States placed restrictions on their use and then a<br>moratorium on the transfer of cluster munitions to Israel out of concern for<br>civilian casualties. Those weapons used more than two decades ago<br>
continue to affect Lebanon.<br><br>Israel has in its arsenal cluster munitions delivered by aircraft, artillery and<br>rockets. Israel is a major producer and exporter of cluster munitions,<br>primarily artillery projectiles and rockets containing M85 DPICM (Dual
<br>Purpose Improved Conventional Munition) submunitions. Israeli Military<br>Industries, an Israeli government-owned weapons manufacturer, has<br>reportedly produced more than 60 million M85 DPICM submunitions.<br>Israel also produces at least six different types of air-dropped cluster
<br>bombs, and has imported from the United States M26 rockets for its<br>Multiple Launch Rocket Systems.<br><br>There is growing international momentum to stop the use of cluster<br>munitions. Belgium became the first country to ban cluster munitions in
<br>February 2006, and Norway announced a moratorium on the weapon in<br>June 2006. Cluster munitions are increasingly the focus of discussion at<br>the meetings of the Convention on Conventional Weapons, with ever more<br>
states calling for a new international instrument dealing with cluster<br>munitions.<br><br>Human Rights Watch is a founding member, and a steering committee<br>member, of the Cluster Munition Coalition:<br><a href="http://www.stopclustermunitions.org">
www.stopclustermunitions.org</a>.<br><br>For more of Human Rights Watch's work on the Israel – Lebanon<br>Conflict, please visit: <a href="http://hrw.org/campaigns/israel_lebanon/">http://hrw.org/campaigns/israel_lebanon/
</a><br><br>