The Borneo Post

US-led strikes killed 84 civilians near Raqa

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BEIRUT: US-led coalition strikes near the Islamic State group’s Syrian stronghold Raqa in March killed at least 84 civilians, including dozens of children, Human Rights Watch alleged yesterday. The group said the strikes hit two sites: a school housing displaced families in the town of Mansourah, and a market and bakery in the town of Tabqa. It said witnesses acknowledg­ed IS fighters had been present at both sites, but that large number of civilians were also there. “These attacks killed dozens of civilians, including children, who had sought shelter in a school or were lining up to buy bread at a bakery,” HRW deputy emergencie­s director Ole Solvang said. “If coalition forces did not know that there were civilians at these sites, they need to take a long, hard look at the intelligen­ce they are using to verify its targets because it clearly was not good enough.”

HRW said the first of the two strikes was on March 20, and killed at least 40 people including 16 children at the Badia school in Mansourah. The second was on March 22 and killed at least 44 people including 14 children at the Tabqa market and bakery.

The US-led coalition has been carrying out air strikes in support of anti- IS operations in Syria since September 2014, after expanding its existing campaign in neighbouri­ng Iraq.

Since last November, it has been supporting the Kurdish-Arab alliance known as the Syrian Democratic Forces ( SDF) as it battles to capture Raqa province, including its capital Raqa city.

The SDF broke into Raqa city in June and is on the verge of capturing the former jihadist bastion.

But activists have criticised what they say are disproport­ionately high civilian death tolls in the campaign.

The coalition says it take all possible precaution­s to avoid civilian casualties and investigat­es credible reports of civilian deaths in its strikes.

In August, it acknowledg­ed the deaths of 624 civilians in its strikes in Syria and Iraq since 2014.

But rights groups say the real figure is much higher, and HRW criticised the coalition’s methodolog­y for assessing civilian casualties.

It said the coalition reported having assessed the Mansourah and Tabqa strikes, but it appeared they carried out no site visits nor witness interviews even though both places have been under SDF control for weeks.

“If the coalition had visited the sites and talked to witnesses they would have found plenty of evidence that civilians were killed in these attacks,” Solvang said.

“The coalition should follow our lead, conduct full investigat­ions, and find ways to make its civilian casualty assessment­s more accurate.”

More than 330,000 people have been killed in Syria since the conf lict began with antigovern­ment protests in March 2011. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Syrian Democratic Forces take position following a sniper shot in their direction on the eastern frontline of Raqa. — AFP photo
Syrian Democratic Forces take position following a sniper shot in their direction on the eastern frontline of Raqa. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? A displaced Syrian man from Raqa carries a child at a refugee camp in Ain Issa. — AFP photo
A displaced Syrian man from Raqa carries a child at a refugee camp in Ain Issa. — AFP photo

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