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Landmines and Measures to eliminate
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International review
of the Red Cross
Introduction
Concern about the effects of certain conventional
weapons, particularly landmines, is not new. Had that concern been
lacking, the 1980 Convention on Conventional Weapons[1 ] (CCW) would
not have been formulated. Nor would some of the earlier studies on
the issue by UN bodies have been written. What is new is a
heightened interest in the problems caused by landmines,
particularly in post-conflict settings. Several factors have
contribute d to the increased recognition that even though the CCW
is in place, it has not addressed the ever-worsening situation on
the ground. (The United States army estimates that 400 million
landmines have been sown since the beginning of the Second World
War, including at least 65 million in the last 15 years.)
With the end of the Cold War and the accompanying
perception of decreased nuclear threat, there has been growing
attention to other weapons which have, in fact, inflicted far more
casualties in the wars of the past few decades than nuclear and
chemical weapons combined. At the same time, the UN has had more
room to facilitate negotiated solutions to protracted wars
throughout the developing world. What it found when it began to
deploy peace-keeping missions in various countries was significant
landmine contamination, which has had an impact not only on UN
missions but also on new development efforts. This contamination has
also affected the work of a wide range of non-governmental
organizations (NGOs) and of the International Committee of the Red
Cross (ICRC).
Renewed awareness of the problem has resulted in
fresh initiatives, both at the international and the national
levels, to attempt to limit the proliferation and indiscriminate use
of landmines. Many of these initiatives would not have been taken
had it not been for the work of the ICRC and the recent
International NGO Campaign to Ban Landmines. The ICRC has long been
involved in efforts to regulate the use of weapons, including
landmines. Meetings sponsored by it in the 1970s were seminal in the
process leading to the CCW. Its more recent work in this area,
resulting in its call for a ban in February 1994, was inspired in
particular by the experience of ICRC surgeons in the field. As for
the NGO landmines campaign, it has brought together an unprecedented
coalition of 350 groups from different fields (human rights,
development, refugees, arms control, humanitarian and environmental
problems), the reby reflecting the magnitude of the landmine
scourge.
Brief history of
landmines and their changing use
The history of landmines can be traced back to the
American Civil War. But mines as they are known today were
originally developed during the First World War to defend against
tanks. Given the size of anti-tank mines, it was relatively easy for
enemy troops to enter minefields and remove the weapons for their
own use. This led to the development of the anti-personnel mine, a
much smaller delayed-action explosive device which was sown
throughout anti-tank minefields to deter enemy soldiers from
entering. First used to protect the more valuable anti-tank mine,
the anti-personnel mine has taken on a life of its own.
Although they were originally designed for use
primarily as defensive weapons, landmines have increasingly been
deployed offensively. While such use has not been confined to
internal conflicts - the United States pioneered advances in mine
technology and deployment during the war in Indochina, and the
former Soviet Union resorted to them on a massive scale in
Afghanistan[2 ] - landmines have become a choice weapon in these
wars and their offensive use often a preferred tactic. Cheap, easily
available and " ever vigilant " once emplaced, anti-personnel
landmines have proliferated in armed conflicts everywhere.
What sets the weapon apart is its time-delay
function. Not designed for immediate effect, landmines lie dormant
until triggered by a victim. While mines can be directed against a
legitimate military target, what might have been one at the time of
sowing will in most cases, because of their delayed action, not
remain so over the entire life span of the weapons. In many cases,
particularly during the wars and internal conflicts of the past
couple of decades, landmines have been used as offensive weapons to
cut o ff access by opposition forces and their civilian supporters
to large tracts of land.
Often designed to maim, their psychological impact on
the enemy is undeniable. In addition to demoralizing combatants,
landmine casualties can also overload military logistical support
systems since most mine victims require more extensive medical and
rehabilitative attention than other types of war-related casualties.
Moreover, landmines do not discriminate between the logistical
support systems of the military and those of society as a whole.
They terrorize and demoralize civilians, and their impact on the
fragile health systems of the countries where they are used in great
numbers can be overwhelming. Post-conflict landmine casualties are
almost exclusively civilian.
