5 million Syrians at risk from explosive weapons: NGO

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The lives of more than five million Syrians, including two million children, are at risk from explosive weapons used in the conflict, a non-governmental organisation said on May 12.

Handicap International warned that explosive weapons were being widely used in heavily populated areas in violation of international law, and that unexploded ordnance posed a long-term threat.
 
"In total, 5.1 million people -- including two million children -- are living in areas highly affected by the use of explosive weapons, creating an immediate and long-term threat to their lives," the NGO said.
 
It said use of the weapons by all parties to the conflict was having "dreadful consequences for civilians."    

"Because of their blast or fragmentation effects, explosive weapons kill or generate complex injuries," the group's regional coordinator Anne Garella said.
 
"The wide use of explosive weapons combined with the lack of appropriate surgical care in Syria has a devastating impact on people's lives."  

The group's study found explosive weapons had been "massively used" by all parties to the conflict, accounting for more than 80 percent of all recorded incidents of violence.
 
Three-quarters of incidents involving the weapons were in densely populated areas, suggesting "that the belligerents have no intention of effectively distinguishing between civilians and combatants, a violation of international humanitarian law," the report said.
 
The group noted that explosive weapons also pose a longer-term threat, creating injuries that can leave the wounded permanently disabled, but also exposing the population to unexploded ordnance.
 
"The impact of explosive weapons thus goes beyond the immediate...

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