----- Original Message ----- 
From: LMNOP <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, June 11, 2000 1:59 AM
Subject: [STOPNATO] Amnesty International report on NATO war crimes inYugoslavia


STOP NATO: NO PASARAN! - HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.COM

"NATO Supreme Commander" General Wesley Clark is
scheduled to speak at the Berkeley Community Theater
on the Berkeley High School campus in Berkeley,
California, in October of this year. For information
on this, see
http://www.speakerseries.net/speaker.htm Join with
Lake Merritt Neighbors Organized for Peace and others
to give General Clark the Berkeley welcome he
deserves.
For some background on the NATO bombardment of
Yugoslavia, see the following Amnesty International
report issued this week.

--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Fri, 9 Jun 2000 10:18:56 -0400
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: YUGOSLAVIA: NATO violations of the laws of
war during Operation Allied Force must be
investigated
Reply-to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

* News Release Issued by the International
  Secretariat of Amnesty International *
  Amnesty International Public document
  AI Index EUR 70/025/2000
  News Service Nr. 102

NATO violations of the laws of war during Operation
Allied Force must be investigated

  NATO forces violated the laws of war leading to
cases of unlawful killing of civilians, Amnesty
International said today, one year after the end of
Operation Allied Force against the Federal Republic
of Yugoslavia (FRY).

  In a report released today, "Collateral Damage" or
Unlawful Killings? Violations of the Laws of War by
NATO during Operation Allied Force, Amnesty
International examines a number of attacks indicating
that NATO did not always meet its legal obligations
in selecting targets and in choosing means and methods
of attack.

  "The 23 April 1999 bombing of the headquarters of
Serbian state radio and television, which left 16
civilians dead, was a deliberate attack on a civilian
object and as such constitutes a war crime," Amnesty
International said.

  "Civilian deaths could have been significantly
reduced if NATO forces had fully adhered to the laws
of war during Operation Allied Force," the
organization added.

  The laws of war include prohibitions on any direct
attacks against civilians or civilian objects, and
on attacks which do not attempt to distinguish between
military and civilian targets or which, although
aimed at a legitimate military target, have a
disproportionate impact on civilians or civilian
objects.

  In various attacks, including the Grdelica railroad
bridge on 12 April, the road bridge in Luane on 1
May, and Varvarin bridge on 30 May, NATO forces failed
to suspend their attack after it was evident that they
had struck civilians. In other cases, including the
attacks on displaced civilians in Djakovica on 14
April and Korica on 13 May, sufficient precautions
were not taken to minimize civilian casualties.

  No proper investigation appears to have been
conducted by NATO or its member states into these
incidents. No measures were taken against anyone
responsible except in the case of the attack against
the Chinese embassy in Belgrade.

  "NATO member states must bring to justice any of
their nationals suspected of being responsible for
serious violations under international humanitarian
law," Amnesty International said.

  "Other states and the International Criminal
Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia should also
investigate allegations of serious violations of
international humanitarian law during Operation
Allied Force."

  "The victims of any such violation must receive
redress," Amnesty International added.

  Among the report's other findings and
recommendations:

- NATO should adopt a mechanism to ensure a common
interpretation of the rules of war that reflects the
highest standards of international humanitarian law;

- NATO's command structure and decision-making
processes on target selection and assignment appear
to contribute to confusion over legal responsibility;
they must be clarified;

- Aspects of the Rules of Engagement -- specifically
the requirement that NATO aircraft fly above 15,000
feet to provide maximum protection for aircraft and
pilots -- made full adherence to international
humanitarian law virtually impossible. NATO must
ensure that its Rules of Engagement fully comply
with the highest standards of international
humanitarian law, are common to all member states, and
are made public to the maximum extent possible.

  "Waging a coalition war is a complex endeavour and
the judgments required of military planners and
soldiers engaged in combat are particularly difficult.
However, the most powerful military alliance in the
world cannot afford but to set the highest standards
of protection of civilians according to international
humanitarian law," Amnesty International said.

Background

  From 24 March to 10 June 1999 NATO aircraft flew
over 38,000 combat sorties against the FRY. The
civilian death tolls given in detailed FRY
government accounts range from 400 to 600. NATO has
not
released official estimates of civilians or FRY
combatants killed. No NATO forces were killed in
hostile action during the air campaign.

  The laws of war prohibiting attacks on civilians
are included in particular in the 1977 Protocol I
Additional to the 1949 Geneva Conventions. France,
Turkey and the United States are not parties to this
Protocol and should ratify it without reservations.

  Amnesty International has extensively documented
and campaigned for an end to human rights abuses in
Kosovo for over 10 years. During this time ethnic
Albanians were victims of unlawful killings, torture
and ill-treatment, and unfair trials by the FRY and
Serbian authorities, although Serbs and others also
suffered at the hands of ethnic Albanian armed
opposition groups.

  The organization documented human rights violations
by Serb forces and others during NATO's bombing
campaign, and continues to monitor and campaign
against human rights abuses against all ethnic groups
under the UN Interim Administration in Kosovo.

  Amnesty International takes no position on the
political issues surrounding the status of Kosovo.
The organization does not judge whether recourse to
force by anyone is justified or not and therefore
takes no position on the legal or moral basis for
NATO's military intervention against the FRY. Amnesty
International focuses strictly on the conduct of such
intervention in light of the rules of international
humanitarian law.

ENDS.../
Amnesty International, International Secretariat, 1
Easton Street, WC1X 8DJ, London, United Kingdom
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