What is designated by a “siege” is a technique consisting in isolating enemy forces by impeding in and out movement of weapons and ammunition, supplies and people, with the aim either to compel enemy forces to surrender, to contain them within a particular location or to gain control over an area. Encirclement and bombardment are constituent elements of sieges.

Sieges are not prohibited as such under IHL or international law. However, besieging parties must comply with the rules applicable to sieges, including those that address adverse impact on civilians, in particular humanitarian assistance and access they must benefit from, as well as the rules on the conduct of hostilities, affording protection and safeguards to civilians.

The prohibition on the starvation of civilians, the rules on humanitarian relief operations and the rules on evacuation of civilians are particularly relevant for an assessment of the impact of an encirclement leading to a siege.

See Access; Bombardment; Conduct of hostilities; Humanitarian assistance; Means of warfare; Methods of warfare; Objects indispensable to the survival of the civilian population.
 

OUTLINE

LEGAL SOURCES

Conduct of hostilities

Article 52.2 AP I (distinction)

Article 51(5)(b) AP I (proportionality)

Article 57 AP I (precautions in attack)

Article 58 AP I (precautions against the effects of attacks)

Rules 7 to 24 ICRC CIHL


Encirclement and ‘sieges as a whole’

Article 57(2) AP I

Rule 15 ICRC CIHL


The prohibition on the starvation of civilians

Article 54(1) AP I

Article 14 AP II

Rule 53 ICRC CIHL


Rules regulating humanitarian relief operations

Article 70 AP I

Article 18 AP II

Rule 55 ICRC CIHL


Evacuations

Article 15 GC I

Article 18 GC II

Article 17 GC IV

Common Article 3(2) GC I-IV:
encourages parties to non-international armed conflicts to enter into agreements to give effect to the other provisions of the conventions, including these on evacuations

Rule 109 ICRC CIHL

Article 57(1) AP I

Article 58(c) AP I

Article 51(7) AP I

CASES AND DOCUMENTS

BIBLIOGRAPHIC RESOURCES

AKANDE Dapo and GILLARD Emanuela-Chiara, Oxford Guidance on the Law Relating to Humanitarian Relief Operations in Situations of Armed Conflict, Section G.2, UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), 2016.

DINSTEIN Yoram, Siege Warfare and the Starvation of Civilians, in Humanitarian Law of Armed Conflict: Challenges Ahead; Essays in Honour of Frits Kalshoven, Astrid Delissen & Gerard Tania eds, 1991, pp. 145-152.

GILLARD, Emanuela-Chiara, Proportionality in the Conduct of Hostilities: The Incidental Harm Side of the Assessment, Research Paper, Royal Institute of International Affairs, October 2010, pp. 9–1.

GILLARD Emanuela-Chiara, Sieges, the Law and Protecting Civilians, Chatham House Briefing, International Law Programme, June 2019.

HAMPSON, Françoise, ‘A Terminological Issue: What Is A Siege?’, in College of Europe (2015), ‘Proceedings of the Bruges Colloquium, Urban Warfare’, 16th Bruges Colloquium, Vol. 46, 2016, pp. 91-94.

NIJS Maxime, Humanizing siege warfare: Applying the principle of proportionality to sieges, International Review of the Red Cross, 2020, 102 (914), pp. 683-704.

QUÉGUINER Jean François (2006), ‘Precautions under the Law Governing the Conduct of Hostilities’, International Review of the Red Cross, 2006, 88 (864) pp. 793-821.

RIORDAN Kevin, ‘Shelling, Sniping and Starvation: the Law of Armed Conflict and the Lessons of the Siege of Sarajevo’, Victoria University of Wellington Law Review, Vol. 41 (2), 2010, pp. 149-178.

VAN DEN BOOGAARD Jeroen and VERMEER Arjen, ‘Precautions in Attack and Urban and Siege Warfare’, Yearbook of International Humanitarian Law, Vol. 20, 2017, pp. 163–198.

WATTS Sean, ‘Humanitarian Logic and the Law of Siege: A Study of the Oxford Guidance on Relief Actions’, International Law Studies, Vol. 94, 2019, pp. 1-48.