Current:Home > ScamsAmnesty International says Israeli forces wounded Lebanese civilians with white phosphorus -TradePrime
Amnesty International says Israeli forces wounded Lebanese civilians with white phosphorus
View
Date:2025-04-19 17:52:52
BEIRUT (AP) — The human rights group Amnesty International said Tuesday that civilians in southern Lebanon were injured this month when Israeli forces hit a border village with shells containing white phosphorus, a controversial incendiary munition.
The organization said it verified three other instances of Israel’s military dropping white phosphorus on Lebanese border areas in the past month, but Amnesty said it did not document any harm to civilians in those cases.
Human rights advocates say the use of white phosphorus is illegal under international law when the white-hot chemical substance is fired into populated areas. It can set buildings on fire and burn human flesh down to the bone. Survivors are at risk of infections and organ or respiratory failure, even if their burns are small.
After an Oct. 16 Israeli strike in the town of Duhaira, houses and cars caught fire and nine civilians were rushed to the hospital with breathing problems from the fumes, Amnesty said. The group said it had verified photos that showed white phosphorus shells lined up next to Israeli artillery near the tense Lebanon-Israel border.
The organization described the incident as an “indiscriminate attack” that harmed civilians and should be “investigated as a war crime.”
A paramedic shared photos with the The Associated Press of first responders in oxygen masks and helping an elderly man, his face covered with a shirt, out of a burning house and into an ambulance.
“This is the first time we’ve seen white phosphorus used on areas with civilians in such large amounts,” Ali Noureddine, a paramedic who was among the responding emergency workers, said. “Even our guys needed oxygen masks after saving them.”
The Amnesty report is the latest in a series of allegations by human rights groups that Israeli forces have dropped shells containing white phosphorus on densely populated residential areas in Gaza and Lebanon during the ongoing Israel-Hamas war.
Israel maintains it uses the incendiaries only as a smokescreen and not to target civilians.
The Israeli military said in a statement to the AP earlier this month that the main type of smokescreen shells it uses “do not contain white phosphorous.” But it did not rule out its use in some situations. The military did not immediately respond to inquiries about Tuesday’s Amnesty statement.
The rights group said it also verified cases of white phosphorus shelling on the border town of Aita al Shaab and over open land close to the village of al-Mari. It said the shelling caused wildfires. The United Nations’ peacekeeping mission in Lebanon, UNIFI, was called in to help with firefighting efforts as local firefighters couldn’t go near the front lines, a spokesperson for the mission told the AP.
Amnesty and Human Rights Watch have also reported an alleged case of white phosphorus shelling in a populated area of the Gaza Strip during the current Israel-Hamas war but have not verified civilian injuries from it.
Doctors working in hospitals in the besieged Palestinian territory told the AP they saw patients with burn wounds they thought were caused by white phosphorus but they did not have the capacity to test for it.
In 2013, the Israeli military said it would stop using white phosphorus in populated areas in Gaza, except in narrow circumstances that it did not reveal publicly. The decision came in response to an Israeli High Court of Justice petition about use of the munitions.
The military disclosed the two exceptions only to the court, and did not mark an official change in policy.
___
Associated Press writer Josef Federman in Jerusalem contributed.
veryGood! (51815)
Related
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- Crystal Hefner says she felt trapped in marriage to late Playboy founder Hugh Hefner
- Wisconsin mom gives birth to baby boy in snowy McDonald’s parking lot. See his sweet nickname.
- Maine's supreme court declines to hear Trump ballot eligibility case
- 'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
- Twitter reacts to Jim Harbaugh becoming the next head coach of the LA Chargers
- Housing is now unaffordable for a record half of all U.S. renters, study finds
- Thousands take to streets in Slovakia in nationwide anti-government protests
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Claudia Schiffer's cat Chip is purr-fection at the 'Argylle' premiere in London
Ranking
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- Jim Harbaugh leaves his alma mater on top of college football. Will Michigan stay there?
- Fans raise $260,000 for cat adoption charity in honor of Buffalo Bills kicker Tyler Bass, following missed field goal
- 3 dead, 4 seriously injured after helicopter carrying skiers crashes in Canada
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- eBay layoffs 2024: E-commerce giant eliminating around 1,000 jobs, 9% of workforce
- Advocates Celebrate a Legal Win Against US Navy’s Staggering Pollution in the Potomac River. A Lack of Effective Regulation Could Dampen the Spirit
- Eva Mendes Defends Ryan Gosling From Barbie Hate After Oscar Nomination
Recommendation
Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
Residents of northern Australia batten down homes, businesses ahead of Tropical Cyclone Kirrily
The Excerpt podcast: States can't figure out how to execute inmates
4 police officers killed in highway attack in north-central Mexico
Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
3-year-old dies after Georgia woman keeps her kids in freezing woods overnight, police say
Voters got a call from Joe Biden telling them to skip the New Hampshire primary. It was fake.
Trump could testify as trial set to resume in his legal fight with E. Jean Carroll