The Niagara Falls Review

Demands for justice after U.S. probe

- SUSANNAH GEORGE and BALINT SZLANKO

MOSUL, Iraq — Little has changed at the scene of the al-Jadida airstrike that killed more than 100 civilians more than two months ago and ratcheted up pressure on the U.S.-led coalition to address allegation­s of mounting civilian casualties in the fight against the Islamic State group.

While bulldozers have cleared the main street of debris so vehicles and pedestrian­s can pass, the houses destroyed by the fierce clashes to “liberate” the neighbourh­ood remain reduced to mounds of rubble.

Initially, residents say they were inundated with journalist­s and Iraqi government officials, but within a week the neighbourh­ood was “abandoned,” said Ali Idriss, 30, whose home is within eyesight of the house hit by the U.S. bomb on March 17.

Idriss said the Pentagon investigat­ion released Thursday that acknowledg­ed 105 civilians were killed in the airstrike is relatively insignific­ant.

“It’s important to hear the Americans apologize,” he said, “but justice would be the government giving the people of this neighbourh­ood money to rebuild their homes.” From where he stood at least five completely destroyed homes were visible.

The Pentagon report concluded that the 500-pound bomb dropped on a house to kill two IS snipers should not have destroyed the entire structure. The report said secondary explosions caused by explosives set by IS fighters inside the al-Jadida house killed the civilians sheltering there.

The report added that another 36 civilians may have been at the building at the time, but “there is insufficie­nt evidence to determine their status or whereabout­s.”

Poor weather conditions during the days leading up to March 17 made coalition aerial surveillan­ce of the neighbourh­ood impossible for the two days before the bomb was dropped, Col. Joseph Scrocca, a coalition spokesman said, adding that coalition surveillan­ce was also unavailabl­e on the day of the strike due to fog.

Two Iraqi officers who oversaw the operation that day said special forces soldiers on the ground instead visually confirmed the presence of IS fighters in the house and reported that no civilians were observed. The officers spoke on condition of anonymity in line with regulation­s.

The Pentagon report concluded the U.S. coalition member who approved the strike did so “in accordance with all provisions of the applicable (rules of engagement) and Law of Armed Conflict.”

But several residents of the alJadida neighbourh­ood told The Associated Press on Friday there were no IS fighters or explosives inside the house struck by the U.S. bomb.

“A sniper wanted to get on top of the house. He got up and then immediatel­y came down,” said Manhal Samir, who was in a house next door at the time. “Within minutes” of the fighter leaving the strike hit, Samir said.

“There were no explosives in the house, only families,” said Ahmed Abdul Karim, who was sheltering in his own home nearby and whose brother was killed in the U.S. strike. “There were children in the basement and in the garden is where the women were.”

The Nineveh provincial council is also calling on the U.S. and the internatio­nal community to compensate the victims of the strike by rebuilding their homes, according to Nuraddin Qablan, the council’s deputy president.

In the past the coalition has dispensed “sympathy payments” to victims and relatives of coalition strikes, but no such payments have been made with regard to the March 17 airstrike, according to Scrocca, the coalition spokesman.

Al-Jadida was one of the hardest hit Mosul neighbourh­oods during the first weeks of the operation to retake the city’s west.

“It wasn’t only this house where civilians died,” said Hamed Salah, approachin­g the building struck by the U.S. bomb. “In that house over there, more than 30 were killed and another family up there,” he said pointing down one street and up another.

Civil protection rescue teams reported recovering more than 200 bodies from the area in the days following the March 17 strike.

On March 17 alone, the coalition dropped 81 bombs in western Mosul, including 12 on al-Jadida neighbourh­ood, an area just about two square kilometres in size, according to Scrocca.

But the Pentagon investigat­ion focused solely on the airstrike that hit at 8:24 a.m. local time.

A team of 18 people worked on the investigat­ion, interviewi­ng civilians, two human rights groups and at least seven media outlets. During the two month investigat­ion coalition members visited the scene of the strike three times where they took measuremen­ts, photos and gathered soil samples, Scrocca said.

The March 17 airstrike brings the total number of civilians confirmed killed by the Pentagon in the fight against IS to 457. Independen­t monitoring groups say the total number of civilians killed is much higher, estimating thousands have been killed in Iraq and Syria since 2014, according to tallies by Iraq Body Count and Airwars.

 ?? AHMAD AL-RUBAYE/ GETTY IMAGES ?? This March 26 file photo shows an Iraqi man amid the rubble of destroyed houses in the Mosul al-Jadida area, following air strikes in which civilians have been reportedly killed during an ongoing offensive against Islamic State.
AHMAD AL-RUBAYE/ GETTY IMAGES This March 26 file photo shows an Iraqi man amid the rubble of destroyed houses in the Mosul al-Jadida area, following air strikes in which civilians have been reportedly killed during an ongoing offensive against Islamic State.

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