killed in syria, civilians killed
© Nicolas Mirguet

Tomorrow is the deadline for the US Department of Defense to report to Congress how many civilians they have killed in Syria: Will the Department acknowledge the genuine figure or deflate it?

  • Congress 1 May reporting deadline looming
  • Recent research shows more than 1,600 deaths in Raqqa and at least 14 in Somalia from US-led operations

Daphne Eviatar said:

“We hope to finally see an honest assessment of the devastating impact that US lethal strikes have had.”

Ahead of tomorrow’s 1 May deadline for the United States Department of Defense to report back to Congress on civilian casualties from US military operations, Daphne Eviatar, the Director of Security With Human Rights at Amnesty International USA, said:

“We hope to finally see an honest assessment of the devastating impact that US lethal strikes have had, and truthful recognition of civilian deaths and injuries as a result of US actions.

“The survivors, families, and community members have a right to that acknowledgement.

“Our recent research on the ground in Syria and in Somalia demonstrates why this is so critical.

“Effective public scrutiny is more important now than ever as we face a dramatic increase in civilian casualties from US operations. It’s time for the US to lift the veil of secrecy shrouding the actual numbers of civilians harmed, and how these casualties are investigated.”

Amnesty is calling on the US military to thoroughly investigate all credible claims of civilian killings and injuries – as well as whether the US made sufficient efforts to prevent them, as required under international humanitarian law – and to provide compensation where appropriate.

Civilian deaths in Syria and Somalia

Last week, Amnesty released the findings of a comprehensive investigation into civilian casualties caused by the US-led Coalition in Raqqa in Syria.

The investigation – which lasted more than 18 months, including more than two months on the ground in Raqqa, more than 200 site visits and more than 400 interviews – documented how US, UK and French forces killed at least 1,600 civilians during the military campaign from June-October 2017.

The Coalition has acknowledged only about 10% of those, and while it is believed that US forces carried out the overwhelming majority of the attacks, the lack of transparency around reporting means it is impossible to know which forces are responsible for which strike.

Amnesty’s investigation suggests that US forces and allies did not do all that they could and should have done to minimise civilian harm, or to investigate the consequences of strikes afterwards.

Meanwhile, in a report last month, Amnesty uncovered compelling evidence that US airstrikes killed a total of 14 civilians and injured eight more, in five attacks that may have violated international humanitarian law. The research covered just five of the more than 100 airstrikes the US Africa Command (AFRICOM) conducted in Somalia in the previous two years, during which time it claimed it killed and injured no civilians whatsoever.

It has since admitted responsibility for two civilian deaths, prompted in part by Amnesty’s report.

US airstrikes have increased dramatically in the past two years, rising from 16 in 2016 to 36 in 2017, with at least 47 strikes in 2018. In the first four months of 2019 alone, AFRICOM has conducted at least 33 airstrikes.

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