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 Russian Airstrikes Kill Syrian Civilians  By Human Rights WatchAl-Jazeerah, CCUN, October 12, 2015 
 
 
 Residents Say No Military Target Near Where 17 Died
 
 Apparent
	  
	  Russian airstrikes on Talbiseh in northern Homs that killed at least 
	  17 civilians should be investigated for possible violations of the laws of 
	  war, Human Rights Watch said today. Two local media activists and two 
	  first responders said that the September 30, 2015 strikes hit a 
	  residential part of town at a distance from any apparent military targets 
	  and that no combatants were killed in the strike.
 
 Russia announced 
	  the beginning of its airstrikes in
	  
	  Syria on September 30.
 
 In addition to the strike on Talbiseh, 
	  local groups operating in northern Homs said that jets that they believed 
	  were Russian conducted strikes on the neighboring towns of Za`faraneh and 
	  Rastan, killing another reported 17 civilians. Northern Homs is controlled 
	  by various armed groups opposed to the government, including some groups 
	  affiliated with al-Nusra Front. Human Rights Watch is still gathering 
	  information about these two additional strikes. According to a report by
	  
	  Russia 24, a state-owned news channel, Talbiseh was one of several 
	  towns in Homs
	  
	  struck by Russian forces on September 30.
 
 “Now Syrian civilians 
	  may have to worry about Russian attacks even when they are in 
	  neighborhoods without apparent military targets,” said
	  
	  Nadim Houry, deputy Middle East director. “Russia’s priority should be 
	  to protect civilians in Syria and take all possible precautions to avoid 
	  harming them.”
 
 Local residents told Human Rights Watch that 
	  airstrikes hit the town of Talbiseh at about 10:30 a.m. on the day the 
	  Russians announced their offensive. A local teacher said a school and a 
	  post office were struck, killing civilians and causing severe damage. The 
	  post office building was not being used as a post office, but for baking 
	  and distributing bread in an area where the conflict has caused a food 
	  shortage, the local residents said.
 
 Four local activists and first 
	  responders said that there were no military targets – such as fighters, 
	  bases, or weapons stocks – near the targeted area and that the closest 
	  front line was at least two kilometers away.
 
 The three-story post 
	  office building was completely destroyed, residents said. Mostafa Wakeel, 
	  the head of the committee organizing the bread production, died in the 
	  strike.
 
 Two first responders said that 17 civilians were killed, 
	  including at least 3 children and 4 women, and 72 wounded. They provided 
	  Human Rights Watch with a list of the dead. Human Rights Watch also 
	  reviewed videos taken by local activists showing four bodies in the 
	  aftermath of the attack.
 
 “There were a lot of corpses,” said the 
	  head of Homs Civil Defense, Abdel Men`em Sateef:
 The post office was 
	  completely destroyed. There were many victims, people dead. We tried to 
	  first help the victims who were still alive, the ones we could save. I saw 
	  a leg, just a leg. A man of 50 was wandering around asking about his son. 
	  One of our colleagues from the civil defense died while rescuing the 
	  victims. I personally carried nine bodies.
 The Syria Civil Defense in 
	  Homs identified the rescuer who died as
	  
	  Abdul Lateef Duhaik, 18.
 
 Russian officials did not issue any 
	  specific comments regarding the strike on Talbiseh. During a media 
	  briefing about the results of the first day of air operations, the 
	  official representative of the Russian Defense Ministry said, “In the 
	  vicinity of Talbiseh, the headquarters of terrorist groups of the same 
	  organization [ISIS] and the ammunition depot were destroyed by SU-24 
	  hits.”
 
 Two local activists told Human Rights Watch that they were 
	  certain that the strikes that killed civilians in Talbiseh were carried 
	  out by Russian planes. They said that the planes launched their weapons 
	  from higher altitudes than Syrian planes usually do and that they had been 
	  told by spotters who monitor communications that they heard Russian being 
	  used in communications with the cockpit of the jets flying over the area.
 
 Under the laws of war all parties to armed conflicts are required to 
	  distinguish at all times between combatants and civilians and direct 
	  attacks only at combatants. Indiscriminate attacks are prohibited. All 
	  parties must take all feasible precautions to avoid, and minimize, loss of 
	  civilian life and injury to civilians.
 
 The strikes on Talbiseh are 
	  not the only reported Russian strikes that have killed civilians in 
	  Northern Homs on September 30. Local media activists and first responders 
	  also said that airstrikes hit the neighboring town of Za`faraneh at about 
	  8:30 a.m. The local Syria Civil Defense reported that the Za`faraneh 
	  airstrikes killed 8 civilians and injured 36.
 
 Airstrikes locally 
	  believed to be Russian also hit the town of Rastan in northern Homs, 
	  killing nine civilians according to the local Syria Civil Defense. Human 
	  Rights Watch is still conducting inquiries about these two attacks.
 
 The Russian authorities should investigate credible allegations of 
	  violations of the laws of war and publish their findings, Human Rights 
	  Watch said. Russia should also take all feasible precautions to minimize 
	  harm to civilians in future attacks.
 
 “Reports of civilian 
	  casualties in its first strikes raise concerns that Russia is not taking 
	  sufficient precautions to avoid civilian casualties in Syria,” Houry said. 
	  “After enduring so much, the last thing Syrians need would be more 
	  indiscriminate attacks from the air.”
 
 For more Human Rights Watch 
	  reporting on Syria, please visit:
 
	
	http://www.hrw.org/middle-east/n-africa/syria
 For more 
	information, please contact:
 In Beirut, Nadim Houry (Arabic, French, English): +961-3-639-244 
	(mobile); or houryn@hrw.org. Twitter: @nadimhoury***In Madrid, Ahmed Benchemsi (English, French, Arabic): +1-929-343-7973 
	(mobile); or benchea@hrw.org. Twitter: 
	@AhmedBenchemsi
 
 
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