It
was with worried expressions that the people of Omis, a small coastal
town on the Adriatic, watched the Cretina River. In that bitter
winter of 1993, it seemed as if death and destruction could come
roaring down from the river at any time. The citizens of Omis, as
well as villagers in the surrounding area, held their collective
breath.
The danger of a deluge came from the Peruca Dam, a huge edifice
that lay some forty kilometers inland, and that, before the breakup
of Yugoslavia, had been part of the countrys second biggest
hydroelectric complex. Serb forces had controlled it since the beginning
of the Croatian War in 1991. Now, Croatian forces were massing for
an attack on Peruca and the 641 million cubic meters of water behind
the dam represented mortal danger to civilians in the town below.
On January 28, Serb troops had detonated between thirty and thirty-seven
tons of explosives in different parts of the dam. Peruca had been
shaken to its foundations, but it seemed to be holding. Had its
walls been breached, the mass of water would have raced in a giant
wave down the river canyon, crushing the villages downriver and
completely wiping out Omis.
Fortunately for the people of Omis, a Croatian counterattack was
successful. Croatian military engineers reached the dam, opened
its sluice gates, and allowed the water level to fall and the pressure
to abate. Their action, and that of Capt. Mark Gray, a British officer
serving with the United Nations as a military observer, probably
saved the lives of between twenty thousand and thirty thousand people.
In October 1992, while the Serbs still held Peruca, Gray, on his
own initiative, opened one of the sluice gates following heavy rains,
thus lowering the water level by six meters.
The Serb military actions were subject to two fundamental principles
governing the impact of armed conflict on civilians as well as special
rules that apply to dangerous forces. First, civilians
may not be made the direct object of attack. If the aim of the attack
on the dam was to wipe out the civilians of Omis it was a grave
breach. If it was to cause them under threat of destruction to abandon
the area for reasons not strictly related to military necessity
or their safety, then the attack was a serious violation.
Even if the attack upon the dam was not undertaken in order to affect
civilians directly, if the resulting damage to civilians and civilian
objects was not justified by military
necessity, and would have been disproportionate to the concrete
military advantages gained through it, the attack would also be
a violation of the laws of armed conflict.
In addition, a special set of rules apply in this case.
According to Article 56 of the 1977 Additional Protocol I to the
Geneva Conventions, works or installations containing dangerous
forces, namely dams, dikes and nuclear electrical generating stations,
shall not be made the object of attack, even when these objects
are military objectives, if
such attack may cause the release of dangerous forces and consequent
severe losses among the civilian population.
On the face of things, it would therefore appear that what the Serbs
did was a violation of the laws of armed conflict. However, as with
so many prohibitions in international humanitarian law, Article
56 of Protocol I is subject to important caveats. In other words,
even so seemingly gross a violation as detonating explosives in
a dam that causes severe losses among civilians is not always forbidden
to soldiers.
Traditionally, the laws and customs of war allow the destruction
of dams and dikes to stop an enemys advance. And Article 56
does specify three exceptions to the prohibition against attacking
or destroying works or installations containing dangerous forces.
Where dams or dikes are concerned, the exception occurs when the
installation is used for other than its normal function and
in regular, significant and direct support of military operations
and if such attack is the only feasible way to terminate such support.
In other words, the article places obligations not only upon attacking
forces but also defenders who might decide to utilize those installations
or the nearby areas for regular, significant, and direct
support of military operations.
The exceptions to the prohibition would appear not to apply in this
instance, since the Croatian forces did not hold the dam and could
not be said to have been using it as a military installation. The
Serbs could also could not claim that destroying the dam allowed
them to fend off the Croatian offensive. It would appear, rather,
that the Serb attacks upon the dam were a clear violation of the
obligation for the Serbs to take all practical precautions
to avoid the release of dangerous forces.
(See proportionality)
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