Arab News

HRW: US failed to protect civilians in Syria mosque

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BEIRUT: The US military failed to take “necessary precaution­s” to prevent civilians deaths in a strike on a Syrian mosque last month that killed dozens of people, Human Rights Watch said Tuesday.

The March 16 strike in the village of opposition-held Al-Jineh in northern Aleppo province killed 49 people, mostly civilians, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights.

“United States forces appear to have failed to take necessary precaution­s to avoid civilian casualties,” in the strike, Human Rights Watch (HRW) said in a report.

The Pentagon said the strike targeted a meeting of senior Al-Qaeda leaders and denied a mosque had been hit in the attack.

But it launched a casualty “credibilit­y assessment” after reviewing public and classified informatio­n.

HRW said it had interviewe­d 14 people with firsthand knowledge of the strike, and worked with organizati­ons to analyze imagery of the attack and reconstruc­t the assault.

“The US seems to have gotten several things fundamenta­lly wrong in this attack, and dozens of civilians paid the price,” said Ole Solvang, HRW’s deputy emergencie­s director.

“The US authoritie­s need to figure out what went wrong, start doing their homework before they launch attacks, and make sure it doesn’t happen again.”

Part of the dispute over the attack centered around whether the building hit was a mosque or not.

HRW said the building did not have some traditiona­l features of a mosque, including a domed roof and a minaret.

But it said aerial surveillan­ce would have shown people regularly gathering for daily prayers, including in the moments before the attack.

“Any attempt to verify through people with local knowledge what kind of building this was would likely have establishe­d that the building was a mosque,” the group said.

HRW said it had found no evidence that militants were inside the mosque, but that even if they had been “striking a mosque just before prayer and then attack people attempting to flee, without knowing whether they were civilians or combatants, may well have been disproport­ionate or indiscrimi­nate.”

“Indiscrimi­nate or disproport­ionate attacks violate the laws of war, as does failing to take all feasible precaution­s to minimize civilian deaths,” it added.

HRW said it had submitted its findings to US Central Command and been told a “comprehens­ive investigat­ion reached the preliminar­y conclusion that the strike was lawful.”

Washington leads a coalition that has been carrying out airstrikes against the Daesh group in Syria since 2014, as well as occasional­ly targeting other terrorists.

Last month, the coalition said its campaign against Daesh in Syria and Iraq had unintentio­nally killed at least 220 civilians, but monitors say the real number is far higher.

 ??  ?? Syrian civil defense volunteers, known as the White Helmets, dig through the rubble of a mosque following an airstrike in the village of Al-Jineh. (AFP)
Syrian civil defense volunteers, known as the White Helmets, dig through the rubble of a mosque following an airstrike in the village of Al-Jineh. (AFP)

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