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Civilian Toll in Libyan-Egyptian Derna Air
Strikes, Seven Dead, Dozens Injured,
a Human Rights Watch Statement
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, February
28, 2015
At least seven civilians, including three children,
died in the joint Egyptian/Libyan airstrikes on the eastern city
of Derna on February 16, 2015, Human Rights Watch said today.
Libya and Egypt should conduct speedy and transparent
investigations into the deaths.
Indiscriminate attacks
that cannot or do not distinguish between military targets and
civilians or civilian infrastructure violate the laws of war.
Serious violations of the laws of war, carried out with criminal
intent, may be war crimes.
Egypt said on February 16 that it had carried out air
strikes targeting extremist militants in Derna. This followed
the
mass killing of 21 Coptic Christians, including 20 Egyptians
on February 15 by militants who pledged allegiance to the
extremist group Islamic State (also known as ISIS). Libya’s army
chief of staff issued a
statement confirming its coordination with Egypt in
conducting the Derna air strikes. Forces loyal to the
internationally recognized government, based out of eastern
Libya, are engaged in an armed conflict with militant groups,
including groups that pledged allegiance to ISIS, in the eastern
region.
“Egypt and Libya say they are fighting extremists
affiliated with ISIS, but that doesn’t give them a free hand to
kill civilians,” said
Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East and North Africa director at
Human Rights Watch. “All parties to the conflicts in Libya need
to do their utmost to spare civilians and should immediately
investigate any civilian casualties.”
Human Rights Watch
documented seven civilian deaths that appear to be a result of
the airstrikes on Derna, and interviewed families of six of the
victims by phone, all killed in their homes in the eastern
city’s Al-Shiha neighborhood. The dead included a mother, Rabiha
al-Mansouri, and three of her four children, Afraa, Zakaria, and
Huthaifa al-Karshoufi, who died when a missile hit their home.
Others were Osama al-Shteiwi, a student who was watching from
the roof of his home, who was hit by shrapnel; Attia Bousheiba
al-Shaari, who died after the front of his house collapsed on
him; and Hanan Faraj al-Drissi, who was on the roof of her home
when a missile struck the street in front.
Residents told
Human Rights Watch that the air strikes wounded at least 20
other civilians, some of whom were in intensive care at
al-Hreish hospital.
Family members interviewed by Human
Rights Watch said military plane over-flights and air strikes
started at about 5 a.m., and many residents went onto their
rooftops to observe them. All of the interviewees said that two
missiles struck their neighborhood between 7 and 7:30 a.m. and
that none of the homes that were hit were being used to store
weapons or ammunition by local militiamen.
The head of
Libya’s air force, which operates under the authority of Libya’s
internationally recognized government based in eastern Libya,
said in an
interview that his forces had carried out “air strikes on
houses in the city of Derna, which were the headquarters for
ground launchers and weapons for the organization Daesh [ISIS],”
and that the air strikes killed between 40 and 50 militants. He
made no reference to civilian casualties.
Attacks
targeting civilians or civilian property, and attacks that do
not or cannot discriminate between civilians and fighters, are
prohibited under the international laws governing the conduct of
armed conflicts. Attacks that are intended to punish civilians,
including family members of a commander or fighter from an
opposing faction, constitute collective punishment, which is
also unlawful. Attacks that cause extensive and disproportionate
destruction of property when carried out unlawfully and wantonly
are also prohibited, Human Rights Watch said.
All parties
to the conflicts in Libya, which now includes Egypt, are
required to abide by the laws of war, which require them to take
all feasible steps to protect civilians. Attacking parties are
required by international law to take into account the risk to
civilians that an attack would pose even if opposing forces are
present and have situated military targets within or near
populated areas.
Certain serious violations of the laws
of war, when committed with criminal intent, are war crimes.
Those who commit, order, assist, or have command responsibility
for war crimes are subject to prosecution by domestic courts or
the International Criminal Court (ICC), which has jurisdiction
over war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide committed
in Libya since February 15, 2011, under United Nations Security
Council Resolution 1970.
ICC investigations in Libya
remain limited to cases from 2011 involving officials of the
former Gaddafi government. Despite ongoing serious crimes that
may amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity in Libya,
the prosecutor of the ICC has not brought any additional cases
and has not announced any new investigations. The prosecutor
should examine reports of serious ongoing crimes in Libya, with
a view to determining whether further investigations are
warranted.
The UN Human Rights Council should establish
an investigative mechanism or appoint a special rapporteur on
Libya to investigate all serious and widespread human rights
violations in Libya, which may constitute possible war crimes
and crimes against humanity, with the view to ensuring that
those responsible for serious crimes are held accountable.
In 2014 the UN Security Council adopted resolution 2174,
which threatens those responsible for serious crimes with
sanctions, including travel bans and asset freezes, but the
Security Council has yet to implement it effectively. The
resolution also reiterated that individuals and groups were
bound by an existing arms embargo, as stipulated in Security
Council Resolution 1970 (2011).
