Hele Syrische families in Raqqa uitgemoord door de VS

Ruth
Sherlock, Lama Al-Arian en Kamiran Sadoun hebben een artikel
geschreven over de situatie in de Syrische stad Raqqa, een jaar
nadat de stad door de VS werd gebombardeerd vanwege de aanwezigheid
van IS, in wat destijds de hoofdstad van hun bloedige kalifaat
was……

Dagelijks
is men nog bezig om de lijken onder het puin vandaan te halen, zoals
de skeletten van 2 Syrische meisjes…… Het zijn dan ook vooral
burgerslachtoffers die men vindt in de ruïnes en massagraven…. Tot
nu toe zijn meer dan 2.600 vermoorde slachtoffers gevonden, maar dat
moeten er volgens de bevolking ter plaatse, duizenden meer
zijn……… Er zijn overigens veel meer burgerslachtoffers gevallen in Raqqa dan IS terroristen……

Uit het hieronder opgenomen artikel wordt ten overvloede nog eens gemeld dat terreurgroep IS, als andere terreurgroepen (‘gematigde rebellen’) eerder, de bevolking verbood Raqqa te verlaten, op straffe van de dood…… Ik meld dit daar de reguliere westerse media en bijvoorbeeld het Syrisch Observatorium voor Mensenrechten (SOHR, geleid door een misdadiger) keer op keer met de leugen kwamen dat het reguliere Syrische legger vluchtelingen zou hebben doodgeschoten, zoals bij de belegering van Oost-Aleppo……. Terwijl het Syrische leger en de Russen juist vluchtcorridors instelden voor de bevolking, die zoals gezegd door scherpschutters van de ‘gematigde rebellen’ (financieel gesteund met o.a. ons belastinggeld…) onder vuur werden genomen…….

De
VN en een paar landen smeekten de VS destijds te stoppen met de
bombardementen op Raqqa, maar dat was als bij de eerdere belegering van het Iraakse West-Mosul tevergeefs…… ‘Vreemd overigens’ dat dit
feit destijds niet of amper werd gemeld door de reguliere westerse media en als het al gemeld werd, dan weggestopt bijvoorbeeld op de laatste pagina van kranten behorend tot die westerse media….. (niet ‘vreemd’ dus, immers men
staat bij die ‘onafhankelijke’ media ten volle achter de terreur die de VS uitoefent,
waar dan ook over de wereld en die media gebruiken daarvoor niet alleen ‘fake news’ (nepnieuws), maar zoals gemeld verzwijgen ook simpel ‘bepaalde nieuwsfeiten……’)

Lees
het volgende ontluisterende artikel en zegt het ajb voort, tijd dat
de wereldbevolking eindelijk achter de waarheid komt en de VS,
Saoedi-Arabië, Israël en de
NAVO lidstaten gaat zien voor wat ze ‘waard’ zijn: bloeddorstige terreurstaten!!! De door de VS in Syrië georganiseerde ‘opstand’ (onder de Obama administratie met hoofdverantwoordelijke voor die opstand: Hillary Clinton…), een opstand die resulteerde in een oorlog en die zou tot nu toe in totaal al zo’n
500.000 mensen het leven hebben gekost……. De VS? De grootste terreurentiteit op aarde!!

EDITOR’S
CHOICE
 |
12.11.2018

Entire
Families Wiped Out’: US Airstrikes Killed Many Civilians in Syria

‘Entire Families Wiped Out': US Airstrikes Killed Many Civilians in Syria

Ruth
SHERLOCK, Lama AL-ARIAN, Kamiran SADOUN

On
a busy street corner in Raqqa, Syria, a digger pushes through the
rubble of a building hit by an airstrike. Onlookers shield their
mouths and noses from the dust and stench of corpses of those who
perished beneath.

Just
streets away, three recovery workers pull out the delicate skeletons
of two children from under the debris of a partially collapsed home.
And across the city, in what was once Raqqa’s public park, men
unearth more bodies from a mass grave.

“Raqqa
did not deserve this destruction,” says Yasser al-Khamis, who
leads the city’s emergency response team. “Of course, we
understood its fate because it was the capital of ISIS, but we were
hoping that the civilian death toll would be lower.”

One
year after the U.S.-led military campaign against ISIS ended in
Raqqa, Khamis’ team is still recovering the remains of the battle’s
casualties. This grim, daily work is revealing a civilian death toll
that is dramatically higher than the assessment offered by the
U.S.-led coalition against ISIS.

Yasser
al-Khamis leads Raqqa’s First Responders Team, a U.S.-funded group
tasked with emergency work including pulling the bodies of
casualties out of the rubble from the war against ISIS.

The
rescue workers’ findings, which they document in meticulous notes
shown to NPR, point to an offensive that killed many more civilians
than it did ISIS members, and where the majority of those civilians
likely died in American airstrikes.

