Civilians Under Fire: Restore Respect for International Humanitarian Law

Publication language
English
Pages
16pp
Date published
01 Feb 2016
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Conflict, violence & peace, International law
Organisations
InterAction

The scale and severity of human suffering in current armed conflicts represent a distressing race to the bottom in disregard for the basic rules regulating armed conflict. Civilian deaths and injuries resulting from explosive weapons have increased by 52% over the last four years. The world is currently witnessing the greatest population displacement since World War II. This is not merely the tragic, inevitable consequence of conflict, and it cannot be excused by the fog of war. Much of this loss of life and human suffering is avoidable. This is precisely what international humanitarian law, also known as the law of armed conflict, is for – to limit the effects of armed conflict.