The
Foreign Ministry has not confirmed allegations by human rights organizations
that Russian cluster bombs are being widely used in Syria.
"There
are a lot of illegally supplied weapons in the Middle East and it is often very
difficult to indentify their origin," Russia's Foreign Minister Sergey
Lavrov told journalists on Monday.
Human Rights
Watch reported Russian cluster bombs were being used in Syria.
"There
is no confirmation of that,” Lavrov stressed. “The region is loaded with
weapons, which are being brought into Syria and other countries in huge amounts
and illegally."
Russia has
been at loggerheads with the West over how to resolve the protracted conflict,
which has claimed the lives of thousands of civilians. Moscow, with the support
of Beijing, are pushing for Syrian rebels and forces loyal to President Bashar
al-Assad to honor an immediate ceasefire and enter negotiations.
Western
nations, however, have thrown their support behind Syria’s political
opposition, which observers say is comprised of various elements, including
terrorist groups like al-Qaeda.
In June,
The Wall Street Journal reported that the United States was working actively on
the ground with the Syrian opposition.
“US
intelligence operatives and diplomats have stepped up their contacts with
Syrian rebels in part to help organize their burgeoning military operations
against President Bashar al-Assad's forces,” the newspaper, quoting senior US
officials, reported. “The Central Intelligence Agency and State Department…are
helping the opposition Free Syrian Army develop logistical routes for moving
supplies into Syria and providing communications training.”
Given
this level of foreign involvement in the Syrian conflict, it is no surprise the
country is littered with munitions.
Human
Rights Watch cited 18 videos that have been posted on YouTube showing the
aftermath of the cluster bomb strikes in recent days that reportedly affected
about a dozen Syrian towns.
Residents
from the towns of Taftanaz and Tamane`a stated in interviews with HRW that
helicopters dropped cluster munitions on or in the proximity of their location
on October 9.
Cluster
bombs are designed to explode in the air after release, sending dozens of
“bomblets” over an area the size of a football field. These bomblets often fail
to explode on impact, and pose a risk to the population who come in contact
with them.
Meanwhile,
Foreign Minister Lavrov noted that due to the Syrian conflict’s
“internationalization” the supply of weaponry there is in abundance.
“It is very
hard to establish who, when and how supplies of ammunition or other types of
armaments got there,” the foreign minister concluded.
No comments:
Post a Comment