Israeli cluster bomb wounds 6 children in south Lebanon
The Daily Star-Mar 27, 2015
TYRE, Lebanon: Six children were wounded in a blast believed to be caused by an Israeli cluster bomb when they were playing in a field in the ...
Three children wounded by cluster bomb in South Lebanon
International-iloubnan.info-Mar 28, 2015
International-iloubnan.info-Mar 28, 2015
IDF commander: We fired more than a million cluster bombs ...
www.haaretz.com/.../idf-commander-we-fired-more-than-a-milli...Sep 12, 2006 - Phosphorous and cluster bombs heavily used; unexploded munitions litter wide ... rounds on their way to artillery crews in the north of Israel.
Haaretz
http://www.voanews.com/content/hrw-saudi-led-airstrikes-use-banned-cluster-bombs/2746512.html
Last updated on: May 03, 2015 8:03 PM
Human Rights Watch said Sunday it has "credible" evidence that the Saudi-led coalition has used outlawed U.S.-supplied cluster bombs in Yemen.
The bombs are built to explode in mid-air and spread smaller bombs across a large area. They can pose a grave danger to civilians, especially when the small bombs fall to the ground unexploded. Children often mistake the bombs for toys.
The human rights group said it has seen video and photographs of the bombs being used against Houthi rebels in Saada in northwestern Yemen.
Human Rights Watch says it has no information on casualties from the cluster bombs.
But the group's arms director, Steve Goose, said, "These weapons should never be used under any circumstances. Saudi Arabia and other coalition members, and the supplier, the U.S., are flouting the global standard that rejects cluster munitions because of their long-term threat to civilians."
Saudi military officials deny using cluster bombs.
A Pentagon official told the French News Agency that the U.S. requires recipients of American cluster bomb exports to commit themselves not to use the weapons in areas where civilians live.
The official says the Pentagon takes all civilian deaths in Yemen very seriously and is looking carefully at the Human Rights Watch report.
A 2008 global treaty banned the use of cluster bombs, but Saudi Arabia, the U.S. and Yemen did not sign it.
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