Libya: cluster bombs reportedly fired by Gaddafi’s forces (UPDATES) (VIDEO)

GlobalPost
Updated on

Troops loyal to Libya's defiant leader Muammar Gaddafi are reportedly firing into civilian areas of a battleground city using cluster bombs, which have been banned by much of the international community.

Cluster bombs are outlawed by much of the world because they cannot be fired precisely and therefore pose a great risk when used in densely populated civilian areas.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) said it saw at least three of the controversial devices — which scatter a number of smaller bomblets over the target — explode over the al Shawahda neighbourhood on April 14.

An investigation by the New York Times, meanwhile, found that 120-millimeter mortar rounds burst in the air over the city of Misurata late Thursday night, signaling the use of cluster munitions.

"Remnants of expended shells, examined and photographed by The New York Times, show the rounds to be MAT-120 cargo mortar projectiles, each of which carries and distributes 21 smaller submunitions designed both to kill people and penetrate light armor," it states.

However, Libyan government spokesman Moussa Ibrahim rejected claims Gaddafi's forces had used cluster bombs.

"I challenge them to prove it," he said, Sky News reported. "To use these bombs, the evidence would remain for days and weeks, and we know the international community is coming en masse to our country soon, so we can't do this."

Libya has invited the U.N. children's fund to visit Misurata, he said, adding that a Red Crescent and Red Cross team was due to visit Saturday, .

Doctors in Misurata say Gaddafi's offensive in the city has killed about 600 people and left more than 3,000 injured, the Independent reports.

The area where HRW witnessed the use of cluster munitions is near the front line in the fighting which has raged for six weeks. HWR condemned the use of the cluster munitions Friday, saying they posed a "grave risk to civilians."

"It's appalling that Libya is using this weapon, especially in a residential area," Steve Goose, arms division director at HRW, said in a press release. "They pose a huge risk to civilians, both during attacks because of their indiscriminate nature and afterward because of the still-dangerous unexploded duds scattered about."

Miurata has become one of the fiercest battlegrounds of the almost two-month long fight for control of Libya.

"As the last rebel holdout in the west, Misurata has become a symbol of defiance, a place of resilience and determination which is bloody but unbowed despite the weeks of fierce pounding," a report from Misurata in the Independent states. "The defiance of this opposition enclave, so close to the capital, seemed to have enraged Colonel Gaddafi's regime as it lashed out repeatedly in frustrated fury."

In addition to cluster bombs, Gaddafi's forces are using other indiscriminate weapons like GRAD rockets against the civilians of Misurata, the Times states.

Earlier Friday, state television broadcast images of Gaddafi, standing through an open car sun roof — his fist pumping the air — as the sports utility vehicle sped through the streets of Tripoli pursued by supporters. The impromptu parade came as powerful explosions rocked the city.

Will you support The World with a monthly donation?

Every day, reporters and producers at The World are hard at work bringing you human-centered news from across the globe. But we can’t do it without you. We need your support to ensure we can continue this work for another year.

Make a gift today, and you’ll help us unlock a matching gift of $67,000!