The human rights group accused President Bashar Assad of lying when he said his government was not using barrel bombs and said in a new report that the attacks have had "a devastating impact on civilians."
Human Rights Watch said that by examining satellite imagery it identified some 450 major damage sites in 10 towns and villages held by rebel groups in the Daraa governorate in the south and over 1,000 in war-ravaged Aleppo, Syria's largest city. It also examined video and photographic evidence and interviewed witnesses to document the attacks.
The four-year-old Syrian conflict has killed 220,000 people, according to UN estimates, and displaced 6.5 million inside the country and more than 3 million people to neighbouring countries.
In an interview with the BBC on February 10, Assad denied his forces have used barrel bombs, insisting that the army uses bullets, missiles and bombs. "There are no barrel bombs; we don't have barrels," he insisted.
The government's use of barrel bombs, usually dropped by helicopters, has been widely documented by international human rights organisations and residents of opposition-held areas in Syria.
The Syrian Network for Human Rights reported on February 22 that 6,163 civilians including 1,892 children and 1,720 women have been killed by the crude explosive devices since the Security Council adopted a resolution a February 22, 2014 which demanded that all parties to the conflict in Syria end the indiscriminate use of barrel bombs and other weapons in populated areas.
The rights group urged the Security Council to impose an arms embargo on Syria's government and any group implicated in widespread human rights abuses.
"We believe an arms embargo would deal adequately with the issue of barrel bombs," Bolopion said, because it would target shipments of spare parts, fuel for aircraft and other key items.
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