A joint investigation by Airwars, the Danish news site Altinget and The Guardian has sparked a review of civilian harm allegations from Danish airstrikes in the 2011 war in Libya.<\/p>\n
The revelations are the first time a particular NATO country has been definitively linked to specific airstrikes that harmed civilians in Libya. You can read the news stories in English<\/a> (Guardian) or Danish<\/a> (Altinget), and find the full story behind the investigation<\/a>.<\/p>\n
The investigation was lead story on The Guardian’s website on January 25th<\/p><\/div>\n
In a direct response to the investigation, Danish Minister of Defence Troels Lund Poulsen ordered the Danish Armed Forces to commit a formal review of the allegations. A top Norwegian official<\/a> said such civilian harm was “unsurprising” as NATO’s targeting information was limited during the campaign in Libya.<\/p>\n
The investigation also sparked an intense conversation on the possibility of a ‘cover up’ in Copenhagen – with a focus on who knew about the internal review and when. Both the foreign minister and the defence minister at the time that the Danish armed forces concluded their review said they do not recall<\/a> being briefed about the reports. The foreign minister emphasised he would have remembered, had he been told, while the defence minister referred follow-up questions to the ministry.<\/p>\n
Then head of NATO, Rasmus Fogh Andersen – a former Danish prime minister – has refused to comment. Former Danish defence minister Hans Engell hailed<\/a> the “skilful” investigation, but said the apparent cover up “threatens the credibility of the armed forces” in Denmark.<\/p>\n
In Libya, the renowned Arabic paper Asharq Al-Awsat reported<\/a> a number of politicians and human rights activists calling for action against Denmark to seek compensation for the victims.<\/p>\n
Since the 2011 air campaign in Libya, Denmark has contributed to several international coalitions, including the anti-ISIS coalition in Iraq and Syria, which Airwars estimates<\/a> led to at least 8,199 civilian casualties.<\/p>\n
Below is a list of some of the articles about the investigation<\/strong><\/p>\n
How we exposed secretive Danish role in Libyan civilian deaths (Airwars)<\/a><\/p>\n
Podcast: How it was revealed that Denmark likely killed civilians in Libya<\/a>\u00a0(Danish)<\/p>\n
Former Danish Defence Minister Hans Engell: The Libya disclosures once again threatens the credibility of the armed forces\u00a0<\/a> (Altinget)<\/p>\n
Middle Eastern media<\/strong><\/p>\n
Denmark to probe 2011 strikes on Libya that killed 14 civilians<\/a>\u00a0(Arab News)<\/p>\n
New evidence emerges from 2011<\/a>\u00a0(Al Hadath Libya)<\/p>\n