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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

Washington File

03 April 2003

Human Rights Watch Says Iraqi Forces Placed Mines Around Mosque

(Calls action violation of international law) (680)
Human Rights Watch has accused Iraq of storing landmines in a mosque
and planting them in the ground outside the mosque in violation of
international law, the human rights group said in a press release
April 2.
"Iraq has violated international humanitarian law by storing
antipersonnel landmines inside a mosque in Kadir Karam in northern
Iraq, and placing them around the mosque before abandoning the area on
March 27th," the press release said.
This Human Rights Watch report can be found at www.hrw.org.
Following is the text of the press release:
(begin text)
Iraqi Landmines Found in Mosque 
Condemned as Violation of International Law   
(Washington, DC, April 2, 2003) -- Iraq has violated international
humanitarian law by storing antipersonnel landmines inside a mosque in
Kadir Karam in northern Iraq, and placing them around the mosque
before abandoning the area on March 27th, Human Rights Watch said
today.
The British demining organization, Mines Advisory Group (MAG),
reported that it entered the mosque today [April 2] and dismantled
more than 150 mines. Photos of MAG´s activities can be seen at
http://www.magclearsmines.org.
Iraq is not among the 132 countries that are party to the 1997 Mine
Ban Treaty that outlaws any use, production, stockpiling or trade in
antipersonnel mines. However, Human Rights Watch believes that any use
of antipersonnel mines by any armed force is prohibited by customary
international humanitarian law since they are inherently
indiscriminate weapons. International humanitarian law also prohibits
using places of worship in support of the military effort.
"Antipersonnel mines should be viewed as completely repugnant weapons
whose use is beyond the pale, just like weapons of mass destruction,"
said Steve Goose, executive director of the Arms Division of Human
Rights Watch. "Iraq´s use of these insidious weapons must be
condemned. In the long run, they are sure to cause more pain and
suffering to Iraqi civilians than to enemy soldiers," said Goose.
According to information provided by mine clearance organizations such
as MAG and Norwegian People´s Aid, as well as media accounts, Iraqi
forces began planting mines before the outbreak of conflict and have
continued laying them in a number of areas.
The New York Times reported today [April 2] that U.S. troops entering
Najaf found Baath Party and paramilitary forces had laid mines on
roads and bridges leading out of the city. Internally displaced
persons in the Kirkuk area have told MAG that massive minefields have
been laid by Iraqi forces along main routes and around now-abandoned
positions. There have been press reports in recent days of Kurdish
fighters (peshmergas) clearing many hundreds of recently laid mines.
Since mid-March, Iraqi mine laying has also been reported in the south
near the Kuwait border, around Basra, around oil wells and elsewhere.
Iraq was already a heavily mined country. Landmines were used
extensively in the 1991 Gulf War by Iraq and by the United States and
other coalition forces. Iraq is also littered with mines from the
Iraq-Iran War of the 1980s and decades of internal conflict.
Today, a cameraman working for the British Broadcasting Corporation
was killed in Iraq when he stepped on a landmine. Three U.S. Marines
have already been injured by antipersonnel mines in separate incidents
in Iraq.
Like Iraq, the United States is not a party to the Mine Ban Treaty,
though nearly all of its coalition partners are, including the United
Kingdom and Australia. The UK and Australia are forbidden by the
treaty to assist in any way with possible U.S. use of antipersonnel
mines.
The United States has not used antipersonnel mines since the 1991 Gulf
War, but has reserved the right to use them in this conflict. Thus
far, the only reports of U.S. mine use have been references to
Claymore-type directional fragmentation munitions used in
command-detonated (soldier-operated) mode; these weapons are not
prohibited by the Mine Ban Treaty because they are triggered by the
soldier, not the victim.
(end text)
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)



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