The impact of landmines extends beyond just
health-care systems. When much of a country has become the theatre
of battle - as in Afghanistan, Angola, Cambodia, Mozambique,
Somalia, the former Yugoslavia, and the list goes on - little is
spared. Used offensively, landmines are deployed to depopulate
areas, to disrupt agriculture and to interrupt the flow of goods and
services. Transportation systems are affected, as are power systems,
agricultural and grazing lands, religious sites, national parks and
forests, and villages and the people living in them or fleeing from
them. In short, all that makes up the fabric of a country can be
contaminated by landmines. Unlike other weapons of war, landmines[3
] and explosive devices which act like landmines are not silenced by
any peace agreement. They continue to kill and maim for generations.
Landmines and the
law of war
Humanitarian law, or the law of war, seeks to limit
as much as possible destruction and injury to the civilian
population during armed conflicts. The basic tenets, which apply
also to landmines, say essentially that soldiers may not use any
means to achieve their ends, that there are limits. There must be a
balance between military need and consequences to the civilian
population - and that balance must be proportional. Combatants must
distinguish between civilians, who must not be targeted in war, and
other combatants. As part of customary law, these tenets apply to
all States regardless of other treaty obligations. Additional
attempts have been made to limit the use of landmines through the
CCW.
International discussions regarding landmines - those
of more than a decade ago leading to the development of the CCW, and
more recently in preparation for review and amendment of the treaty
in September 1995 in Vienna - have considered the issue of
proportionality in a time-limited fashion. Proponents of landmines
argue that they are a necessary weapon which, when used properly,
can be directed toward military targets, while keeping " collateral
damage " under control. In theory, this is accurate - especially if
discussion regarding landmines and their consequences is limited
only to the duration of the military engagement itself. But when the
life span of the weapon and post-conflict impact are considered, the
question of proportionality takes on new meaning.
If the consequences of landmine use include
consideration of the life span of the weapon - which can be decades
- the balance between the immediate military utility during the
engagement and the long-term costs to the civilian population
becomes so skewed as to make the immediate utility appear almost
insignificant by comparison. It may be that landmines are a
militarily useful tool. Nonetheless, that usefulness is far
outweighed by their long-term socio-economic consequences. Over time
(and in some cases during the conflict itself), landmines harm
civilians and the environments in which they live more than they
affect the military targets at which they are aimed.
Furthermore, research has shown that in practice
landmines are frequently employed directly against civilians, both
intentionally and indiscriminately. Evidence from a number of
countries shows that mines are often used as part of deliberate
military strategies designed, in direct contravention of the law of
war, to spread terror among civilians and/or prevent them from
producing food for themselves or enemy troops.
Nature and scope of
the problem
Landmines have been used on a massive scale since
their development. As mentioned earlier, it has been estimated that
400 million landmines have been sown since the beginning of the
Second World War, including at least 65 million in the last 15
years.[4 ] Currently 80 to 110 million are deployed in 64 countries
around the world. The majority of countries most heavily
contaminated with landmines are in the developing world.
Africa is the hardest hit continent with a total of
perhaps 37 million landmines in at least 19 countries.[5 ] Angola
alone has an estimated 10 million landmines and an amputee
population of 70,000.[6 ] Other countries particularly affected are
Eritrea, Ethiopia, Mozambique, Somalia and Sudan. But Africa is not
alone - mines are also found in Asia, Europe, Latin America and the
Middle East.
While landmines are ubiquitous, they have been used
in particularly large numbers in Afghanistan, Angola and Cambodia.
There are altogether at least 28 million landmines in those three
countries alone, which are home to 85% of the world's landmine
casualties.[7 ] Europe is said to have the fastest growing problem,
with more than 3 million landmines already deployed during the
fighting in the former Yugoslavia.[8 ]
Landmines have been used so extensively because they
are readily available, cheap and easy to use. While landmines are
not hard to deploy, their removal is painstakingly slo w, dangerous
and expensive. Mine-detection technology has not kept pace with
rapid developments in mines, which have made them more deadly and
more difficult to trace. Equipment designed in the 1940s is still
being used to detect landmines produced in the 1980s and 1990s.
Mines, which used to be made of metal and thus were
relatively easy to find, are now increasingly made of plastic.
