| International Campaign to Ban Landmines Releases
2004 Report on Global Landmine Situation
WINNING THE WAR AGAINST ANTIPERSONNEL
MINES: BIGGEST CHALLENGES STILL AHEAD
New Report Looks at 5-Year Trends
Click
here to read US Chapter.
(17 November 2004). Since the international treaty
prohibiting antipersonnel landmines took effect five years ago,
use of the weapon around the world has fallen dramatically, global
funding for mine action programs has increased more than 80 percent,
more than 1,100 square kilometers of land has been cleared, and
the number of new mine victims each year has decreased markedly,
according to a 1,300-page report by the International Campaign to
Ban Landmines (ICBL) released today.
"The international norm established by the
Mine Ban Treaty is rapidly taking firm hold around the world, especially
in the heavily mine-contaminated countries where it matters the
most," said ICBL Ambassador Jody Williams, who shared the 1997
Nobel Peace Prize with the ICBL. "Clearly we are succeeding
in our struggle to eradicate this weapon. But even bigger challenges
remain, to convince hold-out governments to come on board, to ensure
effective implementation of and compliance with the treaty, to get
mines out of the ground within the ten-year deadline, and to provide
adequate assistance to landmine victims," said Ms. Williams.
There are 143 States Parties to the 1997 Mine
Ban Treaty, which entered into force with unprecedented speed on
1 March 1999. An additional nine countries have signed but not yet
ratified the treaty that prohibits the use, production, trade and
stockpiling of antipersonnel mines, and requires clearance of mined
areas within ten years. Since the last Landmine Monitor report,
nine countries joined the treaty including Burundi and Sudan, which
are both significantly mine-affected, and Belarus, Greece, Serbia
and Montenegro, and Turkey, which are also mine-affected and combined
have over ten million stockpiled antipersonnel mines to destroy.
The ICBL's Landmine Monitor Report 2004 cites
compelling evidence of use of antipersonnel mines by four governments
since May 2003: Georgia, Myanmar (Burma), Nepal, and Russia. In
contrast, the first Landmine Monitor Report 1999 identified 15 governments
using antipersonnel mines in the 1998/1999 reporting period.
"One of the greatest success stories of the
Mine Ban Treaty is that sixty-five States Parties have completed
the destruction of their stockpiles, collectively destroying more
than 37 million antipersonnel mines, including four million mines
in the last year," said Stephen Goose of Human Rights Watch,
the Chief Editor of the Landmine Monitor initiative. Every State
Party so far has met its treaty-mandated four-year deadline for
stockpile destruction, except for Guinea and Turkmenistan, both
of which have subsequently completed stockpile destruction.
"Compliance with the Mine Ban Treaty by States
Parties has been very impressive, but not absolute or uniform,"
said Mr. Goose. Since the Mine Ban Treaty entered into force, the
ICBL has consistently raised questions about how States Parties
interpret and implement certain aspects of Articles 1, 2, and 3.
In particular, the ICBL has expressed concerns regarding the issues
of joint military operations with non-States Parties, the prohibition
on assisting banned acts, foreign stockpiling and transit of antipersonnel
mines, mines with sensitive fuzes and antihandling devices, and
the permissible number of antipersonnel mines retained for training
and development purposes. The ICBL has pointed out that some States
Parties have diverged from the predominant legal interpretation
and predominant State practice on these matters.
Forty-two countries remain outside of the Mine
Ban Treaty, including China, Russia, and the United States, most
of the Middle East, most of the former Soviet republics, and many
Asian states. In February 2004, the United States abandoned its
long-held goal of eventually eliminating all antipersonnel mines
and joining the treaty.
Still, the power of the mine ban movement is reflected
in the fact that a de facto global ban on the trade of antipersonnel
mines has been in effect since the mid-1990s, with only a very low
level of illicit trafficking and unacknowledged trade taking place.
Moreover, of the more than 50 countries known to have produced antipersonnel
mines, all but 15 have formally renounced production.
From 1999 to 2003, more than 1,100 square kilometers
of land were cleared, resulting in the destruction of more than
four million antipersonnel mines, nearly one million antivehicle
mines, and many more millions of pieces of unexploded ordnance.
"There is now consistent and reliable evidence to show that
mine action is making a measurable difference in the lives of millions
of people living in mine-affected countries," said Ms. Sara
Sekkenes of Norwegian People's Aid, co-chair of the ICBL Mine Action
Working Group, while cautioning that global mine action numbers
should not be regarded as precise. "Clearly tremendous progress
has been made in the field of humanitarian mine action using the
comprehensive framework provided by the Mine Ban Treaty," she
added. The past five years have witnessed the initiation and expansion
of many mine action programs, and ever-greater amounts of land being
returned to communities for productive use.
Some form of mine clearance was reported in 2003
and 2004 in a total of 65 countries, including the first humanitarian
mine clearance operations in Armenia, Chile, Senegal, and Tajikistan.
In 2003 alone, a combined total of more than 149 million square
meters (149 square kilometers) of land was cleared, resulting in
the destruction of at least 174,167 antipersonnel mines, 9,330 antivehicle
mines, and 2.6 million items of unexploded ordnance (UXO).
According to Landmine Monitor Report 2004, 83
countries are mine-affected, including 52 States Parties to the
Mine Ban Treaty. The Mine Ban Treaty requires States Parties to
clear all mined areas within ten years of joining the treaty. States
Parties that have declared completion of mine clearance since 1999
include Bulgaria (October 1999), Moldova (August 2000), Costa Rica
(December 2002), Czech Republic (April 2003), Djibouti (January
2004), and, most recently, Honduras (June 2004).
