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The Mine Ban Treaty and the US Government:
10 Years and Waiting
Washington, DC, 3 December 2007 -- Ten years ago today,
the treaty banning the use, production, trade and stockpiling of
antipersonnel mines was signed in Ottawa, Canada by 122 states. As
of today, 156 governments have ratified the treaty. These states
include mine-affected countries as well as former users and producers
of the weapon, including most members of NATO.
The United States
is one of only 39 countries have not yet joined. Other outliers
include Russia, China, India and Pakistan.
“Despite the absence of
important countries, the norm banning antipersonnel mines is firmly
taking hold,” said
Stephen Goose, Executive Director of Human Rights Watch’s
Arms Division and member of the U.S. Campaign to Ban Landmines
steering committee.
Globally, the treaty has guided states parties
in the destruction of more than 40 million stockpiled mines, the
clearance of vast mined areas and the assistance of landmine survivors. In
2007, only two governments —Burma and Russia—used
antipersonnel mines, and trade has been almost non-existent. The
number of producing countries has dropped from more than 50 in
the early 1990s to about a dozen—including
the United States.
“We remain disappointed that the
Bush Administration decided in 2004 to never join the Mine Ban
Treaty,” said Lora Lumpe, coordinator of the U.S.
Campaign to Ban Landmines, “but the wide acceptance of the
treaty has definitely restricted U.S. actions—in terms of
use and exports of landmines. However, we are greatly disturbed
by efforts this year to re-start anti-personnel landmine production.”
Budget
documents released earlier this year reveal that the administration
is poised to begin producing a new anti-personnel landmine system
for the first time since 1997. The first “Spider” mine
systems are to be produced by September 2008.
The U.S. military
maintains the third largest landmine stockpile in the world, after
China and Russia, holding more than 10 million antipersonnel mines
and 7.5 million anti-vehicle mines.
There is no evidence that the
U.S. has used antipersonnel landmines, with the exception of the
North/South Korean border area, since 1991.
U.S. law has barred
the export of antipersonnel landmines since 1992. This
export provision will expire in October 2008 unless renewed by
Congress.
The goals of the U.S. Campaign to Ban Landmines are:
- U.S. accession to the 1997 Mine Ban Treaty and policies that
move towards accession (eg, a U.S. ban on the use, production,
stockpiling, and transfer of antipersonnel landmines);
- increased resources for humanitarian demining and mine risk
education programs;
- increased resources for victim rehabilitation, assistance,
and psychosocial and economic inclusion;
- enactment of a U.S. prohibition on the use of cluster munitions
in or near populated areas;
- enactment of a U.S. prohibition on the use, production,
stockpiling, and transfer of cluster munitions that
cause unacceptable harm to civilians; and
- U.S. support for an international instrument prohibiting
cluster munitions that cause unacceptable harm to civilians.
The U.S. Campaign to Ban Landmines is comprised of more than 500
national organizations and thousands of individuals, including
the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, the United Methodist Church,
the United Nations Association-USA, Physicians for Human Rights,
Human Rights Watch, Handicap International USA, Amnesty International,
and the American Association of Pediatrics.
For further information, or to arrange an interview
with ICBLspokespeople, please contact Simona Beltrami, tel. +39
333 7142251, e-mail simona@icbl.org,
or the ICBL office in Geneva, +41 (0)22 9200325. To speak with
USCBL representatives, contact Lora Lumpe, tel. +1 202 361 3028,
e-mail lora@fcnl.org
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