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AddressDavim, near dav school, Faridabad, Haryana 121005, India
Hours Closed ⋅ Opens 9AM
Phone +91 129 242 3475
Contact PersonD A V Institute of Management
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Date of Upd.
ID2281485
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for services to the food and drink industry and to the economy in Northern IrelandJoseph Patrick Breen, Ballycastle, County Antrim, lately senior scientific officer, Department for Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs - for services to marine science and to environmental protectionProf Francis Casey, Carryduff, County Down, consultant paediatric cardiologist - for services to healthcare in Northern IrelandVictor James Boyd Chestnutt, Bushmills, County Antrim, lately president, Ulster Farmers Union - for services to agricultureDr Jennifer Elliott, Londonderry - for services to the arts in Northern IrelandSteven McCourt, Larne, County Antrim, head of reducing reoffending, resettlement and rehabilitation, Department of Justice - for public serviceJohn Gordon Miligan, Newtownards, County Down - for services to business and human resource management in Northern IrelandTrevor Dale Robinson, Portadown, County Armagh, lately principal, Lurgan College, County Armagh - for services to educationDeborah Elizabeth Watters, Belfast, co-director, Northern Ireland Alternative - for public serviceMembers of the Order of the British Empire (MBE)Dr Roy Robert Anderson, Belfast - for services to science and natureSandra Hazel Bailie, County Down - for services to bowlsWilliam John Gaston Bennett, Belfast - for services to radio and television broadcasting in Northern IrelandSandra Best, Lisburn, County Down, volunteer and trustee, Royal Ulster Constabulary George Cross Foundation - for voluntary serviceStephen John Bleakley, Fivemiletown, County Tyrone - for services to libraries and to the community in Fermanagh, Omagh and FivemiletownKenneth Sydney Brundle, Killinchy, County Down - for services to business, to economic development and to the charitable sector in Northern IrelandGeorge Crawford Bell, Carryduff, County Down - for services to the music industry in Northern IrelandDr Anne Campbell, Belfast, reader, Queen s University Belfast - for services to drug policy and practiceSusan Shirley Cunningham, Belfast, lately president, North of Ireland Veterinary Association - for services to the veterinary profession in Northern IrelandJacqueline Dixon, Ballyrobert, County Antrim, chief executive, Antrim and Newtownabbey Council - for services to local government and to the community in Northern IrelandEileen Lilian Mary Donnelly, Dungannon, County Tyrone, board of governors, the Integrated College, Dungannon - for services to education in Northern IrelandLorraine Foster, Lisburn, County Antrim - for services to people with learning disabilities in LisburnBrian Jozef Grzymek, Holywood, County Down, lately deputy director, Department of Justice - for public and voluntary service in Northern IrelandKathleen Margaret Joy Guthrie, Hillsborough, County Down - for services to the Reserve Forces and to the veteran community in Northern IrelandThe Reverend Matthew Henry Hagan, Coalisland, County Tyrone, chaplain, Southern Area Hospice and Rector of Tynan, Aghavilly and Middletown parishes, County Armagh - for services to hospice healthcare and to the community in Northern IrelandProfessor Anne Heaslett, Limavady, County Londonderry, lately principal, Stranmillis University College - 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Is attacking Ukraine's power grid a war crime?

Jul 8,2022 8:20 pm

By Ben TobiasBBC News

Russia's frequent and widespread attacks on Ukraine's power infrastructure have plunged millions of people Into Darkness , depriving them of heat, power and water just as winter arrives and temperatures drop Below Zero .

Many Ukrainian and Western leaders quickly condemned The Strikes as War Crimes because of the Harm Done to the civilian population. But attacks on energy grids have long been part of Warfare - so is Russia's strategy a violation of International Law ?

With certain limitations, parts of a country's Electrical Grid can be considered legitimate targets if they are used to power military facilities.

This is true even if the targets have a civilian as well as a military purpose, so long as destroying the object would " ".

Iraq's energy infrastructure was attacked by US forces in 1991 - a strategy that has been heavily criticised. Nato forces also targeted the Power Grid in Serbia in 1999. In both cases, the civilian population was affected by the resulting power outages.

