A. P. V. Rogers
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Precautions against the effects of attacks
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The early law of war treaties and writings seem hardly to have addressed the problem of how to protect the civilian population from the effects of attacks. By 1907 the only positive rule relating to precautions against the effects of attacks was the requirement to mark hospitals and religious edifices with distinctive signs. During the Gulf war of 1991 it was alleged that Iraq pursued a deliberate policy of placing military objectives near protected objects, for example, near mosques, medical facilities and cultural property. The provisions of Art. 58 of Protocol I overlap to quite an extent with those of the protocol dealing with civil defence. Civil defence falls outside the scope of this work, which is concerned with the law as it affects the military commander, but Art. 61 of Protocol I contains a list of civil defence measures that can be taken for the protection of civilian population.

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Law on the battlefield

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