The
U.S.-led coalition against ISIS has so far verified 104 unintended
civilian casualties caused by its attacks in Raqqa and is
investigating more cases, coalition spokesman Army Col. Sean Ryan
tells NPR.

“With
new information being submitted to the CivCas [civilian casualties]
team by a multitude of sources every month, the numbers will
presumably go up,” Ryan adds.

The
workers in Raqqa, however, estimate the real tally is much higher —
likely in the “thousands.”

Since
January, the rescue team has uncovered more than 2,600 bodies.
Through their identification process, they say they have found that
most of the bodies were civilians killed in coalition airstrikes
during the battle for Raqqa between June and October 2017.

Formally
called the First Responders Team, the group receives funding from the
U.S. government, but the 
assistance
is limited
.
Its approximately 37 members work long hours for little pay — some
are volunteers — and say their efforts are slowed by a lack of
heavy machinery needed to access the bodies.

With
many more corpses still under rubble, the rescue workers estimate it
will take another year to clean the city of the dead.

Faster
strikes and artillery barrages

Raqqa
served as the capital of ISIS’ self-proclaimed caliphate for almost
four years after the militant group seized the city in 2014.

The
U.S.-led coalition’s offensive on Raqqa came after several years of
fighting the extremist group in Iraq and other parts of Syria.

While
campaigning for president, Donald 
Trump
vowed to “bomb the s*** out of” ISIS
.

In
the months following his January 2017 swearing-in, conflict
analysts 
reported
increases
 in
both the numbers of U.S. airstrikes and of civilians reported killed
in the attacks.

President
Trump 
reportedly
handed decision-making
 power
for major bombardments to the military, enabling airstrikes to be
more easily called in by commanders on the ground during a battle.

In
May 2017, Defense Secretary James Mattis 
told
CBS News
 the
U.S. was accelerating and intensifying the campaign against ISIS, and
added, “We have already shifted from attrition tactics … to
annihilation tactics.”

In
Raqqa, the consequences of the “annihilation tactics” are
still keenly felt.

According
to Airwars, an independent research group monitoring the anti-ISIS
conflicts in Iraq and Syria, the 
U.S.
was responsible for about 95 percent of the airstrikes
 and
all of the artillery barrages in Raqqa. The U.K. and France also
participated in the offensive.

Data
given to Airwars by the U.S. military’s central command show the
coalition launched 
at
least 21,000 munitions
 —
airstrikes and artillery — in the city in little over four months.

“Entire
families have been wiped out”

By
the end of the campaign, Raqqa was a wasteland of smashed concrete;
its residential tower blocks were flattened and schools and hospitals
toppled. A United Nations 
study
found that over 80 percent
 of
the city — originally home to some 220,000 people — is damaged or
destroyed.

Many
residents say they lost loved ones in the strikes.

Mohanned
Tadfi, 41, recently buried his mother, his brother, his sister-in-law
and seven nieces and nephews. “Ten people,” he says. “A
plane came and hit the house and the building of five floors fell on
their heads.”

Tadfi
says his brother Latuf had found it too hard and dangerous for his
family to leave. “ISIS was executing anyone from his
neighborhood who tried to escape. And in any case, our mother is
diabetic and can’t walk well, and it was too difficult [to] carry her
because the bridges out of the city had been bombed.”

The
family stayed in their basement apartment as the war intensified
around them. The Syrian Democratic Forces, a U.S.-backed militia, was
closing in on the neighborhood and the family thought the fighters
would soon capture the area from ISIS.

On
Sept. 5, 2017, just after a muezzin in a nearby mosque called the end
of noon prayers, an airstrike hit the building where Tadfi’s family
was. Another brother, Raed Tadfi, went to deliver insulin for their
mother. He found Latuf dead on the steps and the building collapsed
behind him.

Days
later, SDF fighters seized control of the neighborhood. Tadfi says he
and his brother asked the militia for access to the house. “Please,
there are children under the rubble. My brother’s children, young
kids. Maybe even just one of them is still alive!” he recalls
asking them.

But
they were told the area was too dangerous for civilians. It wasn’t
until three months later that Tadfi was finally able to recover his
loved ones. He hired a flatbed truck and took them away to graves he
says he dug with his own hands.

The
Tadfis’ story is one of the cases being looked at by Donatella
Rovera, a senior crisis response adviser for Amnesty International
who has spent much of the last year in Raqqa. She compiles witness
testimonies and analyzes war damage to buildings as part of an
ongoing investigation to determine how many civilians were really
killed in the coalition attacks.

The
building in Raqqa of the former home of Latuf Tadfi and his family,
which relatives say was hit by a U.S.-led coalition airstrike.