Currently available systems do not reliably detect minimum-metal
plastic mines in battle-contaminated field conditions. In Cambodia,
for example, for every mine found an average of 129 harmless metal
fragments are detected.[9 ] Each instance of possible mine
contamination must be investigated, prolonging mine-clearance
operations. But advances in mine technology have not been limited to
plastic casings. Mines have become sophisticated weapons with
electronic fuses and sensor systems which can make them even more
deadly. They can now sense footstep patterns, body heat, sound and
the signal of a mine detector - all or any of which can make them
explode.
Clearance is made even more difficult by an almost
complete disregard for the stipulated mapping and recording of
minefields. While the CCW requires the mapping of " preplanned "
minefields, the term " pre-planned " is not defined. Even if it were
- given the few instances of minefields mapping and recording in the
majority of conflicts of the past several decades - the provision
would probably not be followed. Military instructions also provide
for the mapping and recording of minefields. But as the UN and other
experts involved in humanitarian mine clearance have repeatedly
pointed out, in the overwhelming majority of cases, instructions in
this regard are not heeded.
Advances in mine-delivery systems have made it
possible to remotely scatter mines at rates of well over 1,000 per
minute.[10 ] While it might be possible to record the general
location of such mines, even the militar y concede that accurate
mapping is impossible. The Falklands/Malvinas conflict provides an
illustration of this problem: during the fighting, British troops
kept detailed maps of presumed locations of remotely-delivered
mines. But clearance attempts after the war were thwarted because
the mines could not be found. Large areas of the islands are still
off-limits today.[11 ]
Even in the relatively few instances where minefields
have been mapped, in many cases the information has become almost
irrelevant over time as weather conditions have changed the original
location of the weapons. For example, mines sown on riverbanks have
been washed downstream by flooding, and mines sown in desert
environments move easily and frequently in shifting sands. Also, in
heavily contested areas, mines are often sown on top of previous
minefields so that even if maps have been made at some point during
the conflict, they do not include all of the new mines laid as
battle fronts shift back and forth and opposing forces mine and
re-mine the same areas to defend their respective positions.
While many are familiar with military minefield
breaching, the concept of humanitarian mine clearance is relatively
new. In breaching, various methods can be used, but the basic
premise is to cut a path through the minefield. Mines outside the
path are disregarded and a relatively low clearance rate is
tolerated in the breach itself - soldiers expect to suffer
casualties. Humanitarian mine clearance, however, involves the
removal of all mines - the UN standard is 99.9% - to return
previously-mined land to civilian use. Even where there have been
advances in the ability to detect mines, the focus has been on
military, not humanitarian, needs. The differences between the two
types of mine clearance and the imperative need for new technologies
to respond in particular to the humanitarian crisis resulting from
landmine contamination are not being adequately addressed.
The sheer numbers are overwhelming, but numbers alone
do not fully explain the problem. It takes 100 times as long to
remove a landmine as to deploy it. And a field with one landmine in
it can be unfit for productive use as surely as a field with 100
landmines in it. It can take a mine-removal team as long to clear a
field with one mine in it as a field with 100 mines in it. The
process is the same wherever there is a fear of mine contamination:
the entire area must be painstakingly combed and probed either to
remove mines that are actually there - or to demonstrate that the
area is free of mines. With the millions of landmines currently
contaminating the globe, even if no more mines were produced or
deployed, it would take decades to overcome the problem.
But mines do continue to be produced and most of the
mines found in contaminated countries were not made there: 85% were
purchased or transferred from producer countries.[12 ] Of the more
than 255 million landmines manufactured over the past 25 years,
about 190 million have been anti-personnel mines. At one time or
another, at least 100 companies were involved in the production of
360 types of anti-personnel mines in 55 countries. Current
production averages about 5 million mines every year; for the
previous 25 years, it averaged 10 million annually. Of the US$ 20
billion spent annually on arms, it is estimated that conventional
anti-personnel mines account for less than US$ 100 million.[13 ]
China, the former Soviet Union and Italy have been
the major producers and traders of landmines in recent years. Other
important suppliers have included the former Czechoslovakia and the
former Yugoslavia, along with Egypt, Pakistan and South Africa.
