HRW: Syrian forces drop incendiary bombs on populated areas

HRW: Syrian forces drop incendiary bombs on populated areas

PanARMENIAN.Net - Syrian forces have dropped incendiary bombs on populated areas, Human Rights Watch said on Wednesday, calling on the authorities to stop using a weapon that causes "especially cruel human suffering", Reuters reported.

Most of the weapons found appeared to be two kinds of Soviet models, one of which releases 48 incendiary submunitions over an area the size of a football field, it said.

Incendiary weapons contain flammable materials such as napalm, thermite or white phosphorous, which can set fire to buildings or cause severe burns and respiratory damage.

"These weapons cause especially cruel civilian suffering and extensive property destruction when used in populated areas," said Steve Goose, director of the arms division of the New York-based rights group. "Syria should stop using incendiary weapons in acknowledgment of the devastating harm these weapons cause."

The group said it based its findings on interviews with witnesses and by analyzing videos uploaded by activists. It concluded that at least four areas had been hit by such bombs - two towns near the capital Damascus, one in the northern province of Idlib and a town in central Homs province. HRW is still investigating use of the weapons in other areas.

The injury caused by incendiary bombs is compounded in hard hit areas in Syria, where infrastructure has been destroyed by clashes in its 20-month-old revolt and hospitals in rebel-held areas have been badly by army shelling.

"The burns are difficult to treat, especially in conflict areas lacking adequate medical facilities, and the treatment itself can be excruciating," the HRW report said. "Permanent scarring and disfigurement can lead to social ostracism."

The bombs used by Syrian government forces mostly contained thermite, HRW said, citing independent arms analyst Nic Jenzen-Jones.

"Thermite is used only for its incendiary effect and not for marking, obscuring, illumination or other purposes," HRW said.

Activist accounts described bombs dropped from Russian MiG fighter jets, exploding in mid-air before releasing fireballs over a wider area.

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