|
|
 |
You are in: Home :: News Story |
NEWS STORY
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
Somalia: Stop War Crimes in Mogadishu
|
 |
Human Rights Watch
February 14, 2011
(New York) - The scale and severity of the crimes during the intense
fighting in Somalia in recent months demonstrates the need for an
international commission of inquiry, Human Rights Watch said
today. A recent Human Rights Watch investigation found that all of
the parties to the armed conflict have been responsible for
indiscriminate attacks on civilians since May 2010. Some of these
attacks may amount to war crimes.
The intense fighting in Mogadishu, the capital, between the
Islamist armed group al-Shabaab and the Somali Transitional
Federal Government (TFG) and African Union peacekeepers over the
past eight months has killed and wounded thousands of civilians
and forced all but the poorest residents to flee the capital.
"The world has for too long ignored the appalling cost to
civilians of the fighting in Mogadishu," said Rona Peligal, deputy
Africa director at Human Rights Watch. "An international
commission of inquiry is urgently needed to investigate war crimes
committed in Somalia by all sides."
Al-Shabaab forces have also been responsible for targeted
killings of people allegedly linked to the transitional
government, the forced recruitment of children, and abuses against
civilians under their control.
Mogadishu has been wracked by conflict since late 2006, when an
Ethiopian military intervention ousted a coalition of Islamic
courts from power. Although Ethiopian forces withdrew from the
city by January 2009, insurgents continue to fight the
transitional government and its supporters.
In May 2010 the armed opposition - including al-Shabaab and
Hizbul Islam insurgents - began a new offensive to topple the TFG,
which is recognized internationally. The transitional government
controls only a few areas of Mogadishu. It is backed by more than
8,000 peacekeeping troops from the African Union Mission in
Somalia (AMISOM), and Ahlu Sunna Wal Jamaa militias, a moderate
Somali Islamic group erratically allied to the transitional
government.
The offensive heightened over the Islamic month of Ramadan in
August and September, when al-Shabaab called for a "final
offensive" to oust the transitional government, shortly after al-Shabaab
claimed responsibility for the July 11 bombings in Kampala,
Uganda. Al-Shabaab claimed the bombings, which killed 76 people
and wounded 70 others, were in response to Uganda's leading
political and military role in the Somalia peacekeeping force.
Tens of thousands of civilians fled the city between May and
November due to repeated, indiscriminate attacks of rocket and
mortar fire by all parties to the conflict, and other abuses.
The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) reported on
January 27, 2011, that the two hospitals it supports in Mogadishu
received a record number of patients in 2010, including about
2,300 women and children with war-related injuries.
In November, Human Rights Watch interviewed 82 refugees from
Mogadishu who had fled the offensive since May and sought refuge
in the Daadab refugee camp in northern Kenya. Human Rights Watch
research indicated that both al-Shabaab and the peacekeepers had
intensified attacks in late 2010, killing and wounding hundreds of
civilians through the indiscriminate use of heavy artillery,
mortars, and rockets in populated areas.
"The fighting in Mogadishu has provoked massive numbers of
people to flee the city in recent months," Peligal said. "But the
poorest of the poor remain in the city, with nowhere to go, no
access to basic services, and they suffer constantly from the
ongoing conflict."
Indiscriminate Attacks by All Parties
Both sides conducted indiscriminate bombardments of populated
areas from May to November that resulted in scores of civilian
casualties. Witnesses told Human Rights Watch that civilians in
Mogadishu were trapped between the "hit and run" tactics of the
insurgent al-Shabaab fighters, who generally launch mortar rounds
at transitional government and peacekeepers' positions from
populated areas and then flee, and the indiscriminate response of
the peacekeepers and transitional government troops.
The laws of war prohibit indiscriminate attacks, which strike
military targets and civilians without distinction. Examples
include attacks that are not directed at a specific military
objective, or that use weapons that cannot be targeted at a
specific military objective. Forces also violate the laws of war
when they move into densely populated areas and conduct attacks
without taking all feasible precautions to ensure that the target
is military and not civilian.
Many people interviewed by Human Rights Watch described a
consistent pattern: al-Shabaab would launch one or two rockets or
fire a mortar round at transitional government and peacekeeping
positions within or near populated areas under their control,
prompting a sustained bombardment with mortars and rockets by the
peacekeepers and transitional government forces. These heavy
bombardments of civilian areas have provoked the repeated
displacement of residents.
Witnesses said that after launching their attacks, al-Shabaab
fighters would immediately leave the area in vehicles or hide
among the civilians. People described this kind of operation
taking place in the districts of Hodan, Halwadaag, Wardighley, al-Ashabya,
K-13, Bar Huba, and Bakara Market.
Yusuf, a 42-year-old man from Kismayo who went to Mogadishu
during Ramadan, told Human Rights Watch: "Al-Shabaab attacks from
areas where civilians are. They come to the neighborhood, mount
their mortars, shoot, and leave. [Some] run away and some others
just hide in the community. When AMISOM's response comes, there's
nobody from al-Shabaab there anymore."
Residents told Human Rights Watch that the peacekeepers
typically respond to the attacks with a sustained barrage of heavy
artillery, used indiscriminately. Muktar Barre Aden, a 43-year-old
bus driver from the Huruwe area in Mogadishu, said: "Both sides
attack civilians...but the main problem is AMISOM. They're
shelling too much; they're just bombing from their bases. What
strategy is that?"