“This
is one case of many that I have been investigating where entire
families have been wiped out in places where they thought they would
be safe,” she says, standing beside the wreckage of the Tadfis
home.

Determining
casualties

In
a statement responding to NPR, Col. Ryan, the spokesman of the
Combined Joint Task Force, said the coalition conducted “thorough
assessments” to ensure it didn’t accidentally kill civilians.
“The majority of strikes were executed as planned, but to say
this was perfect execution from all sides is meaningless and we
understand mistakes were made.”

He
said the coalition was “fighting a ruthless enemy that was
systematically killing innocent civilians and unfortunately some were
unintentionally killed trying to liberate them, something we tried to
avoid.”

Rovera
doesn’t dispute that ISIS tried to prevent civilians from leaving.
But, she says,the military knew that before the battle and did not
adjust their attack plan accordingly.

Her
investigation so far suggests that “many hundreds” of
civilians were killed in the Raqqa offensive, which she says
prioritized speed, even in densely populated neighborhoods.

Testimony
Rovera gathered from embedded journalists and SDF militia sources
suggests that strikes sometimes came “within minutes” of a
local commander choosing a target.

“If
they had had observation for an adequate period of time, they would
have realized that there were civilians in those buildings,”
she says. “Yes, the war probably would have taken more time.
But more lives would have been saved.”

The
rescue unit says it determined most of the more than 2,600 recovered
bodies were civilians in a few different ways. ISIS combatants often
dressed a specific way and carried an ID card, the workers say. Other
characteristics, such as victims’ age and gender and testimony from
families, also help in the team’s documentation.

Rescuers
say they recognize airstrike scenes from the scale of the
destruction.

Airwars puts
the civilian death toll
 in
the Raqqa offensive at 1,400, but it believes the number could be
higher. It gathers data largely remotely, through communication
with sources and information from social media, and has not been able
to verify every reported case.

“We
expected a significantly higher portion of civilian harm reports to
be determined as credible, since in Raqqa really the only player
causing the destruction was the coalition,” says Chris Woods,
the director of Airwars.

He
explains that the coalition has assessed and accepted only a fraction
of the casualty reports from Raqqa than it did from the major
campaign to drive ISIS from Mosul, Iraq, from October 2016 to July
2017.

“That
suggests a political dimension to the decision-making process,”
he says. “We can’t think of another explanation for that
discrepancy.”

Rovera,
the Amnesty International adviser, says it is imperative that
coalition forces send ground investigators into Raqqa. “Having
dropped the bombs from the sky they should now be sending their
investigators on the ground now to establish the facts of what was
the impact of those strikes on the civilian population,” she
says.

Col.
Ryan from the coalition said the existing coalition forces in Syria
are not a trained investigative force and taking them away “from
their mission is not advisable as the fight against this ruthless
enemy continues.”

For
now, Raqqa’s people are left to count their dead largely alone, while
the U.S. and other powers strike elsewhere in Syria.

npr.org

Tags: Raqqa  War
Crimes
 

===============================

Zie ook:

White Helmets is een terreurorganisatie, zie de bewijzen op Facebook: foto’s van de W.H. leden

VS heeft al 4 keer het verboden chemische wapen witte fosfor gebruikt‘ (in Syrië)

Voor meer berichten over Raqqa, Aleppo en/of Mosul, klik op het betreffende label, direct onder dit bericht.

De VS bombardeerde Raqqa plat, terwijl de doelen voor die bombardementen, IS strijders, met duizenden de stad mochten verlaten……..

De
grootste terreurentiteit op onze kleine aarde, de VS, heeft niet
alleen West-Mosul in Irak zo goed als platgebombardeerd, wat bij Angelina Jolie de uitspraak ontlokte dat ze nimmer een dergelijke
vernietiging zag*, maar ook het Syrische Raqqa werd voor een heel groot deel door VS bombardementen vernietigd…….

In
beide gevallen smeekte de VN en een paar landen die wel menselijke
regeringen hebben, de VS te stoppen met die bombardementen, daar
vooral de burgers van die steden werden getroffen…. De VS deed
niets op die smeekbedes en ging gewoon door met willens en wetens vermoorden van vooral burgers…… 

In West-Mosul is
een enorm aantal burgers vermoord met die bombardementen van vooral
de VS…. Hun aantal was zo groot dat de terreurregering van Irak
besloot de slachtoffers niet te bergen, maar hen te bulldozeren
onder het puin van de huizenblokken, dit om het ‘officiële’ aantal dodelijke burgerslachtoffers
zo laag mogelijk te houden…….

