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U.S.
Cluster Bombs Add to Afghan Land Mine Tragedy
QARAH
BAGH, Afghanistan, 4 dec 01 (Reuters)--
By Michael Steen
Abdul Haddi
is explaining how his mine-clearing team safely detonated a large
anti-tank mine buried at the edge of the highway when a second,
unplanned explosion rips through the air and everyone gasps.
Behind a line
of stones painted red for danger, a cloud of smoke and dust has
erupted into the clear blue sky and someone is shouting. A stone
ricochets off the rusting hulk of one of the old Soviet-built tanks
that dot the landscape.
The blast was
from a U.S. cluster bomblet, accidentally triggered by a shepherd
who narrowly avoided being killed. Until recently the village of
Qarah Bagh, north of the Afghan capital Kabul, was a front-line
position.
Like other mine-clearance
agencies, Haddi's team, from the British anti-land mine charity
the Halo Trust, has not yet been trained to destroy cluster bomblets,
and can only mark out patches of them as danger areas.
"It was
a small yellow thing, I didn't know what it was,'' said the shepherd,
Habib Ullahjan, 45. "I picked it up and threw it away, then
it exploded.''
Afghanistan
is already one of the world's most heavily mined countries, littered
with ordnance made by Russians, Iranians, Italians and Pakistanis.
But the U.S.
bombing of former Taliban positions has added a new killing machine
to the multitude of unexploded devices strewn across Afghanistan's
expansive dusty plains, in orchards, rice fields, and villages.
Designed
to Shred Flesh
Campaign group
Land mine Action says U.S. military figures show 600 cluster bombs
have been dropped in Afghanistan.
Each cluster
bomb contains 202 "BLU 97'' bomblets which are designed to
shred enemies' flesh and wreck their equipment on the ground.
But somewhere
between seven and 30 percent of the devices fail to detonate on
impact and either sink into the ground or lie on the surface. They
effectively become land mines.
Now that the
Taliban have retreated -- bombed out of the north by Washington
which accuses the hard-line Islamic movement of harboring Osama
bin Laden (news - web sites) -- refugees from the fighting are returning
to their homes.
"I only
came back three days ago. We fled to Kabul from the fighting,''
said Ullahjan, the shepherd, leading his flock of sheep away from
the field where he set off the cluster bomblet.
"I came
back to check my house. It's been destroyed. I thought this place
was clear of mines.''
Ullahjan was
luckier than 12-year-old Nickwalli or Samim Ahsanullah, who is eight.
Both boys are recovering in Kabul's Karta Se hospital from cluster
bomblet explosions.
Nickwalli lost
one eye and has injuries to his arms and head. Samim's thin legs,
arms and chest are badly injured.
Bomblet Looked
Like a Biscuit
"There
were three of us going to school. We saw small yellow things on
the ground. I picked one up and it exploded. It looked like a big
biscuit,'' said Samim.
The hospital's
head nurse, Mohammed Zaman, said the surgeons had almost amputated
Samim's leg but decided against it at the last minute. "I think
it will be okay,'' he said.
Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld has said the United States has every right to use
cluster bombs after the Sept. 11 attacks on New York's World Trade
Center and the Pentagon (news - web sites).
The United States,
along with Russia and China, has refused to back an international
ban on anti-personnel mines, signed in Ottawa in 1997. But the State
Department pledged to increase its funding of land mine clearance
in Afghanistan.
And once it
was revealed that the yellow bomblets were the same size and color
as yellow U.S. food packets being air dropped for civilians in Afghanistan,
Washington said it would in the future color food packets blue.
None of which
immediately helps the Karta Se hospital, a rickety collection of
buildings in the heart of west Kabul, a part of the city turned
into a nightmare vision of pulverized buildings by the brutal civil
war in the early 1990s.
Zaman said the
hospital receives up to five people every day who have stepped on
a land mine, picked up unexploded ordnance, or stumbled across a
cluster bomblet.
The U.N. estimates
that 10 Afghans are killed or maimed every day by mines.
Gathering
Firewood
No one has yet
compiled any data on how many cluster bomblets have injured civilians,
but they add to the daily toll of mine victims which increases at
this time of year as poor people stray off roads to seek firewood
or scrap metal to sell.
"I was
in Kala Kan (south of Qara Bagh) the day before yesterday and just
one of these small bomblets killed one person and injured another,''
said Abdul Latif Matin, the regional manager of the U.N. Mine Action
Program.
"(Cluster
bombs) are making the situation in Afghanistan even worse,'' said
Matin, whose office is dominated by a large map of central Afghanistan
covered with red dots that represent minefields.
Every time a
minefield is cleared, he crosses the dot. Many dots remain uncrossed
-- just to clear minefields designated high priority will take another
seven to 10 years, Matin said.
"Of course
it's disappointing that we had cleared some of the sites that have
now been hit, and we now have to re-clear them,'' Matin said.
The Red Cross
has set up six orthopedic centers in Afghanistan, staffed mostly
by land mine victims. The center in Kabul produces prosthetic legs,
crutches and wheelchairs for the hundreds of people who come every
week.
So far no cluster
bomb victims have shown up at the Kabul center, said the head doctor,
Najmuddin, but it takes several months for amputees' stumps to heal
enough for a prosthetic leg to be fitted.
"It's very
difficult to know if things will get worse,'' said Najmuddin. "If
peace comes, if there's no fighting, maybe we'll see fewer patients.''
Copyright
© 2001 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.
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