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NATO
cluster bombs take their toll in
Kosovo
PRISTINA,
Yugoslavia, Apr 28, 1999 (AFP) - When seven cousins from the Koxha
[Albanian] family found a yellow tube attached to a mushroom-shaped
cloth in a pasture, they thought it was a
toy.
They did not imagine it
was a cluster bomb that would soon kill five of them and seriously
injure two others, said Besnik Koxha, one of the wounded
survivors.
The Koxhas, ethnic
Albanians from Doganovic village, 55 kilometers (30 miles) south of
Pristina, were among the latest casualties of cluster bombs dropped
on Kosovo by NATO warplanes.
Rade Grbic [a Serb],
director of the main hospital in Kosovo's capital Pristina, said his
staff has treated "between 300 and 400" people wounded by cluster
bombs since NATO raids began March 24.
"But there were also
many people killed by these bombs," he said.
Besnik Hoxha, 14, and
his brother Ardijen, 2, suffered shrapnel injuries even though they
were at least 20 meters (yards) from their five cousins who played
with the cluster bomb when it went off, Grbic
said.
"I have worked in this
crisis region for 15 years and treated many injuries, but I have never seen such horrific wounds as those caused
by cluster bombs," he says.
"These wounds lead most
often to disability, people lose their limbs."
Cluster bombs are most
commonly used against concentrations of tanks and infantry soldiers
on a battlefield, according to a source close to the Yugoslav army
in Kosovo.
"The yellow tubes and
so-called 'parachutes' found throughout the province indicate that
most of the cluster bombs dropped by NATO in Kosovo come from a
CBU-87 system," the source said.
"This system consists
of more than 200 mini-cluster bombs loaded in a dispenser which is
delivered by aircraft," he said.
"At a certain height,
the dispenser releases the bombs," he said. "But not all of them
explode when they fall in the field."
At
NATO headquarters in Brussels, an official confirmed that the
alliance is using cluster bombs, but only those designed to
destroy tanks [sic!] and other armored
vehicles.
"There are two types --
anti-material and anti-personnel," the official told AFP, speaking
on condition of anonymity. "We are using the
first."
But he acknowledged
that civilians could become casualties if
they tamper with unexploded cluster bombs.
According to the
authoritative "Jane's Air-Launched Weapons" directory, the US-made
CBU-87 "combined effects munition" is a "free-fall cluster bomb"
comprising 202 "multi-purpose bomblets."
Each bomblet is capable
of "defeating up to 177mm (seven inches) of armor," and has
fire-starting capabilities as well, Jane's
said.
But it added: "The
bomblet also has a fragmenting case which gives it a good
anti-material/personnel capability."
In a combat zone like
Kosovo, civilians and military live and operate close to each other
which leaves great risk for civilian casualties from cluster bombs,
especially those left unexploded.
An AFP reporter in
Kosovo has seen dozens of unexploded cluster bombs in three places
-- at [Serb monastery] Gracanica, seven kilometers southeast of
Pristina; Merdare, five kilometers northeast of Podujevo, in the
north; and in the area of Urosevac, in the south on the road to
Macedonia.
It was in the area
south of Urosevac that the five Koxha cousins were
killed.
"There are villages in
Kosovo where large portions of space cannot be accessed because of a
huge number of unexploded bombs," Grbic said.
"Even when the war is
over, they will be a big problem, because no one knows the exact
number of unexploded cluster bombs on our territory."
(End quote)
Minneapolis Star
Tribune, May 15, 1999
Editorial:
Cluster
bombs -- For Yugoslavia's kids, a pernicious gift
Excerpts:
In Yugoslavia, as in
every other land, children wake up on a weekend morning ready to
play. They check the sky and, if it's free of clouds and F-15s, head
out into the neighborhood. They play ball, kick sticks and hunt
through the grass for bits of treasure. Lately they've been
stumbling upon some especially alluring objects
-- bright orange-yellow things the size of soda cans, and shiny
spheres the size of tennis balls. The kids snatch them up. They
explode. The kids lose an arm, an eye or a
life.
