Hass refugee camp bombing explained

Hass refugee camp bombing
Hass compound airstrike
Partof:Russian intervention in the Syrian civil war
Location:Hass, Idlib Governorate, Syria
Target:Refugee camp
Time:7:25 p.m.
Timezone:local time
Type:Airstrike
Fatalities:20 civilians
Injuries:52
Victim:-->
Perpetrators: Russian Air Force
Susperp:-->
Weapons:Aerial bombs
Numpart:-->
Dfen:-->
Motive:unknown

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The Hass refugee camp bombing was an aerial bombardment of a refugee camp in the Syrian opposition-held town of Hass in the Idlib Governorate of Syria, which has been deemed a war crime by Human Rights Watch. It was perpetrated on 16 August 2019, at 7:25 p.m. local time, during the Syrian civil war. The bombing killed 20 civilians, including a pregnant woman, and injured another 52 people.[1]

Airstrike

The refugee camp was located outside the town, eight miles from the nearest front line, and there were no military targets nearby. Later analysis confirmed that the bombing was perpetrated by a bomber jet of the Russian Federation.[2] Two Russian Sukhoi Su-24 war planes departed the Khmeimim Air Base on that day, at 7:02 p.m., and were then circling the area. No Syrian war planes were recorded over the area at the time of the bombardment. The two bombs dropped on the refugee camp were identified as OFAB-100-120 and KAB-500. The blast collapsed a row of buildings around the courtyard of the camp.[2]

It was part of a wider Syrian military campaign against Idlib in 2019. Human Rights Watch released a statement saying that "under international law, deliberate or reckless attacks against civilians and civilian objects committed with criminal intent are war crimes".[3]

International responses

France condemned the airstrike on the refugee camp and called for the cessation of hostilities.[4]

The United Nations Human Rights Council recorded the crime in its report published on 2 March 2020. It stated the following:

See also

Similar international events:

Reports

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Syria-Russia Attack on Refuge an Apparent War Crime. 18 October 2019. Human Rights Watch. 15 January 2020.
  2. News: A Civilian Camp in Syria Was Bombed. Here's How We Traced the Culprit.. Malachy Browne, Christiaan Triebert, Evan Hill and Dmitriy Khavin. 1 December 2019. New York Times. 15 January 2020.
  3. Web site: Russia Should Be Held Accountable for Any War Crimes in Syria. 3 December 2019. Human Rights Watch. 15 January 2020.
  4. News: Syria – Air strikes on a camp for displaced people (16 August 2019). diplomatie.gouv.fr. 15 January 2020.