{"id":95738,"date":"2023-11-24T11:24:41","date_gmt":"2023-11-24T11:24:41","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/airwars.org\/?post_type=news_and_analysis&p=95738"},"modified":"2023-11-24T11:25:12","modified_gmt":"2023-11-24T11:25:12","slug":"tribunal-notice-airwars-challenge-mod-transparency-civilian-harm","status":"publish","type":"news_and_analysis","link":"https:\/\/airwars.org\/news\/tribunal-notice-airwars-challenge-mod-transparency-civilian-harm\/","title":{"rendered":"Tribunal notice: Airwars to challenge UK refusal over civilian harm next week"},"content":{"rendered":"

On Wednesday November 29th, the London-based civilian harm watchdog Airwars will take the UK government to a tribunal. The session is to appeal against the refusal of the Ministry of Defence and the Information Commissioner to release any details about the single civilian casualty that the UK has admitted in the past decade.<\/p>\n

In eight years of bombing the so-called Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, the UK claims to have killed more than 4,000 ISIS militants<\/a> but only one civilian. In the same timeframe, the US has accepted responsibility for causing the deaths of more than 1,000 civilians.<\/p>\n

A strike on March 26, 2018 remains the only time the UK government has officially accepted harming civilians. The Minister of Defence told parliament<\/a> in May 2018 that \u201c[d]uring a strike to engage three Daesh fighters, a civilian motorbike crossed into the strike area at the last moment and it is assessed that one civilian was unintentionally killed.\u201d<\/p>\n

Since then the MoD has refused to release even basic details about the incident – including the location, how it reached that designation and rejected other allegations of civilian harm, and who made the ultimate decision that the allegation was ‘credible.’<\/p>\n

Airwars’ head of investigations Joe Dyke first filed a Freedom of Information (FOI) case requesting such details in early 2021. The Ministry of Defence rejected it, saying that releasing this information would threaten national security.<\/p>\n

In the past three years a number of developments have made the UK’s refusal look even less transparent.<\/p>\n