Volgens deskundigen zijn in West-Mosul meer dan 20.000 burgers vermoord, echter dit natrekken is zoals je begrijpt onmogelijk, het werkelijke aantal vermoorde burgers zullen we dan ook nooit weten……

Vreemd
genoeg mochten destijds tijdens die bombardementen IS strijders de
stad verlaten, waarna ze onder begeleiding van de Irak coalitie naar
de grens met Syrië werden gebracht…… (om in dat land tegen Assad te vechten) Ofwel men bombardeerde een stad met het doel terroristen uit te schakelen, laat vervolgens een groot deel van hen
vertrekken en bombardeert vervolgens vrolijk door tot de stad geheel
in handen was van die moorddadige Irak coalitie (onder regie van vooral de VS)………

Hetzelfde
heeft zich afgespeeld in Raqqa, waar men eerder sprak over honderden
IS strijders en hun familie die mochten vertrekken, blijkt het na onderzoek om
duizenden te gaan…… Ook daar ging de VS door met bombardementen
op de stad, terwijl het overgrote deel van de strijders al was
vertrokken, ofwel de VS bombardeerde vooral de bewoners die niets te
maken hadden met IS of andere terreurgroepen……

Gelukkig
haalt de schrijver van het hieronder opgenomen artikel, Darius
Shahtahmasebi, Aleppo aan en dan m.n. de bevrijding van Oost-Aleppo. Het
Syrische leger en de Russen hebben destijds besloten, 2 maanden voor
de uiteindelijke bevrijding, te stoppen met bombardementen, juist om
zoveel mogelijk burgerslachtoffers te voorkomen….. 

De reguliere
westerse media en het grootste deel van de westerse politici
schreeuwden destijds echter moord en brand over de bevrijding va, die men in het westen liefkozend ‘gematigde rebellen’ noemt…… De hysterische reacties van die media en politici waren vooral gebaseerd op berichtgeving die door
de terreurgroepen naar buiten werd gebracht, ofwel een dik pak
leugens, veelal ‘geserveerd’ door het SOHR (Syrische Observatorium voor
Mensenrechten), geleid door een gevluchte Syrische misdadiger die
met de leugen dat hij een politiek vluchteling was, asiel verkreeg in
Groot-Brittannië….

Zoals
bij alle steden die het reguliere Syrische leger bevrijdde van
islam-terreur, was de bevolking van Oost-Aleppo dolblij met hun
bevrijders, na deze bevrijding keerde een groot deel van de gevluchte burgers
terug naar hun stad…… Het voorgaande volkomen in tegenstelling tot West-Mosul en Raqqa, daar er niets is om naar terug te keren……..

The
US Annihilated Raqqa While Allowing Thousands of Terrorists to Escape
— Why?

June
20, 2018 at 9:28 pm

Written by Darius
Shahtahmasebi

(ET— Amnesty
International released an explosive 
report last
week, which described the US-led coalition’s disproportionate and
indiscriminate war in Raqqa as the US-led “war of annihilation”.

The
report confirmed what some people have suspected for a while but few
have dared to even talk about. Namely, that the United States and its
allies have 
completely
destroyed
 a
Syrian city, and left almost nothing but death and destruction in
their wake.

In
coming to its conclusion, Amnesty researchers visited 42 coalition
air strike sites across the city and interviewed 112 civilian
residents who had survived the ordeal. The results of their
investigation shouldn’t be a surprise to anyone who has been paying
attention, as approximately a year ago, 
Reuters described the
plight of one resident in Raqqa who found several of his neighbours
lying dead on the street, with cats eating the corpses.

The
report even details four cases of civilian families who, between
them, lost 90 relatives and neighbours. One family lost 39 in total,
all of them allegedly killed by coalition air strikes. This would
also not be a surprise to anyone who cared enough to follow this
story closely, particularly with the 
Intercept’s
shocking article last year 
titled,
‘Entire families are being killed by US airstrikes in Raqqa,
Syria’.

To
be fair, US President Donald Trump did 
once
say
 he
would “take out” the families of 
Islamic
State
 (IS)
fighters. He also 
once
asked
 the
CIA why they delayed an air strike on a terrorist target so as to
avoid hitting the house with his family inside it. In other words,
the Commander-in-Chief of the world’s military superpower doesn’t
have a clue how international humanitarian law works.

When
so many civilians are killed in attack after attack, something is
clearly wrong, and to make this tragedy worse, so many months later
the incidents have not been investigated. The victims deserve
justice. The Coalition’s claims that its precision air campaign
allowed it to bomb IS out of Raqqa while causing very few civilian
casualties do not stand up to scrutiny. On the ground in Raqqa, we
witnessed a level of destruction comparable to anything we’ve seen
in decades of covering the impact of wars,”
 said Donatella
Rovera, Senior Crisis Response Adviser at Amnesty International.

Most credible
estimates
 of
the assessment of the damage done to Raqqa are that a whopping 80% of
Raqqa was uninhabitable after the US had supposedly “liberated”
its population. This isn’t something the American media even took
on with a conscience, or even felt the need to apologise for; this
was something they actively bragged about.

