As Iraqi forces backed by the United States ramp up efforts to take Mosul back from ISIS, there are reports of scores of civilians killed by airstrikes from a U.S.-led coalition.In a statement, the United States Central Command admitted that its airstrikes had hit an area where civilian casualties have been reported.The Central Command said that an initial review of strike data from March 16-23 indicates that "the Coalition struck ISIS fighters and equipment, March 17, in West Mosul at the location corresponding to allegations of civilian casualties." It said a formal assessment had been opened to determine the facts surrounding the strike and the validity of the charges that civilians were killed.As NPR's Alice Fordham reports, an Iraqi rescue worker, Abdelsalam Abdelkadir, said his team had recovered dozens of bodies and thinks there are many more under the rubble of a densely-populated neighborhood of western Mosul. "He said ISIS was using people as human shields, and that he didn't know whether the strikes were by Iraq's air force or the U.S.-led coalition against ISIS," Alice reports.There has been no official announcement by the U.S. that restrictions designed to prevent civilian casualties have been lifted, Alice reports. But there has been a sharp uptick in reports of civilians killed in airstrikes in Iraq and Syria in recent weeks.The Associated Press says its reporters saw at least 50 bodies recovered from the wreckage of buildings following recent airstrikes.Capt. Jeff Davis, a Pentagon spokesman, told the New York Times that there has been "no loosening of the rules of engagement."
U.S. Says Its Mosul Airstrikes Hit Area Where Civilian Casualties Are Reported