Prior to the mid-1980s, the United Kingdom, Belgium and the United
States ranked among the top producers and exporters; other
significant exporters in that period included Bulgaria, France and
Hungary.[14 ]
The International
NGO Campaign to Ban Landmines
The first organized efforts by the NGO community to
address the problem of landmines began in 1992 with a handful of
organizations, including Handicap International (France), Human
Rights Watch (USA), Medico International (Germany), the Mines
Advisory Group (UK), Physicians for Human Rights (USA) and the
Vietnam Veterans of America Foundation (VVAF-USA). Those six
organizations have since become the steering committee of the
International NGO Campaign to Ban Landmines, and the VVAF its
coordinator.
The Landmines Campaign has grown to include
approximately 350 NGOs working in at least 20 countries around the
world for a ban on landmines. It is now made up of organized
components in Australia, Belgium, Cambodia, Canada, France, Germany,
Ireland, Italy, Mozambique, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway,
the Philippines, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Thailand, the United
Kingdom and the United States. There are also NGOs active in the
Campaign from other countries such as Afghanistan, Costa Rica,
India, Nepal and South Africa.
These organizations have joined together to promote
the Campaign's " Joint Call to Ban Anti-personnel Landmines. " This
is a twofold call for, on the one hand, an international ban on the
use, production, stockpiling and sale, transfer or export of
anti-personnel mines, and, on the other hand, for contributions, by
countries responsible for the production and dissemination of
anti-personnel mines, to the international fund administered by the
UN and to other programmes to promote and finance mine victim
assistance and landmine awareness, clearance and eradication
worldwide.
The Campaign has also held two international
conferences on landmines, the first in London in 1993 and the second
in Geneva in 1994. It is planning a third conference to be held
after the CCW Review Conference. In vari ous individual country
campaigns, there have also been collections of signatures on a
petition calling for a ban on landmines. The signatures, now
totalling well over half a million, will be presented to the chair
of the Vienna Conference. In addition, the International Campaign to
Ban Landmines will be sponsoring a " Call for Posters " - an
invitation to students around the world to contribute designs of
posters to illustrate a world free of landmines.
NGOs have also made significant contributions through
systematic documentation of the problem of landmines, compiled in
the form of country reports on Angola, Cambodia, El Salvador, Iraqi
Kurdistan, Mozambique, Nicaragua and Somalia. Human Rights Watch and
Physicians for Human Rights have also produced
Deadly Legacy , a 537-page
report considered to be one of the most comprehensive works on the
various aspects of the problem. Finally, just before the Review
Conference the VVAF will be releasing its
Socio-Economic Report on the Impact
of Landmines , which quantifies the effects of landmines
through studies on Afghanistan, Cambodia, Mozambique and the former
Yugoslavia.
Because of their accumulated expertise on various
aspects of the problem, NGOs have frequently been asked to
participate in government and other expert sessions on landmines.
The first such meeting of significance was a three-day landmines
symposium held by the ICRC in Montreux in April 1993. NGOs also
participated to a lesser degree in the ICRC's subsequent meeting on
military utility in January 1994.[15 ] Most recently in March 1995,
four NGOs of the Campaign's steering committee were key participants
in two days of Public Hearings on Landmines held by the European
Parliament. These led to the introduction of an EP resolution
calling for a ban on landmines.
NGO involvement in the issue of landmines has been
critical to sparking widespread attention to the problem both by
their governments and in the media. Various organizations in the
International Campaign have worked closely with their governments on
national initiatives to deal with the landmines problem. While each
country campaign and the various NGOs working to ban landmines have
made significant contributions to the overall effort, several
initiatives stand out as particularly illustrative of the
contributions of the NGO campaign: those of Italy, Belgium and
Cambodia.
Impact of the
Campaign: the examples of Italy, Belgium and Cambodia
Italy
When representatives of the International Campaign
first met with Italian NGOs to start up activities in Italy, while
there was much interest, initial efforts were halting. The first
landmines workshop held in the country, in December 1993, was small
and somewhat tentative. Within eight months, however, the Italian
campaign had made truly impressive strides. Through a series of
appearances on the most widely watched Italian television talk show,
Italian supporters of the campaign brought the issue of landmines to
the public. The Italian Minister of Defence appeared with campaign
representatives and voiced his support for a ban on landmines.