Other witnesses said that the peacekeepers responded with
rockets and mortars even toward populated areas where there was no
evident military objective. Areas inside the Bakara Market that
have been repeatedly hit include the fruit and vegetable area, the
bus station, the gold area, the clothes area, and the money
exchange area - all with heavy civilian traffic. The laws of war
prohibit deliberate attacks on civilians and civilian property, as
well as attacks where the anticipated loss of civilian life is
disproportionate to the expected military gain.
A 30-year-old woman from Bakara Market said: "During Ramadan
the worst days were the 21st, 27th, and 29th
days [August 31, September 6, and September 8]. There was a lot of
firing into Bakara. Al-Shabaab hit targets directly, but AMISOM
hit public places, especially the bus and parking at the market. I
lived in the center of the market. This was the worst place. The
parking lot of the market and the bus station and the place gold
was sold were all hit the worst."
Human Rights Watch also received reports that the peacekeepers
shelled areas under al-Shabaab control intensively and
indiscriminately in the aftermath of the July 11 attacks in
Kampala. A 37-year-old merchant in Bakara Market from the Bar Huba
area in Mogadishu told Human Rights Watch: "The day after
[Kampala] they [AMISOM] fired upon the Bakara Market and Bar Huba.
It was non-stop shelling for 24 hours. From that day, [AMISOM]
started targeting civilians more and more."
"Both al-Shabaab and the peacekeepers are conducting attacks
with little regard for the safety of the civilian population,"
Peligal said. "Those responsible for indiscriminate shelling
should be prosecuted for war crimes."
Failure to Warn Civilians
The laws of war require warring parties to take constant care to
spare the civilian population, and give effective, advance warning
of attacks that may affect the civilian population, unless
circumstances do not permit. Neither side in Mogadishu has
provided sufficient warnings to civilians in areas affected by
planned offensives, Human Rights Watch said.
Witnesses in areas under government control said that neither
the transitional government nor the peacekeepers have ever
distributed information to civilians about imminent fighting and
the necessity to leave.
Human Rights Watch received conflicting reports about al-Shabaab's
conduct. In some cases, people told Human Rights Watch that al-Shabaab
disseminated flyers and made some limited public announcement
using megaphones to tell civilians to leave certain areas. But in
other cases, residents said al-Shabaab fighters stopped them from
leaving areas where heavy fighting was taking place.
Targeted Killings in Areas Under al-Shabaab Control
Witnesses and family members of victims described targeted
killings by alleged al-Shabaab members in areas under the control
of transitional government employees and their relatives, or
people suspected to have connections with the government.
A 25-year-old mother of two from Huruwe told Human Rights Watch
that her father and two brothers were killed by al-Shabaab:
Anybody related to the TFG, even indirectly, is targeted with
all of his family. My father was a police officer. When [al-Shabaab]
took over the area, they were asking people in the neighborhood
who was a TFG member. And the neighbors spied on us. They came
masked; you couldn't even know who was shooting. My father was
coming back to the house for dinner; they shot him in the chest.
He was in his police uniform. One of my brothers ran toward him,
and they shot him dead. Another brother was killed later, after
two months. He was beheaded. After his killing, we all ran away.
Under the laws of war, police normally have the status of
civilians. However, police units that take part in military
operations or otherwise engage in military functions may be
targeted as combatants. Individual police officers may only be
targeted when they are taking a direct part in the hostilities.
Everyone in custody must be treated humanely.
Another woman said her family was targeted during the Ramadan
offensive because she and her husband worked for the transitional
government:
My daughter, my husband, and my mother were all killed by al-Shabaab.
This happened when they took over our area. My family was all
killed and I was injured, and I ran away. They were against all
people working with the TFG. Al-Shabaab says people working with
the TFG are all Christians; they used to call us from unknown
numbers and threaten us. After the killings, I was targeted
every now and then; they used to come to my place unarmed. And
my family was destroyed, and I found myself alone in a ruined
house. Even now I live in fear.
Forced Recruitment of Young Men and Children by al-Shabaab
Young men and boys living in areas controlled by al-Shabaab in
Mogadishu are at increasing risk of being forcibly recruited by
the insurgency, dozens of people told Human Rights Watch. The vast
majority of individuals interviewed by Human Rights Watch were
aware of the imminent threat of forced recruitment, and families
with boys cited the threat as one of the main reasons to flee
Mogadishu.
Family members consistently told Human Rights Watch researchers
that al-Shabaab abducted children from duksis (Islamic
schools), playgrounds, and homes, coercing children into joining
by offering them money, phones, or food. The children were then
reportedly trained to fight on the front line, including as
suicide bombers. There have also been credible reports of the
transitional government and allied militia using children, but
Human Rights Watch could not confirm this. An international treaty
to which Somalia is a signatory prohibits any recruitment of
individuals below the age of 18 into non-state armed groups.
"The increasing use of children as cannon fodder is a new low
in the conflict in Somalia." Peligal said. "Any commander who
recruits or coerces children to take part in the fighting is
committing a war crime."
story
url
|
 |
|
|