Libya witnessed an uptick of airstrikes in September as the Libyan National Army (LNA) air force, back by the United Arab Emirates, increased its campaign to seize areas of the country still outside its control. Local sources claimed 230 air and artillery strikes, of which 141 were either conducted by the LNA or the UAE.<\/p>\n
However, the heavy bombing did not lead to more civilian casualties than in the previous month. Between 14 and 15 civilians were reportedly killed and another 29 to 36 injured. In August between 62 and 71 civilians had been reported killed. That decrease can be explained by the absence of major civilian harm events.<\/p>\n
In the worst known civilian harm event in September, between three and four civilians were reportedly killed by an LNA\/Emirati airstrike<\/a> on the Al Qalaa neighbourhood of Murzuq.<\/p>\n
In another major development, the US conducted four airstrikes in Libya between September 19th and 29th, its first officially declared actions since November 2018. AFRICOM said the strikes killed 43 ISIS fighters<\/a> in Libya\u2019s south, apparently degrading their capabilities to operate in the country.<\/p>\n
Smoke rises after an alleged LNA\/UAE airstrike on Mitiga Airport in Tripoli on September 26th (via Libya Observer)<\/p><\/div>\n
After four months of heavy bombardment, civilians trapped in Idlib governorate finally saw some respite during September thanks to a Moscow-brokered ceasefire which came into force on Saturday August 31st. This resulted in an immediate and drastic decline in allegations of civilian harm.<\/p>\n
Airwars tracked just five casualty events reportedly carried out by Russia or the regime during September – compared to 109 in August. This is the lowest number of events tracked since May 2019. Across these five events, five civilians were claimed killed with nine or ten more wounded. All but one of the events were in Idlib governorate.<\/p>\n
However, while allegations against Russia all but ceased, claims against the Syrian regime continue to surface in both local and regional media sources, with reports suggesting that Russia was providing reconnaissance support to the regime\u2019s alleged attacks on rebels and civilians.<\/p>\n
The second week of September saw a resumption in civilian harm allegations against Russia, with the first coming on September 10th<\/a>. An alleged Russian airstrike killed an elderly displaced civilian man in the village of Duhr in Darkush area. The Syrian Network for Human Rights<\/a> named 76-year-old Ahmad Eisa al Musa<\/strong> as killed, adding that the victim died when Russian warplanes fired missiles near a building sheltering IDPs. Ahmad Eisa al Musa’s son Abu Anas told Al Quds: <\/a>“We were asleep at midnight when we heard the sound of a rocket that fell 50 meters away from us. Everyone came out but my father was late being sick and couldn’t walk easily.”<\/p>\n
Syrian Civil Defense forces carrying the body of Ahmad Eisa al Musa, killed by an alleged Russian airstrike at around midnight between September 10th and 11th (via Syrian Network for Human Rights).<\/p><\/div>\n
There were two events on September 12th. In the first<\/a>, one woman was killed in alleged Russian or regime airstrikes on Sarja, Idlib according to a single source, the Shaam News Network<\/a>.<\/p>\n
The second event that day<\/a>\u00a0– and the worst of the month – occurred in Ma\u2019aret Al Nu\u2019man, Idlib. Two civilians including a child died and five or six others were injured in alleged Russian or regime strikes. According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights<\/a>, “shelling carried out by regime forces stationed in Khan Sheikhoun” killed a child and injured six other civilians. The little girl was named as Islam Sadir<\/strong>. Sources published very graphic images of burnt bodies.<\/p>\n
Islam Sadir, killed in an alleged Russian or regime strike on Ma’aret Al Nu’man, Sept 12th (via @SyrianCoalition)<\/p><\/div>\n
The following day, September 13th<\/a>, one civilian died due to his injuries after an alleged Russian airstrike on the village of Aynata on the Al Rouj plains, Idlib, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights<\/a>. The Step News Agency<\/a> added that civilians were also wounded, though it gave no numbers.<\/p>\n
Additionally, there was one casualty event in Banes, Aleppo on September 15th<\/a>. Several civilians were wounded after the explosion of a cluster bomb that was allegedly dropped by Russian warplanes, according to a single source, @so_ria98<\/a>.<\/p>\n
Between September 1st and 30th, the Coalition reported 28 strikes in Iraq – four more than August’s 24 strikes. It reported no multilateral actions in Syria for the month. However additional ground operations and unilateral US actions also continued.<\/p>\n
According to AFCENT, 137 munitions<\/a> were dropped on Iraq and Syria from the air in September by the US-led Coalition. This represented a 37% drop on the 218 released in the previous month.<\/p>\n
Currently, we assess three of these five events as fairly reported, and likely killing between three and five civilians. The first event occurred on September 4th<\/a>. Local media said that one child, Ali al-Ahmad<\/strong>, was alleged killed at dawn during a landing operation carried out by the international Coalition in between the towns of Maizeela and the village of Marat on the road Deir Ezzor, and the province al-Hasakeh. The operation was reportedly accompanied by a military convoy believed to be from the SDF. Three other civilians were said to have been arrested.<\/p>\n
On the same day (September 4th<\/a>), two civilians were reportedly killed during another landing operation by Coalition forces. According to Asrar7days<\/a>, US occupation helicopters carried out an aerial landing by the lake of Al-Bassel dam towards the east, reaching Wadi Al-Raml and another in Al-Haddaja village. The source noted that this came “amid fear and panic among the residents.”<\/p>\n
There was one further event on the morning of September 19th<\/a> in Al Zur, Deir Ezzor when two unidentified men were killed by an alleged Coalition drone strike, according to local sources. Deir Ezzor 24<\/a> said the men were masked and on a motorcycle when struck, though their combatant status was unclear. Activists told Smart News <\/a>that it was not possible to identify the victims because their bodies were burned, but that they were\u00a0 “most likely to be two members of the Islamic State”. Ain Hasaka claimed that activists later revealed the identity of one of the dead as\u00a0 Abboud al-Fahad, a close relative of ISIS leader Hammam al-Tayyana.<\/p>\n
\n#D24<\/a>:
Two masked men riding a motorcycle were targeted by an aircraft believed to belong to the coalition in #Azzir<\/a> village near #AlBassirah<\/a> city east of #DeirEzzor<\/a>. pic.twitter.com\/0s3MekoKmu<\/a><\/p>\n— \u062f\u064a\u0631\u0627\u0644\u0632\u0648\u063124 (@DeirEzzor24) September 19, 2019<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n