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Photo © Jared Bloch / ICBL-CMC, June 2014. Landmine Monitor 2014 (Presentations, December 2014) Overview Landmine use remains isolated. New casualties.

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Presentation on theme: "Photo © Jared Bloch / ICBL-CMC, June 2014. Landmine Monitor 2014 (Presentations, December 2014) Overview Landmine use remains isolated. New casualties."— Presentation transcript:

1 Photo © Jared Bloch / ICBL-CMC, June 2014

2 Landmine Monitor 2014 (Presentations, December 2014) Overview Landmine use remains isolated. New casualties have dropped dramatically. Clearance completion feasible for most states within 5 years with proper commitment and resource use. Victim assistance shows progress; good starting point for Maputo Action Plan in next 5 years. International support for mine action dipped.

3 Landmine Monitor 2014 Main sections: Landmine Ban Policy Mine Action – Contamination and Clearance Casualties and Victim Assistance Funding Support

4 The Mine Ban Treaty - Status There are 162 States Parties and one signatory to the Mine Ban Treaty. US policy changes in 2014 include aim to eventually accede. Photo © Ban Landmines Campaign Nepal (NCBL), April 2014

5 Landmine use Yemen admitted a violation of use ban occurred in 2011 – first confirmed State Party to use landmines after joining Mine Ban Treaty. Antipersonnel landmines were used in Syria, Myanmar (although declining in Myanmar) and break- away area Nagorno-Karabakh – all not party to the treaty. Photo © Ole Solvang, Human Rights Watch, July 2014 Evidence of landmine use and presence of stocks in Ukraine, but as of October 2014 not possible to determine whether used and by whom.

6 Landmine use by NSAGs Non-state armed groups (NSAGs) used antipersonnel mines or victim-activated improvised explosive devices in Afghanistan, Colombia, Libya, Myanmar, Pakistan, Syria, and Yemen. This is one fewer (Tunisia) than reported in previous Monitor.

7 Stockpiles, production, and transfer Stockpiles and stockpile destruction 88 States Parties have destroyed 48 million mines over time, including more than 1 million in 2013. More than 9 million await destruction by 6 States Parties. Belarus, Greece, and Ukraine remain in violation of the treaty. Major updates in two states not party: China stockpiles fewer than 5 million mines (down from long-standing estimate of 110 million); and the United States some 3 million (compared to earlier-reported 10 million) Production and transfer Only 11 identified as producers, with as few as 4 active (India, Myanmar, Pakistan, and South Korea). US removed from producer list. Low level of illicit and unacknowledged transfers appears to continue.

8 Mine Action Photo © Till Mayer / Handicap International, November 2013

9 Contamination AfricaAmericasAsia-Pacific Europe, the Caucasus, and Central Asia Middle East and North Africa Angola Chad DRC Eritrea Ethiopia Mauritania Mozambique Niger Senegal Somalia South Sudan Sudan Zimbabwe Somaliland Argentina* Chile Colombia Cuba Ecuador Peru Afghanistan Cambodia China India Lao PDR Myanmar North Korea Pakistan South Korea Sri Lanka Thailand Vietnam Armenia Azerbaijan BiH Croatia Cyprus Georgia Kyrgyzstan Russia Serbia Tajikistan Turkey United Kingdom (UK)* Uzbekistan Kosovo Nagorno-Karabakh Algeria Egypt Jordan** Iran Iraq Israel Lebanon Libya Morocco Palestine Syria Yemen Western Sahara Note: States Parties to the Mine Ban Treaty are indicated in bold; other areas are indicated by italics Some 56 states and four other areas were confirmed to be mine-affected as of October.

10 Cl earance of landmines At least 185km 2 of mined areas were cleared in 2013—less than the at least 200 km 2 in 2012—destroying almost 275,000 antipersonnel mines and 4,500 antivehicle mines. The largest total clearance of mined areas in 2013 was achieved in Afghanistan, Cambodia, and Croatia (75% of recorded clearance). In 2013, three States Parties formally declared completion of clearance of all known mined areas: Bhutan, Hungary, and Venezuela. Burundi completed clearance of its suspected mined areas in April 2014. As of October 2014, 28 states and one other area have declared themselves cleared of mines since the treaty entered into force in 1999.