In fact, there may be times when neutralising a military facility by taking out its Power Supply is preferable to hitting the facility directly with missiles or artillery.

" Would I rather deprive part of the civilian population of electricity for a limited period, rather than risk killing civilians because of the collateral effects of using kinetic weapons? Yeah, I would think so, " Michael Schmitt - Professor emeritus at the US Naval War College - Told The Bbc .

Russia denies intentionally targeting civilians, and has sought to justify its attacks on Ukrainian infrastructure as Strikes against the " military command system of Ukraine and related energy facilities" according to a

However, even when an object is a legitimate military target, there are still limits on when and how it can be attacked.

" The State has an obligation under international humanitarian law (IHL) to choose a target or a tactic that will cause less damage to civilians. Less death and less injury, but still fulfilling the military advantage, " Dr Maria Varaki from King's College War Studies department Told The Bbc .

Civilian deaths and injury caused by attacks on military targets are not necessarily violations of International Law . But the must be applied, which says that the harm to civilians should not be excessive in relation to the military advantage gained. Parties must also take " " to spare the civilian population and civilian property.

In Ukraine, President Volodymyr Zelensky said after Strikes on cities in November that 10 million people had been left without electricity and that half of the country's power capacity had been knocked out.

At a certain point, says Prof Schmitt, " the civilian harm is so severe that you just can't pull the trigger".

The sort of advantage gained by an attack is also a factor when considering whether it is a violation of IHL.

" Demoralising people, terrorising people, is not considered to be an acceptable military advantage, " Dr Varaki explains. In fact, she says, The Opposite is true: " Terrorising the civilian population is considered to be A War crime. "

As well as Russia's insistence that it is targeting only military objects, the Kremlin has hinted that there is Another reason for The Strikes - persuading Kyiv to talk.

" The unwillingness of the Ukrainian side to settle The Problem , to start negotiations, its refusal to seek Common Ground - this is their consequence, " said Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov .

An attacking force may hope that destroying the Civilian Power grid will lower the morale of The Enemy , but that is not enough to justify The Attack under International Law . There must also be a concrete military advantage before The Attack is deemed legal.

The Sheer scope and scale of Russia's attacks on Ukrainian infrastructure make it unlikely that they can all be justified in that way, says Prof Schmitt.

" We're at a point now where they're hitting so many targets that I can't imagine they're picking power infrastructure that qualifies as a military objective in every case. "

As a former US Air Force targeting officer, Prof Schmitt also doubts that Russia is fully validating every object it attacks - Another requirement of IHL.

" You just can't conduct operations of that intensity and that frequency across an entire nation and have done your required verification of targets, " he explains.

With that in mind, Prof Schmitt believes it is now " pretty clear" that Russia's main motivation, at least in some attacks, is to " terrorise the civilian population".

Whatever Russia's exact reason for targeting the Power Grid , Dr Varaki says it has not previously shown a commitment to minimising civilian harm.

" You can identify a general pattern that The Russian army has not been fully concerned by civilian deaths, " she argues.

By 28 November, relating to Ukraine's energy infrastructure, according to the Defence Minister . Millions were without power, and electricity usage was restricted in over a dozen regions.

But despite that, Prof Schmitt says that if Russia hopes to demoralise the population, the tactic is unlikely to work.

" Historically there is no reason To Believe the Ukrainian morale will Break . . [Putin] is hardening the resolve against Russia to stay The Fight . This is a strategic miscalculation. "

So has Russia violated International Law ? Any future legal process would have to first consider if the huge number of targets could all be considered legitimate military objects.

Even if they are, the Harm Done to the civilian population in attacking them should not be excessive in relation to the concrete advantage gained. And that advantage must be military in Nature - terrorising the population is not a legitimate reason to launch an attack.

Russia and Ukraine are both parties to, where many of these rules are defined. It remains to be seen whether Russia will ever have to explain how its actions comply with those rules.



Source of news: bbc.com

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