These are the individual sub-munitions from the BL-755 aircraft bomb.
From the series of poictures, it appears that there was a single weapon that malfunctioned, landing on the ground with dispersing all (or possibly any) of its cargo of 147 bomblets. Around 11-15 bomblets remained in the crushed remains of the bomb; a further 68-72 are laid out in the tiled room. Thus the total recovered is roughly between 79 and 87. This is more than half the original number packed in the bomb.The cluster bomb was most likely dropped by Saudi Arabia-led coalition forces. Out of the coalition members, UAE and Saudi Arabia are known to possess this type of cluster bombs in their stockpiles. Picture taken at YEMAC (local demining organisation) storage center in Hayran, Hajjah.
TOPSHOT - Syrian men carrying babies make their way through the rubble of destroyed buildings following a reported air strike on the rebel-held Salihin neighbourhood of the northern city of Aleppo, on September 11, 2016.
Air strikes have killed dozens in rebel-held parts of Syria as the opposition considers whether to join a US-Russia truce deal due to take effect on September 12. / AFP / AMEER ALHALBI (Photo credit should read AMEER ALHALBI/AFP/Getty Images)
Smouldering debris of burned houses is seen in Warpait village, a Muslim village in Maungdaw located in Rakhine State on October 14, 2016 as the government announced that terror groups were behind the series of attacks
Towns and villages across northern Rakhine state were deserted on October 14, as terrified residents fled a deadly military crackdown on foot and by air, fearing Myanmar's restive western state could once again be ripped apart by violence. / AFP / YE AUNG THU (Photo credit should read YE AUNG THU/AFP/Getty Images)
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