LONDON (Thomson
Reuters Foundation) - Cluster bomb attacks and unexploded munitions
killed or injured nearly 1,600 people in Syria in the past two years –
97 percent of them civilians – an international campaign group said on
Wednesday. Both South Sudan, the
world’s newest nation, and Ukraine also used cluster munitions in the
first half of 2014, defying the 2008 treaty banning the production,
stockpiling and use of the weapons, the Cluster Munition Coalition said
in the report. “Appallingly,
last year in Syria there were more casualties and civilian suffering
from cluster munitions than at any other time or place since Monitor
reporting began,” said Megan Burke of the Survivor Network Project,
editor of the casualties and victim assistance chapter of the report. The
CMC launched the report shortly before the fifth meeting of states that
have signed up to the treaty, which opens in San Jose, Costa Rica on
Sept. 2. The report said
there were at least 1,584 casualties from cluster munition attacks and
unexploded submunitions in Syria over the last two years, and that 97
percent of them were civilians, the highest rate ever recorded. Two
U.N. General Assembly resolutions condemned the Syrian government’s use
of cluster bombs in 2013, and a U.N. Security Council resolution in May
2014 expressed serious concern at their use by South Sudan. The
convention demanded that any remaining cluster munitions be eradicated
within eight years. To date, 1.16 million cluster munitions have been
destroyed by 22 countries, more than three-quarters of the weapons
declared stockpiled under the convention banning cluster bombs. More
than 140 countries have condemned Syria’s use of cluster munitions in
statements and resolutions, including 51 states that have not yet joined
the Convention, the report said. China, Russia and the United States
are among nations that have not signed the treaty. “It’s
not enough to protest civilian victims of cluster munitions—all states
with a conscience should join the ban convention to ensure civilians are
protected from harm, now and into the future,” stated Mary Wareham,
editor of the ban policy chapter of the report entitled Cluster Munition
Monitor 2014.
Most victims of Syrian cluster bombs are civilian: campaign group

Reuters
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