However, in 2003 and 2004, no mine clearance or
mine risk education activities were recorded in 13 States Parties.
"Without sufficient and sustained resources, we fear that many
States Parties will not meet their treaty obligation to remove emplaced
mines within ten years," said Mr. Stan Brabant of Handicap
International and Landmine Monitor Research Coordinator for mine
risk education. "This is a critical time, and our goal of a
mine-free world is within reach," he added.
Landmine Monitor has identified about US$2.07
billion in donor mine action contributions from 1992-2003. Of that
12-year total, 65 percent ($1.35 billion) was provided in the past
five years (1999-2003), since the entry into force of the Mine Ban
Treaty. For 2003, Landmine Monitor has identified $339 million in
mine action funding by more than 24 donors. This is an increase
of $25 million, or 8 percent, from 2002, and an increase of $102
million, or 43 percent, from 2001. Major increases were registered
in 2003 for the European Commission and the United States, as well
as Canada and Sweden.
In 2003, Afghanistan ($75 million) and Iraq ($55
million) received 38 percent of global mine action funding. Meanwhile,
an unusually large number of mine-affected countries experienced
a decline in donor contributions to mine action in 2003. Mine action
funding fell most severely in 2003 for Vietnam and Cambodia, but
decreases were also experienced in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Eritrea,
Somaliland, Laos, and Ethiopia. In 2003, several of the major donors
provided significantly less mine action funding, including Japan,
Austria, Italy, Australia, France, and the Netherlands.
The number of reported new mine casualties declined
in the majority of mine-affected countries in 2003, and dropped
significantly in some heavily mined countries such as Afghanistan,
Bosnia and Herzegovina, Cambodia, Lebanon, and Sri Lanka. Landmine
Monitor identified 8,065 new casualties caused by landmines and
unexploded ordnance (UXO) in 2003, compared to 8,333 in 2002. However,
many casualties go unreported and Landmine Monitor estimates there
are now between 15,000 and 20,000 new casualties annually around
the world- far fewer than the 26,000 per year estimated in the 1990s.
"The declining landmine casualty rate is
heartening, but there are still an appalling number of people, especially
children, killed and maimed by landmines every year in virtually
every region of the world," said Ms. Sheree Bailey of Handicap
International, Landmine Monitor's Victim Assistance Research Coordinator.
"The stark reality is that there is an ever-growing number
of mine survivors in the world and in the vast majority of mine-affected
countries, neither the national governments nor international donors
are doing nearly enough to provide for their needs," she added.
According to Landmine Monitor, in 2003, new landmine
and UXO casualties were recorded in 65 countries. A total of 86
percent of reported new casualties were identified as civilians
and 23 percent were children.
The major progress in the past five years in preventing
antipersonnel mines from being laid and in clearing existing minefields
has not been matched in the area of victim assistance. Landmine
Monitor reports that while global mine action funding has increased
greatly since 1999, identifiable resources for mine victim assistance
have actually declined (US$29.8 million in 1999 compared to US$28.2
million in 2003). Resources for victim assistance as a percentage
of total mine action funding have decreased significantly and steadily
from 14.9 percent in 1999 to 8.3 percent in 2003.
"In many mine-affected countries the assistance
available to rehabilitate and reintegrate landmine survivors back
into society remains desperately inadequate," said Ms. Bailey.
"If governments are serious in their commitment to assist survivors,
funding for healthcare and the disability sector must be significantly
increased and sustained over the long-term," she added. Landmine
Monitor identified only 35 countries receiving resources from other
States for mine victim assistance programs in 2003, with the majority
of resources being provided for physical rehabilitation programs.
Landmine Monitor estimates that there are somewhere
between 300,000 and 400,000 mine survivors in at least 121 countries
today. From 1999 to September 2004, Landmine Monitor recorded more
than 42,500 new landmine and UXO casualties from incidents in at
least 75 countries.
Landmine Monitor Report 2004: Toward a Mine-Free
World is the sixth annual report by the ICBL. It contains information
on landmine use, production, trade, stockpiling, demining, casualties
and victim assistance in every country of the world. This year's
1,300-page report is a special edition covering the past five years,
in anticipation of the first five-year Review
Conference for the Mine Ban Treaty
On
Monday, 29 November, the ICBL will present the report to diplomats
attending the review conference in Kenya, known as the Nairobi Summit
on a Mine-Free World.
The Landmine Monitor initiative is coordinated
by a "Core Group" of five ICBL organizations. Human Rights
Watch is the lead organization and others include Handicap International,
Kenya Coalition Against Landmines, Mines Action Canada, and Norwegian
People's Aid. A total of 110 Landmine Monitor researchers in 93
countries systematically collected and analyzed information from
a wide variety of sources for this comprehensive report.
This unique civil society initiative constitutes
the first time that non-governmental organizations have come together
in a sustained, coordinated and systematic way to monitor and report
on the implementation of an international disarmament or humanitarian
law treaty.
The full Landmine Monitor report and related documents
are available online now in various languages. Please email lm@icbl.org
for the password.
From 00:01 GMT on 18 November the report will
be available online at http://www.icbl.org/lm/2004
For more information or to schedule an interview,
contact:
BELGIUM:
Ms. Annelies Vanoppen
Handicap International
+32 (2) 286-50-38,
Email: annelies.vanoppen@handicap.be
MOZAMBIQUE:
Ms. Inger Sandberg
Norwegian People¡œs Aid
+47 97 97 75 91
CAMBODIA:
Ms. Sheree Bailey
Landmine Monitor Victim Assistance
Research Coordinator
+855 12 693 823
NAIROBI:
Ms. Sue Wixley
ICBL
+ 254 (0735) 337-396
Email: media@icbl.org
|