This scenario is made possible by NATO, which
has been scattering the colorful trinkets across Yugoslavia for
weeks. The soda-can things are CBU-87 and RBL755 bomblets, while the
bright little balls are ATACMS bomblets. None of them is meant for
children, of course. They're unexploded submunitions -- the little
bombs inside of cluster bombs. NATO likes to drop them on enemy
airfields, because cluster bombs release a shower of explosives that
then explode again -- doing great damage to planes and other
equipment.
But every now and then
NATO misses its mark. It drops cluster bombs not
on a military installment, but on a civilian center. This happened
earlier this month in the southern Yugoslavian city of Nis, when an
airstrike meant for an airfield instead hit a hospital complex and
a market. The damage of such a mishap doesn't end with the
airstrike. That's because the bomblets inside cluster bombs don't
always explode when they're dropped. A good 5 percent of them are
duds -- lying in quiet wait for an unwitting walker to happen by.
They become a kind of land mine,
detonating when they're disturbed on the ground. Like land mines,
they remain lethal years after a conflict has ended -- killing
innocent civilians.
This circumstance has
caught the attention of the acclaimed international group Human
Rights Watch, which is calling on NATO to stop using cluster bombs.
The group cites testing data that suggests that each cluster bomb
leaves behind 5 to 10 duds on average. The danger posed by these
bomblets is anything but theoretical: On April 24, Human Rights
Watch reports, five children playing with unexploded submunitions in
southern Kosovo were killed. Two were injured. The death toll is
likely to increase.
NATO and Pentagon spokesmen insist the cluster bomb is
an especially effective weapon in a campaign like this because of
its ability to devastate a wide area. But similar arguments can be
made for many other weapons already forsaken -- chemical and
biological weapons, for instance. Civilized nations refrain
from using them not because they're ineffective, but because they
hurt civilians as well as soldiers and because their effects outlast
even the longest war.
This war -- any war --
can't help but stir pangs of conscience for the thoughtful... [I]t's
impossible not to wince at the idea that Serbian children have been
left motherless by NATO jets. And it seems right to cry out in
anguish at the news that NATO's weapons are
leaving behind spangly lethal little toys that beckon to little
Yugoslavian children. Surely no wager of war -- especially
one fighting to save lives [sic!] -- should leave such a
legacy.
(End quote)
Message from a cluster bomb: Going after "soft targets" has never been
easier
By Norman Solomon (*) MSNBC
CONTRIBUTOR
May 12 - Hi! My name is CBU-87/B, but let's not be formal. A
lot of my friends call me Cluster Bomb. I've been busy
lately, doing what I'm supposed to. And I sure appreciate the
careful treatment I receive from the American news
media.
I get a little jealous
of the exaggerated notoriety that the news media confer on outfits
like the National Rifle Association. They get credited with the
proliferation of murder and mayhem.
MY PALS AT THE PENTAGON
put me in the category of a "Combined Effects Munition." My maker
describes me as an "all-purpose, air-delivered
cluster weapons system." Not to brag or anything, but such
labels don't do me justice. When I explode, the results can really
be awesome.
I've gotten to do my
stuff in Yugoslavia this month. One of my memorable performances
came at around noon on a Friday. Some people in the city of Nis were
shopping at a vegetable market when "boom!" I arrived. It was
dramatic as hell.
LOW MEDIA
PROFILE
A news article that I
found in the May 8 edition of the San Francisco Chronicle reported
that "the bombs struck next to the hospital
complex and near the market, bringing death and destruction,
peppering the streets of Serbia's third-largest city with shrapnel
and littering the courtyards with yellow bomb
casings."
This was one of my few
moments in the U.S. media limelight, so forgive me while I quote
some more: "In a street leading from the market,
dismembered bodies were strewn among carrots and other vegetables in
pools of blood. A dead woman, her body covered with a sheet,
was still clutching a shopping bag filled with
carrots."
 |
NATO talking heads: "We have nothing against the Serbian people"
NIS, Yugoslavia
(Reuters) - A woman lies dead beside a bag of carrots Friday
after a NATO daylight air raid near a market over the town of
Nis south of Belgrade. Two residential
areas and a hospital were hit by what appears to be cluster
bombs killing 15 people, injuring scores with shrapnel
and destroying some 30 homes. Photo by Desmond
Boylan |
From the editors of this web site: Whenever a Serbian person is murdered the Western media leaves
the person nameless. We want to identify the victim.
