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Human Rights Watch > Middle East/North Africa > Israel - Lebanon Conflict

Cluster Munitions in Lebanon

 
(Updated October 19, 2006)

On July 24, 2006, Human Rights Watch was the first to confirm Israel’s use of cluster munitions in Lebanon, when it broke the news that a July 19 attack on the village of Blida left one civilian dead and 12 wounded. Human Rights Watch tracked the use of cluster munitions throughout the conflict, and successfully urged the United States not to ship new cluster munitions to Israel. Since the end of the fighting, Human Rights Watch has investigated the humanitarian impact of dangerous unexploded submunitions on civilians in southern Lebanon. Below is a complete guide to Human Rights Watch’s work on cluster munitions in Lebanon.


Briefings

First Look at Israel’s Use of Cluster Munitions in Lebanon in July-August 2006

Events in Lebanon show that cluster munitions pose unacceptable dangers to civilians


Press Releases

United States: Cut Off Cluster Munition Sales to Israel

Israeli Cluster Munitions Hit Civilians in Lebanon
Also available in:   Arabic   Hebrew

U.S.: Deny Israeli Request for Cluster Munitions
Also available in:  Arabic  Hebrew

Lebanon: Protect Civilians From Unexploded Weapons
Also available in:   Hebrew

Lebanon: Israeli Cluster Munitions Threaten Civilians
Also available in:  Arabic  Hebrew  French


Advocacy Letters

Letter to National Security Advisor Hadley on Requested U.S. Cluster Munitions Transfer to Israel
Also available in:   Hebrew



Resources

Cluster Munition Questions and Answers: The M26 Rockets

Human Rights Watch’s complete work on cluster munitions

Human Rights Watch’s complete coverage of the Israeli-Lebanon Conflict
Also available in:  in Arabic  in Hebrew

 

 

 

Fast Facts on Israel’s Use of Cluster Munitions in Southern Lebanon

The UN Mine Action Coordination Center South Lebanon (UNMACC) has estimated that Israel fired as many as four million submunitions into Lebanon during the conflict in July and August 2006. For comparison, Coalition forces used about 1.9 million submunitions in Iraq in 2003, and the U.S. Air Force used about 248,000 submunitions in Afghanistan in 2001-2002.
UNMACC has identified 841 cluster munition strike locations, with more being discovered every day.
The UN has stated that around 90 percent of all cluster munitions were fired into south Lebanon during the last 72 hours of the conflict. Most cluster munitions were delivered by artillery or ground rockets; a limited number appear to have been dropped by aircraft.
The UN has estimated that one million hazardous unexploded submunitions may litter the ground. Demining experts are estimating that the failure rates of Israel’s submunitions were between 30 and 40 percent.
As of November 4, 2006, more than 58,000 submunitions have been cleared and destroyed by UNMACC and its contractors, UNIFIL, and the Lebanese Armed Forces.
Unexploded submunitions are killing or injuring an average of three people daily in Lebanon. As of January 25, at least 30 people had been killed and at least 184 injured by cluster submunitions.
Many farmers have not been able to harvest current crops or plant their winter crop due to the submunition contamination. Unexploded submunitions also pose a threat to returnees, humanitarian workers, and peacekeepers.

Members of the Chinese U.N. Interim Force mine-clearing unit place unexploded bomblets, from cluster bombs dropped by Israeli forces during the recent conflict with Hizbollah, in a box after they were found on a fruit farm near the village of Al Hinneyeh in southern Lebanon September 5, 2006. The bomblets were later safely detonated. REUTERS/Peter Andrews (LEBANON)
Photos of cluster submunitions in Lebanon.
© 2006 Reuters

Related Material

Israel/Lebanon: Hezbollah Must End Attacks on Civilians
Also available in:   Arabic   Hebrew  Persian  French

Lebanon: Hezbollah Rocket Attacks on Haifa Designed to Kill Civilians
Also available in:  Arabic  Hebrew

Fatal Strikes: Israel’s Indiscriminate Attacks Against Civilians in Lebanon

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