The high visibility given to the issue helped the
Italian campaign to mobilize public support and press the government
for change. On 2 August 1994, Italy, which had been a major
manufacturer and exporter of landmines, surprised the international
community with a Senate motion ordering the government to ratify
forthwith Protocol II of the 1980 Convention; to take immediate
legal action to launch a moratorium on the export of anti-personnel
mines, to put an end to the production of those mines by Italian
companies or companies operating in Italy an d to support workers in
that sector; and to promote clearance efforts in countries
contaminated with anti-personnel mines. It remains to be seen how
far Italy has actually proceeded towards halting production.
In the discussion prior to the vote, the Italian
government representative noted that export authorizations for
anti-personnel mines had not been issued by Italy since November
1993. He stated that his government formally undertook to observe a
unilateral moratorium on the sale of anti-personnel mines to other
countries and to ready the necessary instruments for stopping the
production of such devices by Italian companies or companies
operating on Italian territory. Moreover, Italy moved rapidly to
ratify the CCW and at the same time its Parliament directed the
government to support a Swedish proposed amendment to the CCW that
would ban anti-personnel landmines. This, however, the government
has yet to do.
Finally, to continue building awareness in Italy, the
Italian campaign held three days of events in Brescia, home of
Valsella landmines, in September right after the Senate motion was
passed. In a clear demonstration of public support for the ban
initiatives, thousands of people came together for the events, which
included a 17 km walk to the Valsella plant to call for a ban on
landmines. In one of the most moving moments of the march, women
workers from the plant stood up and added their voice to the call
for a ban. The mayor also announced that the town council had voted
unanimously, in a special meeting, to join the Italian Campaign to
ban landmines.
Belgium
Although Belgium has become involved in various
aspects of the landmines problem in recent years, it initially
concentrated its efforts on mine clearance. In 1992, Belgium
introduced a UN resolution calling for a coordinated approach to the
problem of mine removal. The r esolution also asked the
Secretary-General to present a comprehensive plan for demining. This
early initiative contributed to the development of what is now the
United Nations Demining Trust Fund, under the Department of
Humanitarian Affairs. In July 1995, the UN hosted a major donors
conference in Geneva in support of the Demining Trust Fund.
While the focus in Belgium seemed to be on the
clearance aspect of the landmines problem, a significant domestic
effort was slowly being made to push a bill through the country's
Parliament. The Belgian campaign, working with Senators Lallemand
and Dardenne who sponsored the bill, strove to ensure that there was
support for it. After months of careful shepherding of the landmines
bill through the Parliament, on 2 March 1995, by unanimous vote,
Belgium became the first country to enact legislation banning
landmines. At the same time, Senator Dardenne reported that the
Belgian Defence Minister had promised to destroy most of the
country's stocks of 340,000 landmines and the equipment to lay them.
Specifically, the Belgian legislation bans the use,
production, procurement, sale and transfer of landmines, including
components, parts and technology. Anti-tank mines are also banned
wherever the necessary pressure to make them explode can be provided
by a person, as are submunitions that are knowingly designed not to
explode on first impact. The law will apply for a period of five
years, renewable for the same period by the Council of Ministers.
Perhaps as significant as the legislation itself is the fact that
efforts by the Minister of Defence to include NATO exclusions in the
law were defeated.
Cambodia
Cambodia is the first severely mine-contaminated
country where a significant NGO campaign has helped to build an
organized resp onse by the local community to the landmines crisis.
The International Campaign worked with representatives of the
Cambodian government and the Cambodia Mine Action Centre (CMAC) to
promote Landmines Awareness Day on 23 February 1995. With that day
as a focal point, the Campaign began collecting signatures on a
petition calling for a ban on landmines. More than 300,000
Cambodians responded and the signatures were presented to the
government. Furthermore, in March the United Kingdom landmines
campaign organized a meeting in the House of Commons. A Cambodian
delegation took part and, calling upon the British government to
support the ban on landmines use, presented the list of signatures
to the Prime Minister.
The Cambodia campaign also sponsored the first
international conference in a heavily-mined country. Held from 2 to
4 June 1995, the conference brought together over 400
representatives of NGOs and governments from 42 countries. Among the
many issues covered at the conference was proposed draft legislation
that would ban landmines in Cambodia.