Looking
at photographs of the ruined, desolate streets of what was once the
Islamic State’s capital of Raqqa is a reminder of the overwhelming,
pitilessly effective military power of the United
States,”
 bragged the Washington
Post’s David Ignatius in an op-ed last year. “The heaps
of rubble in Raqqa that once housed terrorists and torturers convey a
bedrock lesson, as valid now as in 1945: It’s a mistake to
provoke the United States. It may take the country a while to
respond to a threat, but once the machine of US power is engaged,
it’s relentless – so long as the political will exists to sustain
it,”
Ignatius
continued.

For
all of Bashar al Assad’s flaws, and despite all of the mounting
allegations of war crimes against him, after Russia and Syria retook
the city of Aleppo in 2016, hundreds of 
thousands of
refugees 
returned back
to live in the city. An Aleppo cathedral even 
reopened last
year with a classical concert (the US-backed rebels occupying Aleppo
previously were not big on religious diversity). I don’t know about
you, but I haven’t heard of any concerts taking place in Raqqa thus
far.

But
here is where things get even more disturbing. On November 13, 2017,
the 
BBC dropped
a bombshell 
report exposing
how the US cut a secret deal with “hundreds” of IS fighters and
their families to leave the Syrian city of Raqqa under the “gaze of
the US and British-led coalition and Kurdish-led forces who control
the city”. 
The
US
 even
allegedly allowed the escape of some of IS’ “most notorious”
members, as well as its foreign fighters and tonnes of weapons and
ammunition.

Almost
a month later, 
Reuters took
the story even further and 
reported that
a high-level defector from the Kurdish-led forces in Syria had
revealed that the number of IS fighters given safe passage was
actually in the thousands, not hundreds. This account was then
seconded by a security official in Turkey.

So,
on the one hand, you have the US exacting all of its military might
and power to completely raze Raqqa to the ground, while on the other,
they were doing all of this while allowing their alleged targets to
escape safely. This ultimately begs the question: who were they
trying to kill that entire time? What crime did the residents of
Raqqa commit that they had to suffer and endure this criminal
behaviour?

It
also cannot be overlooked that the US did all of this without
any 
discernible
legal basis
.
For those of you who need this spelt out: the US does not have any
legal mandate to conduct military operations in Syria. This is not
some secret or mere mistake or accident, the US government’s own
lawyers have been advising them of this, even under the 
Obama
administration
.

But
don’t take my word for it. Speaking to Syrian opposition members at
a meeting that took place at the Dutch mission to the United Nations
(UN), then Secretary of State John Kerry 
stated,

The
problem is that the Russians don’t care about international law,
but we do. And we don’t have the basis – our lawyers tell us –
unless we have the UN Security Council Resolution, which the Russians
can veto, and 
the
Chinese
,
or unless we are under attack from the folks there, or unless we are
invited in. 
Russia is
invited in by the legitimate regime – well it’s illegitimate in
our mind – but by the regime. And so they were invited in and we
are not invited in.

We’re
flying in an airspace there where they can turn on the air defences
and we would have a very different scene. The only reason they are
letting us fly is because we are going after IS. If we were going
after Assad, those air defences, we would have to take out all the
air defences, and we don’t have the legal justification, frankly,
unless we stretch it way beyond the law.”

Despite
having this knowledge, it didn’t stop the US from doing what it
does best – accounting for at least 90% of the strikes on Raqqa.
Ignatius is wrong: it is not a mistake to provoke the United States.
Raqqa never provoked anyone. Just like Vietnam, Libya,
Korea, 
Iraq and
everywhere else before it, it joins a long list of territories forced
to pay the highest price for reasons that cannot and will not ever be
justified, let alone investigated by the United States.

By Darius
Shahtahmasebi
 Republished
with permission / 
Express
Tribune
 / Report
a typo

=====================================

* Zie:

Tot slot dient nogmaals opgemerkt te worden dat de VS illegaal aanwezig is op Syrische bodem, daarnaast zonder enige VN resolutie Syrisch grondgebied bombardeert en zich schuldig maakt aan enorme oorlogsmisdaden, zoals je hierboven kon lezen…….

Zie ook: ‘Voorbeeld BBC en AD propaganda inzake Idlib (Syrië)

Voor meer berichten over Raqqa, Mosul en Aleppo, klik op het desbetreffende label direct onder dit bericht. (na een aantal berichten volgt hetzelfde bericht keer op keer, even opnieuw onder het laatst gelezen bericht op het desbetreffende label klikken en je krijgt weer een aantal berichten te zien)

Amnesty International: bombardementen op Raqqa van VS coalitie hebben honderden burgers gedood…….

