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Anti-Daesh coalition civilian killings tripled in 2017

By AFP - Jan 20,2018 - Last updated at Jan 20,2018

BAGHDAD — The number of civilians killed by the US-led coalition fighting the Daesh terror group in Iraq and Syria tripled in 2017, as battles raged in extremist-held urban areas, a monitor said Friday.

Between 3,923 and 6,102 non-combatants were killed in the two countries, said Airwars, a London-based journalist collective that compiles data from public sources.

That is sharply up from its estimate of the previous year’s toll of between 1,243 and 1,904.

The coalition backed Iraqi forces in a gruelling battle last year to oust Daesh from second city Mosul, as well as supporting a Kurdish-dominated force that seized Syria’s Raqqa city from the extremists after months of fighting.

Airwars said the surge in deaths was likely partly caused by intense fighting in urban areas.

But it also said the administration of US President Donald Trump may be partly to blame.

“This toll coincided with the start of the Trump presidency, which has declared the conflict against ISIS to be a ‘war of annihilation’,” it said, using an alternative name for Daesh.

“The scaling back by the new administration of some measures aimed at protecting civilians” may have contributed to the “steep increase” in casualties, it said.

Airwars said the coalition had carried out some 11,573 artillery and air strikes, some 50 per cent up on the previous year. More than 70 per cent were in Syria. 

It said 766 attacks last year wounded some 2,443 civilians in both countries.

The monitor, which also tracks casualties of Russian operations in Syria, said coalition-linked civilian deaths in 2017 had “far” outnumbered those attributed to Russia.

It said the toll for civilians killed in coalition strikes in Syria had quadrupled compared to 2016, with the battle for Raqqa killing at least 1,450 civilians, while in Iraq deaths were up by 87 per cent.

 

Between the start of the battle for Mosul in October 2016 and the announcement of its “liberation” in July, between 1,066 and 1,579 civilians were killed by coalition raids there, Airwars said.

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