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Global
Progress on Banning Landmines
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Human Rights Watch
September 7, 2000
More than 22 million antipersonnel mines have been destroyed from
the arsenals of at least fifty nations, and the number of new
landmine victims is dropping sharply in heavily mined countries
like Cambodia, Afghanistan, Bosnia-Hercegovina and Mozambique, the
International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL) said.
"Antipersonnel mines are increasingly a relic of the past," said
Stephen Goose of Human Rights Watch. Nearly three-quarters of the
world's nations have now joined the 1997 Mine Ban Treaty that
outlaws any possession or use of antipersonnel mines. The United
States is not among them.
The ICBL's 1,100-page Landmine Monitor Report 2000: Toward a
Mine-Free World was edited and produced by Human Rights Watch, a
founding member of the ICBL, which won the Nobel Peace Prize in
1997. The report provides new details on mine use, production,
trade, stockpiling, demining and mine victim assistance in every
country of the world in the period from the March 1999 entry into
force of the Mine Ban Treaty to mid-2000. (See attached sheet on
Key Findings of the Landmine Monitor report).
The report states that since March 1999 it appears that
antipersonnel mines were used in twenty conflicts by eleven
governments and numerous rebel groups. Angola, which has signed
the treaty, continued to use mines, and it is likely that Burundi
and Sudan, which are also signatories, used mines. The most
extensive use of antipersonnel mines in this period occurred in
Chechnya, especially by Russian forces, and Kosovo, especially by
Yugoslav forces.
On Monday, 11 September, the ICBL will present the Landmine
Monitor Report 2000 to diplomats attending the Second Meeting of
States Parties to the Mine Ban Treaty in Geneva, Switzerland. A
65-page Executive Summary is also available. A total of 115
Landmine Monitor researchers from 95 countries contributed to the
report.
Human Rights Watch is a privately-funded international
monitoring group based in New York. It is the lead agency in the
core group of ICBL organizations responsible for the Landmine
Monitor. The others include Handicap International, Kenya
Coalition Against Landmines, Mines Action Canada, and Norwegian
People's Aid.
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