“Unless the Security
Council acts quickly and decisively to hold those responsible
for civilian deaths and injuries accountable and to reinforce
the existing arms embargo, there is a risk that the situation
will deteriorate further and result in many more civilian
deaths,” Whitson said.
Armed Groups
Several armed groups in eastern Libya publicly pledged allegiance to ISIS
in November 2014, declared that they had established “Barqa Province,” and
conducted public extrajudicial executions and floggings. At least two
other armed groups have claimed affiliation to ISIS in what they refer to as
the Tripoli and Fezzan Provinces, respectively western Libya – including the
capital, and southern Libya. These armed groups have claimed responsibility
for several attacks, including the apparent mass killing of 21 Christian
Copts near Sirte, and a January 27, 2015 attack on a luxury hotel in Tripoli
that killed nine civilians.
On February 20, armed groups that claim
to be affiliated to ISIS committed twin suicide attacks in the eastern town
of al-Gubba, 40 kilometers from Derna, killing at least 44 people and
injuring dozens more. A statement released by the “Barqa Province of IS”
said the attacks were in retaliation for the Derna airstrikes.
The
current armed conflicts, which began in May 2014 in eastern Libya and spread
to the west two months later, has left the country with two rival
governments: an internationally recognized government based in al-Bayda in
the east, and a rival, self-proclaimed government in Tripoli that controls
much of western Libya. Both claim to be the legitimate government of all of
Libya, but neither has been able to exert control nationally. Meanwhile,
Libya’s institutions, particularly its judiciary, are at near-collapse, with
courts and prosecutors in most cities no longer functioning because of
direct targeting of judges and prosecutors by militants, and general
insecurity.
Evidence From Witnesses and Family Members
Al-Karshoufi Family
Human Rights Watch spoke by phone with two members of the al-Kharshoufi
family on February 18 and February 20, 2015. They said a rocket struck the
family home on the morning of February 16, immediately killing Rabiha
al-Mansouri and three of her four children – ages 2, 6, and 7. Al-Mansouri’s
husband and their 8-year-old son survived. One relative told Human Rights
Watch: “The house was nearly destroyed after one of the missiles landed
straight on it at around 7 a.m. It’s a big four-story family home, and the
ceiling, which is very heavy, landed where the mother and her four children
were staying.”
Another relative told Human Rights Watch that the
bombing almost totally destroyed 16 other houses in the same neighborhood
and caused some damage to another 32 homes.
Al-Shteiwi Family
A brother of Osama al-Shteiwi, who spoke to Human Rights Watch by phone
on February 20, said he saw Osama killed instantly when shrapnel hit his
head as he was on the roof of their home trying to film the air strikes,
which had begun at about 5a.m. He said Osama had returned to Libya from
Turkey, where he was an engineering student, on February 2, when his
scholarship funds ran out.
“My brother and I had been up since the
early morning when we first heard over-flights of military airplanes and air
strikes in the distance,” the brother said. “Just seconds before the missile
landed on our house, I shouted to my brother to come back indoors, but it
was too late. Shrapnel hit him on the head and severed it from his body. He
died instantly.” Osama’s brother said he had not heard any anti-aircraft
weapons fired from their neighborhood although “there was a lot of shooting
that day, from all over the city,” including small arms fire from their
neighborhood.
Human Rights Watch saw a copy of Osama’s burial
certificate, which stated the cause of death and listed the injuries he had
sustained.
Al-Shaari Family
The son of Attia Bousheiba al-Shaari, who was at the family home the day
of the air strike, told Human Rights Watch in a call on February 20 that his
father was in front of their house to warm up the car sometime between 7 and
7:30 a.m., waiting for one of his daughters, when a missile struck in front
of the home.
“We had been hearing air strikes since the early morning
in the city and we heard them coming closer, but our home is in a
residential area, we never expected anything like this to happen,” the son
said. “I cannot begin to describe what it felt like when the missile struck.
I ran out immediately after and saw that the front of our home had just
fallen off. I then saw that my father was lying on the ground next to his
car. He had injuries on his face and I specifically remember blood running
out of his ear. I brought him to the hospital, but it was too late, he’d
died immediately.”
The son said that he had not heard any shooting
from their street before the air strike: “Our neighborhood is neutral. I do
not know of anyone who stores weapons or ammunition. I find it very strange
that our street was targeted specifically.”
Human Rights Watch was
unable to contact family members of the other victim, Hanan al-Drissi, but
spoke by phone to three of her neighbors, who said she died instantly when a
rocket hit her home. One neighbor said that al-Drissi was on the roof at the
time, and that one of her sisters, also at the house, was critically
injured.
***
For information about the armed groups in Libya, witness testimonies, and
details of the attacks, please see below.
For more Human Rights Watch
reporting on Libya, please visit:
http://www.hrw.org/middle-eastn-africa/libya
For more
information, please contact: In New York, Hanan Salah (English, Arabic,
French, German): +1-917-385-4035; or
salahh@hrw.org. Follow on Twitter @HananMSalah In New York, Sarah
Leah Whitson (English): +1-718-362-0172 (mobile); or
whitsos@hrw.org. Follow on Twitter @sarahleah1
***
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