Amnesty
kwam gisteren met
de
uitkomsten van een onderzoek in de Syrische stad Raqqa naar het
aantal (massa-) moorden die de VS coalitie daar met bombardementen heeft
begaan…..

Je
weet waarschijnlijk nog wel dat o.a. De VN, een paar ngo’s en een
paar westerse landen de VS opriepen te stoppen met de bombardementen op
de stad. Helaas aan dovemansoren, net als in het Iraakse West-Mosul
ging m.n. de VS gewoon door met bombarderen……….*  

Amnesty
spreekt over honderden doden, echter als ik me niet vergis werden er
na de inname van de stad duizenden mensen vermist……. Het is als
in het Iraakse West-Mosul, hoewel men daar na ‘de bevrijding’ hele
huizenblokken heeft gebulldozerd
, zonder eerst
de lijken onder het puin vandaan te halen……. Ook daar gaf men toe een honderden burgerslachtoffers te hebben gemaakt, hoewel deskundigen zeggen dat het er
minstens 30.000 moeten zijn……

90%
van de bombardementen op Raqqa (en eerder in het Iraakse West-Mosul) werden door de VS uitgevoerd. Groot-Brittannië
voerde 215 bombardementen uit op Raqqa en als bij eerdere bombardementen van
GB (ook in Irak) stelt de legerleiding dat het geen
burgerslachtoffers heeft gemaakt……. Het is dat ‘t allemaal zo
triest en smerig is, anders zou je je daadwerkelijk doodlachen,
jezus!!

Het aantal doden is moeilijk na te trekken, ten eerste daar men de overledenen binnen 24 uur moet begraven volgens islam voorschriften. Daarnaast waren journalisten niet welkom in Mosul en Raqqa (en andere gebombardeerde steden, bombardementen die volgens het Verdrag van Genève als oorlogsmisdaden moeten worden aangemerkt……)

Weet niet hoe het momenteel met Nederland zit, voeren wij nog
bombardementen uit in Irak en verkenningsvluchten boven Syrië? Zo ja,
dan wordt er in feite in de landen gemoord middels ons belastinggeld
(en met F16 straaljagers, die volgens een aantal ministers uit de
kabinetten Balkenende en Rutte 1 en 2, van ellende uit de lucht zouden vallen…..)…. Vandaar dat we nu de meer dan waardeloze JSF (F35) van
Lockheed Martin gaan kopen, tegen een godsvermogen aan
belastinggeld……..

Syria:
US-led Coalition’s aerial attacks in Raqqa killed hundreds of
civilians – new report

The
devastation in the city is as bad as any Amnesty has seen in decades
of covering conflicts around the world © Amnesty International

First-hand
investigations in the destroyed city reveal extent of civilian
casualties, as Coalition’s ‘war of annihilation’ decimated
extended families and neighbourhoods

On
the ground in Raqqa we witnessed a level of destruction comparable to
anything we’ve seen in decades of covering the impact of wars’ –
Donatella Rovera

City
was blitzed but ISIS fighters were allowed safe passage out of Raqqa
in deal with Coalition and Kurdish forces 

UK
carried out 215 airstrikes but claims it killed no civilians

The
UK needs to come clean over its role in this carnage’ – Kate Allen

US-led
Coalition forces killed hundreds of civilians – and injured thousands
– in the Syrian city of Raqqa in the process of “liberating” them
from the Islamic State armed group, Amnesty International said in a
new report today, ahead of tomorrow’s one-year anniversary of the
Raqqa offensive.

Amnesty
researchers visited 42 Coalition airstrike sites across the ruined
city and interviewed 112 civilian residents who survived the carnage
while losing loved ones in the attacks.

The
victims highlighted in Amnesty’s report cut across the city’s
socio-economic spectrum and range in age from a one-year-old baby
girl to a man in his 80s. 

Their
harrowing stories and immense losses stand in stark contrast to the
Coalition’s repeated claims that they took great pains to minimise
civilian casualties. In September, at the height of the conflict,
Coalition commander US Lt Gen Stephen Townsend wrote that “there
has never been a more precise air campaign in the history of armed
conflict”. Raqqa residents, such as airstrike survivor Munira
Hashish, tell a different story: 

Those
who stayed died and those who tried to run away died. We couldn’t
afford to pay the smugglers; we were trapped.” 

She
and her children eventually managed to escape through a minefield “by
walking over the blood of those who were blown up as they tried to
flee ahead of us.”

Raqqa’s
residents were trapped as fighting raged between ISIS militants and
Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) fighters, supported by the
Coalition’s air and artillery strikes. Meanwhile, ISIS mined escape
routes and shot at civilians trying to flee. Hundreds of civilians
were killed: some in their homes, some in the very places where
they’d sought refuge, and others as they tried to escape. 

