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[casi] 200+ civilians killed by cluster bombs




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IRAQ BODY COUNT PRESS RELEASE 4
Wednesday 7th May 2003
NO EMBARGO

HOW MANY CIVILIANS WERE KILLED BY CLUSTER BOMBS?
The Pentagon says 1: Iraq Body Count says at least 200.

An independent research organisation has published detailed evidence of at
least 200 civilians killed by coalition cluster bombs since the start of the
Iraq War (full details at www.iraqbodycount.net/editorial.htm).

The Pentagon has admitted only one recorded case of a civilian death from
cluster munitions in Iraq this year. This extraordinarily low number has
been greeted with widespread incredulity. Human Rights Watch director
Kenneth Roth has condemned it as a "whitewash". Amnesty International has
called for an independent investigation to be held into coalition use of
cluster munitions. So far, however, such critics have not been able to draw
on a firm counter-estimate of the numbers so far recorded killed.

To begin to fill this informational vacuum an international research team
yesterday published the world's first comprehensive numerical analysis of
cluster-related deaths.

Since the start of hostilities Iraq Body Count has been building up a
meticulous and exhaustive compilation of every reported civilian death in
Iraq caused by coalition military action. It has based its work on
corroborated reports in key media sources published worldwide. The research
team has updated its estimates on a daily basis by adding to a constantly
growing on-line data-base (www.iraqbodycount.net/bodycount.htm) which now
reports over 100 separate incidents involving up to 2700 civilian deaths in
total.

Among these incidents are included reliable reports of at least 200 civilian
deaths due to cluster bombs, with up to a further 172 deaths which were
probably caused by cluster bombs. Of these 372 deaths, 147 have been caused
by detonation of unexploded or "dud" munitions, with around half this number
being children.

Many of the press reports from which the data have been extracted contain
graphic eyewitness details of injuries and mutilations confirmed by doctors
as being typical of cluster bombs, including dismemberment and decapitation,
and the riddling of the body with deep shrapnel wounds.

Authors John Sloboda and Hamit Dardagan said "Public concern about the
possible misuse of these savagely indiscriminate weapons is rapidly
mounting. Our research reveals the shocking disparity between what the world
's press has already reported and what the Pentagon is prepared to admit.
Those who are genuinely concerned with civilian casualties, and interested
in minimising them, can no longer plead ignorance"

For more information contact
Hamit Dardagan (0207 912 1072)
John Sloboda (077 879 75689)
Email: press@iraqbodycount.org



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