11 Clearance of landmines (continued) AfricaAmericas Asia- Pacific Europe, the Caucasus, and Central Asia Middle East and North Africa DRC Eritrea Ethiopia Mauritania Mozambique Niger Senegal South Sudan* Sudan* Zimbabwe Somaliland Argentina** Chile Colombia Cuba Ecuador Peru China India Pakistan South Korea* Sri Lanka Armenia Croatia Cyprus* Georgia* Kyrgyzstan Russia Serbia Tajikistan Turkey* UK** Uzbekistan Kosovo Nagorno-Karabakh Algeria Egypt Jordan Iran Libya Morocco Palestine Yemen* Western Sahara Within the next five years, 24 States Parties and 16 states not party as well as three other areas are fully capable of completing clearance. * Clearance subject to adequate security and control of territory, but all mined areas under effective control can be cleared (or have been cleared, such as in the case of Cyprus) ** Without prejudice to the sovereignty dispute between Argentina and the UK on the Malvinas/Falkland Islands, if the UK clears the islands in accordance with its international obligations, Argentina’s legal obligations under Article 5 will also be complete0

12 Casualties In 2013, a global total of 3,308 casualties were recorded, a 24% decline compared with the total of 4,325 in 2012. Number of mine/ERW casualties per year (1999-2013)

13 Casualties (continued) Casualties were identified in 52 states and three other areas in 2013, of which 34 are States Parties to the Mine Ban Treaty. The vast majority of recorded landmine/ERW casualties (79%) were civilians. Afghanistan, Cambodia, and Colombia continued steady declines. In Syria, a state not party to the convention, casualties due to landmines/ERW more than tripled in 2013 The 31 States Parties with significant numbers of mine/ERW casualties have reported between 226,000–358,000 landmine survivors over time through 2013.

14 Victim assistance Photo © RAVIM-Mozambique

15 Victim assistance coordination Approximately two-thirds of States Parties had active coordination mechanisms and relevant national plans. In nearly all States Parties, survivors were participating in decisions that affect their lives and in the implementation of services—although in many countries, their participation must be better supported, especially in coordination roles. New Committee on Victim Assistance has mandate to support States Parties in implementing victim assistance and to raise the needs and rights of victims in other relevant frameworks. Members of the international community took important steps to strengthen ties between disarmament, human rights, and development efforts.

16 Equal Basis report

17 Funding and Support Donors and affected states contributed approximately US$647 million in international and national support for mine action in 2013, a decrease of $34 million (5%) from 2012. Five mine action donors—the US, Japan, Norway, the EU, and the Netherlands—accounted for 65% of all donor funding. A total of 47 states and three other areas received support from 31 donors. © Lucy Pinches / ICBL-CMC, June 2014 Mine Ban Treaty envoy Princess Astrid of Belgium meets with ICBL campaigners from Southeast Asia at the Third Review Conference of the Mine Ban Treaty in Maputo, Mozambique

18 International support International assistance in 2013 was $446 million, a decrease of almost $51 million from 2012. International support for mine action by year

19 National and peacekeeping operations funding Eighteen affected states provided $201 million in national support for their own mine action programs, an increase of $17 million compared with 2012. In addition to those contributions, appropriations from the UN General Assembly for mine action within 11 peacekeeping operations provided $150 million in 2013, an increase of 33% compared with 2012.

20 Additional resources Country profiles Factsheets, Reports, Tables Landmine and Cluster Munition Blog landmineandclustermunitionblog.wordpress.com ICBL website www.icbl.org

21 Thank you! Visit us: www.the-monitor.org monitor@icblcmc.org @MineMonitor @minefreeworld Photo © Ngo Xuan Hien/Project RENEW, August 2012


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