Canadian Bombing Strikes That Appear to Have Killed Civilians Since Justin
Trudeau Took Power in
November, 2015.
Date
|
Location
|
Countries involved
|
Civilians Killed
|
November 19
|
Mosul
|
Canada/US/UK
|
10-13
|
December 3
|
Mosul
|
Canada/US/UK
|
2
|
December 9
|
Ramadi
|
Canada/US/UK
|
4
|
December 13
|
Mosul
|
Canada/US/UK
|
3-4
|
December 31
|
Mosul
|
Canada/US/UK
|
10
|
January 14
|
Tikrit
|
Canada/US/UK/France
|
Unknown number
of
“friendly fire”
casualties
|
January 15
|
Mosul
|
Canada/US/UK/France
|
36
|
Since Trudeau’s election, Canada
has bombed Iraq on 52 separate occasions (including February 3, 2016). Canada's military has been dropping 500-lb. bombs on the Iraqi people (and sometimes in Syria) since November, 2014. Trudeau promised he would the bombing upon election. In the first week of December, Stephane Dion stated the bombing would end "within weeks." Two months later, it continues unabated.
Because there is no concern for
civilian casualties amongst the bombing powers, there is no effort to link
specific acts of bombing to those killed by them. In fact, most governments
insist there have been no civilians killed.This chart is based on information provided by Canada's own War Dept. and airwars.org; it indicates which countries bombed the same location on particular days when reports of civilian casualties were gathered.
That stunning disregard for human life
was illustrated perfectly by Canadian attempts to cover up the CF-18 slaughter
of some 30 Iraqi civilians in January 2015, an air strike that only came to
light eight months later when The Globe and Mail reported
on documents released not by Ottawa but by the Pentagon. They indicated that:
"[t]he Canadian military made it clear to the
United States shortly after the alleged incident that it felt no obligation
under the Geneva Conventions to probe what happened, the Pentagon records show.
'It should be noted that Canadian Joint Operations Command [legal advisers]
opinion is that, under the Law of Armed Conflict (LOAC) there are no
obligations for the Canadian Armed Forces to conduct an investigation.'"
That work of documentation is
left to groups like airwars.org. In any event, these are dates in which
Canadians have bombed, often in conjunction with other countries, and civilians
have been reported killed. This is likely a conservative estimate given limited
reporting sources on the ground in Iraq and Syria.
Source: Homes not
Bombs: Because Canada should build homes, not blow them up. tasc@web.ca
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