Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) militants have used cluster
munitions in Syria in at least one location and Syria's regime is
continuing to use the widely banned weapon, Human Rights Watch said
Monday.
The New York-based group, citing reports from local
Kurdish officials and photographic evidence, said IS fighters had used
cluster bombs on July 12 and August 14.
They were deployed in
fighting around the town of Ayn al-Arab in Aleppo province, near the
border with Turkey, in clashes between the militant group and local
Kurdish fighters.
The group said it was believed to be the first time ISIS had used cluster bombs, and it was unclear how it had acquired them.
Cluster munitions contain dozens or hundreds of small bomblets and can be fired in rockets or dropped from the air.
They spread explosives over large areas and are indiscriminate in
nature, often continuing to maim and kill long after the initial attack
when previously unexploded bomblets detonate.
The weapons have
been used by the Syrian government as well in its battle against rebels
seeking to overthrow President Bashar al-Assad.
HRW said Syrian
government forces had used at least 249 cluster munitions since
mid-2012, according to video and film evidence, witness accounts, and
research.
Syria is not a party to the Convention on Cluster Munitions, which has also not been signed by the United States.
HRW urged all members of the international community to accede to the
treaty, and also repeated a call for arms embargoes on the Syrian
government and any other party committing abuses in the country's
conflict.
"Any use of cluster munitions deserves condemnation,
but the best response is for all nations to join the treaty banning them
and work collectively to rid the world of these weapons," said HRW arms
division director Steve Goose.
"The UN Security Council should
impose an arms embargo on the Syrian government and other armed groups
that commit systematic or widespread rights abuses," the group added in
the statement.
More than 191,000 people have been killed in
Syria since the conflict there began in March 2011, according to the
United Nations.
Human Rights Watch: ISIS using cluster bombs

AFP
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