Amnesty’s
research and Raqqa residents’ accounts – detailed in the 70-page
report,
 ‘War
of annihilation’: Devastating Toll on Civilians, Raqqa
 –
throw into serious question the Coalition’s insistence that their
forces did enough to minimise civilian harm. The report details four
emblematic cases (see below) of civilian families brutally impacted
by the aerial bombardment. 


Between them, they lost 90 relatives and
neighbours – 39 from a single family – almost all killed by Coalition
airstrikes. Amnesty believes the cases are part of a wider pattern
and provide a strong prima facie case that many lethal Coalition air
and artillery strikes were disproportionate or indiscriminate attacks
carried out in violation of international humanitarian law and are
potential war crimes.

Shortly
before the military campaign, US Defence Secretary James Mattis spoke
of a “war of annihilation” against ISIS in Raqqa, and from 6 June
to 12 October 2017 the US-led Coalition operation – involving US,
British and French forces – carried out tens of thousands of
airstrikes. The US military said it fired 30,000 artillery rounds
during the offensive, while its forces are known to have been
responsible for more than 90% of the airstrikes. Much of the city was
destroyed, with countless homes, private and public buildings and
infrastructure reduced to rubble or damaged beyond repair.  

Amnesty
has written to defence officials in the USA, UK and France seeking
additional information about the report’s cases and other attacks,
with Amnesty asking about Coalition tactics, specific means and
methods of attack, choice of targets, and precautions taken in the
planning and execution of attacks, and about any investigations
carried out to date. 

Donatella
Rovera, a Senior Crisis Response Adviser at Amnesty International,
said:

The
Coalition’s claims that its precision air campaign allowed it to
bomb ISIS out of Raqqa while causing very few civilian casualties do
not stand up to scrutiny. 

On
the ground in Raqqa we witnessed a level of destruction comparable to
anything we’ve seen in decades of covering the impact of wars. 

A
senior US military official said that more artillery shells were
launched into Raqqa than anywhere since the Vietnam war. Given that
artillery shells have margin of error of over 100 metres, it is no
surprise that the result was mass civilian casualties.

When
so many civilians are killed in attack after attack, something is
clearly wrong, and to make this tragedy worse, so many months later
the incidents have not been investigated. The victims deserve
justice.”

Four
Raqqa family case studies

The
case of the Badran family illustrates how dire the situation became
for civilians trapped in Raqqa. Over the course of several weeks, 39
family members were killed in four separate Coalition air strikes as
they moved from place to place inside the city, desperately trying to
avoid rapidly shifting frontlines.

We
thought the forces who came to evict 
Daesh [ISIS]
would know their business and would target 
Daesh and
leave the civilians alone. We were naïve. By the time we had
realised how dangerous it had become everywhere, it was too late; we
were trapped,” Rasha Badran told Amnesty. After several attempts to
flee, she and her husband finally managed to escape, having lost
their entire family, including their only child, a one-year-old girl
named Tulip, whose tiny body they buried near a tree.

The
Aswads were a family of hard-working traders in Raqqa. Some of them
stayed behind to protect their belongings from looting, seeking
shelter in their basement. But, on 28 June a Coalition air strike
destroyed the building, killing eight civilians, mostly children.
Another family member lost his life when he stepped on an ISIS mine
when he returned to the city to try to recover the bodies days
later. 

Despite
repeated attempts to flee, the Hashish family lost 17 members, mostly
women and children, over a two-week period in August. A Coalition air
strike killed nine, seven died as they tried to flee via a road which
had been mined by ISIS, and two others were killed by a mortar
launched by SDF.

The
fate of the Fayad family illustrates how a Coalition blitz during the
final hours of the battle wiped out entire families in the Harat
al-Badu area of central Raqqa, where ISIS fighters were known to be
using civilians as human shields. The deaths of Mohammed “Abu Saif”
Fayad and 15 family members and neighbours in Coalition airstrikes
early on 12 October seem all the more senseless because, just hours
later, the SDF and the Coalition agreed a deal with ISIS, granting
remaining ISIS fighters safe passage out of Raqqa.

Benjamin
Walsby, an Amnesty International Middle East Researcher, said:

If
the coalition and their SDF allies were ultimately going to grant
ISIS fighters safe passage and impunity, what possible military
advantage was there in destroying practically an entire city and
killing so many civilians? Raqqa’s civilians are returning home to
ruins, pulling loved ones out of rubble, and facing death or injury
from mines, IEDs and unexploded ordnance. The Coalition’s refusal
to acknowledge its role in creating this catastrophic situation adds
insult to injury.”