This Serbian
woman is Vera Ilic. She was buying vegetables in a crowded marketplace
in the Serbian town of Nis. It was May 7, 1999, 11:20am. This
is the busiest time of day for the
marketplace. At this time from the safety of unreachable
heights NATO cowards dropped cluster bombs into the market.
Vera Ilic died slowly from her wounds.
Her murderers are still at large.
Guess what, because the NATO pilots are American their acts of
mass murder will not be judged by the
Hague "Tribunal." |
I know, it's immodest
to flaunt my press notices. But people don't get to see those sorts
of news accounts very much in America! If the stories are reported
at all, they're usually buried (ha ha) on back pages of newspapers
and rarely even mentioned on the networks.
UNPLEASANT
MORALIZING
Once in a while, some
Western journalist decides to put me down. The moralizing can be
unpleasant. For instance, BBC correspondent John Simpson has been
reporting from Belgrade, and he did a rather brusque commentary that
the Sunday Telegraph in London published a few days
ago.
"In Novi Sad and Nis,
and several other places across Serbia and Kosovo where there are no
foreign journalists, heavier bombing has brought more accidents,"
Simpson carped. He complained that cluster bombs "explode in the air
and hurl shards of shrapnel over a wide radius." And he went on to
say: "Used against human beings, cluster bombs
are some of the most savage weapons of modern
warfare."
Cluster bombs like me
could do without the overheated pejoratives, thank you. Fortunately,
we hardly ever have to endure such indignities in the American
press.
But please don't forget
the very real accomplishments that I can partially claim as my own.
The next time you see a headline or hear a
newscaster referring to the "air campaign," remember that my
achievements are outrageously understated by such
jargon.
IN SEARCH OF SOFT
TARGETS
When those high school
students died in Colorado, the news media kept saying what a
horrendous tragedy it was. But what about the work I've done on kids
and grownups in Yugoslavia?
You see, I'm a
1,000-pound marvel, a cluster bomb with an ingenious design. When I
go off, a couple of hundred "bomblets" shoot out in all directions,
aided by little parachutes that look like inverted umbrellas. Those
"chutes slow down the descent of the bomblets and disperse them so
they'll hit plenty of what my maker calls "soft targets." Before
that happens, though, each bomblet breaks into about 300 pieces of
jagged steel shrapnel.
Sometimes, as a cluster
bomb, I get a little jealous of the exaggerated notoriety that the
news media confer on outfits like the National Rifle Association.
They get credited with the proliferation of murder and
mayhem.
Well, they're rank
amateurs! Piddling sidearms pushers! Compared to me, they're
small-time retailers. I'm into wholesale. They don't know how to
preserve, protect and defend the Grim Reaper as I
do.
SELECTIVE
FOCUS
I just laugh when I
read the nasty things that so many editorial writers and pundits
have been writing about the NRA. While they rant and rail against
assault rifles that take a few lives now and again in the United
States, I've been busy slicing up tender human bodies in
Yugoslavia.
When those high school
students died in Colorado, the news media kept saying what a
horrendous tragedy it was. But what about the work I've done on kids
and grownups in Yugoslavia? Journalists merely echo the statements
coming out of the White House, mumbling that it's regrettable and
can't be helped.
The pundits keep
talking about gun control. Meanwhile, big bombs like me are
increasingly out of control as we roam the skies above
Yugoslavia.
Overall, this has been
a great spring for me. And from the standpoint of public relations,
I'm doing fine. Back in the offices of top Washington officials, and
in the upper echelons of American news media, I've got lots of
friends in very high places. They may pretend not to know me, but we
understand each other very well.
(End quote)
Norman Solomon is a media critic based in San Francisco and
author of books, including "Habits of Highly Deceptive
Media.".
Strictly speaking,
cluster bombs are not specifically
outlawed by the Geneva Conventions. In fact they are prohibited by Article 35 of the Protocol
Additional to the Geneva Conventions (Protocol I) which
states:
"2. It is prohibited to
employ weapons, projectiles and material and methods of warfare of a
nature to cause superfluous injury or unnecessary
suffering."
In addition, Article 13
of Protocol II additional to the Geneva Conventions, which applies
to armed conflict not of an international character, provides
that:
"2. The civilian
population as such, as well as individual civilians, shall not be
the object of attack. ..."
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