Was reading an article on this today and the point made was that yes, schools are being used as bases, but children have not been physically attending school in Ukraine since the invasion began, and right now the schools are empty buildings with excellent transport links, lots of interlinked, well-laid out space, and multiple bathrooms. Some form of discretion has to be used by the people making these judgements on war-crimes.Sandydragon wrote:OK, technically putting military targets in civilian areas and thus exposing non-combatants to harm is a war crime, Amnesty are right there (assuming that this has been deliberate and the use of civilian buildings has been done before the civilians moved out). BUT, when you look at the Ukraine invasion as a whole, there is clearly one side that is doing its best to play by the rules of armed conflict and the other is hell bent on near genocide. Giving the latter any form of moral cover by blaming Ukraine is incredibly naive at best.Puja wrote:Shockingly enough, Amnesty, that is what happens when someone invades a country and takes over populated residential cities. I can hardly think Ukraine is doing it on purpose to use human shields, given that the Russian military has amply demonstrated how few fucks they give over murdering civilians, so I'd imagine this is just what happens when you attempt to retake populated areas of your country that someone else invaded.Mellsblue wrote:I’m no expert but this seems, erm, ill-thought-out.
Puja
The laws of armed conflict are great in theory, but some are almost impossible to adhere to. Fighting in built up areas makes the risk of collateral damage very high even when precision is attempted, and hard to avoid putting legitimate military targets next to non-combatants.
Can't help but feel that Amnesty are trying to do a Kier Starmer-esque pre-emptive block on criticism that they're not being neutral by showing that they are looking at both sides and aren't just commenting on Russian atrocities, and they've just massively misunderstood how much of a blunder that is.
Puja