UK
forces carried out 215 airstrikes in Raqqa

According
to the 
Ministry
of Defence
,
UK forces carried out 215 airstrikes in Raqqa. Up until last month,
UK ministers had repeatedly claimed that UK forces in Syria and Iraq
had killed no civilians. On 2 May, the Defence Secretary Gavin
Williamson 
said that
a UK drone missile killed a civilian on a motorcycle in eastern Syria
in March. Amnesty has written to the Ministry of Defence seeking
detailed information over the UK’s airstrikes in Raqqa.

Kate
Allen, Amnesty International UK’s Director, said:

Civilians
in Raqqa have suffered grievously at the hands of Islamic State, but
they’ve also been imperilled by the Coalition’s disproportionate
aerial attacks. 

The
Coalition’s operations in Raqqa have killed hundreds and injured
thousands of civilians and the UK needs to come clean over its role
in this carnage.

“Having conducted more than 200
airstrikes in Raqqa, the UK needs to be able to show that its
targeting was proportionate and that it took proper measures to avoid
unnecessary civilian casualties in its joint operations with the US
and others. Instead of repeating a mantra about there being ‘no
evidence’ of civilian casualties from UK airstrikes, the MoD should
publish proper data about its Raqqa attacks – dates, times,
locations, weapons used and intended targets. 

Crucially,
ministers should explain how the UK has investigated the impact of
its attacks in both Raqqa and Mosul. For example, has the UK carried
out on-the-ground investigations at the sites it bombed and
interviewed survivors and witnesses?

With
a Defence Committee set to examine Operation Shader, now is the time
for the UK to demonstrate to the British public that the UK’s
military role in Syria and Iraq has been responsible and lawful. The
Government should establish a thorough, impartial investigation into
all allegations of unlawful attacks and civilian casualties from UK
operations in Raqqa and Mosul.”

Operation
Shader is the operational code for the UK’s contribution to the
multinational military operation against the Islamic State armed
group in the Middle East. 

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Aan dit bericht van Amnesty is een petitie verbonden, gericht aan Trump, dus voor VS burgers >> hier de link voor VS burgers of andere geïnteresseerden.

* Bij de bevrijding van oost-Aleppo door het Syrische leger, stopten de Russen en dit leger al 2 maanden voor de uiteindelijke bevrijding met bombarderen, juist om burgerslachtoffers zoveel mogelijk te voorkomen…. Hiervoor was amper aandacht in de reguliere westerse media, later herhaalde e.e.a. zich bij de bevrijding van Oost-Ghouta, terwijl dezelfde media (en westerse politici) het uitschreeuwden het onaanvaardbaar te vinden dat Rusland en Syrië die stad bevrijdden van psychopathische moordenaars, verkrachters en martelbeulen, in het westen aangeduid als ‘gematigde rebellen….’

Zie ook: ‘Voorbeeld BBC en AD propaganda inzake Idlib (Syrië)

        en: ‘VS vermoordde met bombardementen in augustus 433 burgers in Raqqa………. Westerse media alweer stil…….

        en: ‘Raqqa >> BBC World Service en ‘onafhankelijke journalistiek’: ‘Er zijn veel burgers omgekomen bij de strijd in de straten in Raqqa……..’

        en: ‘Raqqa door VS platgebombardeerd >> reguliere (massa-) media in de VS zijn er trots op……

        en: ‘Groot Brittannie gooit meer dan 3.400 bommen af, die niet 1 slachtoffer zouden hebben gemaakt……

        en: ‘Mosul verwoest door VS……...

        en: ‘US Airstrikes Killing Hundreds of Civilians in Syria’s Raqqa

        en: ‘Mosul, stad van lijken: vele honderden doden onder het puin

        en: ‘VS bombardementen op Raqqa moorden hele families uit……….

        en: ‘VN waarschuwt de VS voor het maken van een onacceptabel aantal Syrische burgerslachtoffers met haar bombardementen…….

        en: ‘VS weigert op het VN verzoek in te gaan tot het stoppen met bombardementen op burgerdoelen in Raqqa……….

        en: ‘Raqqa, een strijd als om West-Mosul, echter met geheel andere media aandacht……….

        en: ‘Bombarderen was een probleem in Mosul, maar niet bij het nieuwe Iraakse/VS offensief…….

        en: ‘Kinderen in Irak vermoord middels VS terreur…….


        en: ‘Honderden burgerslachtoffers in Mosul door VS bombardementen, ofwel grootschalige terreur……


        en: ‘Mass Media Siege: Comparing Coverage Of Mosul and Aleppo‘ (met mogelijkheid tot vertaling)


       en: ‘After Mosul’s “Liberation,” Horror of US Siege Continues to Unfold‘ (met mogelijkheid tot vertaling)


       en: ‘Mosul, het verschil in berichtgeving vergeleken met de bevrijding van Oost-Aleppo………..

       en: ‘Iraakse strijdmacht gaf grif toe dat tot hun orders voor West-Mosul ook het vermoorden van vrouwen en kinderen behoorde……..‘