Other responses by
the international community
As noted above, the increased recognition that the
CCW has not addressed the ever-worsening situation on the ground has
resulted in new national and international initiatives to attempt to
limit the proliferation and indiscriminate use of landmines or to
ban them outright. Many of the national initiatives, which have
involved close cooperation with NGOs, have been seen as first steps
toward a complete ban on landmines. This was the idea behind the
development of the first unilateral initiative, taken by the United
States in 1992, to adopt legislation providing for a one-year
moratorium on the export of landmines. That legislation, sponsored
by Senator Patrick Leahy and Congressman Lane Evans, and extended in
1993 by a unanimous vote, is recognized, along with two UN
resolution s for worldwide moratoria introduced by the United
States, as having been a primary catalyst for other export control
initiatives.
The first country to respond to this initiative was
France. During a visit to Cambodia in February 1993, the then French
President, François Mitterrand, officially announced his country's "
voluntary abstention " from exporting anti-personnel landmines, in
effect since the mid-1980s. Shortly thereafter, France also
initiated the process which is to result in the Review Conference of
the CCW in Vienna in September 1995. Then on 11 November 1993,
Senator Leahy, speaking on behalf of the United States delegation to
the UN, introduced a resolution urging States to implement moratoria
on the export of anti-personnel landmines. These moratoria were
envisioned as first steps toward a permanent export control regime.
The response to the moratorium movement and to the
first UN resolution has been impressive. Currently, 15 countries
have announced comprehensive export moratoria, namely Argentina,
Belgium, Canada, the Czech Republic, France, Germany, Greece,
Israel, Italy, Poland, the Slovak Republic, outh Africa, Spain,
Sweden and the United States. In addition, the Netherlands and
Switzerland have enacted limited moratoria restricting exports to
States party to Protocol II of the CCW, and the United Kingdom and
Russia have declared moratoria on anti-personnel landmines that do
not self-destruct or self-neutralize. With the decision taken by the
European Council of Ministers in May 1995, exports of
non-self-destructing mines have also been banned from EU territory.
To continue building toward a permanent control
regime, the United States sponsored a second UN resolution on export
moratoria in 1994.[16 ] The resolution, again introduced by Senator
Leahy, called for more export moratoria. But what was perhaps more
significant in the resolution was its call for further international
efforts to see k solutions to the problems caused by anti-personnel
landmines, with a view towards the eventual elimination of
anti-personnel landmines. Some States tried to remove that language
from the resolution, but it was finally adopted by consensus.
Some countries have moved beyond simple export
limitations on landmines. In June 1994, the Swedish Parliament voted
that Sweden should declare that a total international ban on
anti-personnel mines was the only real solution to the problems
caused by the use of these weapons. It also voted that the
government should therefore propose means of achieving such a ban.
Sweden subsequently prepared an amendment to Protocol II of the CCW
which would ban anti-personnel landmines. This amendment is to be
submitted to the Vienna Review Conference.
While fifteen countries[17 ] support the call for a
ban it is not likely that a consensus will be reached on the
amendment in Vienna.
Finally, apart from legislative initiatives, on 30
November 1994 the Netherlands Defence Minister announced before the
country's Parliament the intention of its armed forces to destroy
423,000 anti-personnel and antitank mines at a cost of some US$ 5
million.
Vienna Review
Conference
As noted above, a Review Conference will be held in
Vienna in September 1995 to amend the CCW. A series of four
governmental preparatory sessions were held in Geneva in 1994 and
early 1995. NGOs were present at the first and second sessions,
before leaving to protest against the blocking of their presence at
the other meetings - this despite the fact that NGOs have recognized
expertise in various aspects of the landmines issue and were present
at the sessions leading to the development of the convention. In
subsequent preparatory sessions, NGO representatives formed part of
the Australian, New Zealand and Swedish governme ntal delegations.
Rather than take a broad approach to the problem, which would
require a serious assessment of the real impact of landmines on the
ground with a view to amending the CCW in such a way as to address
the problem meaningfully, the preparatory sessions have taken a more
narrow approach limited to adjustments of the existing framework. It
has already become clear from the proposed amendments drawn up at
those meetings that the international community is not ready to meet
its stated goal of eliminating landmines.
Many of those who advocate a complete ban on
landmines as the only realistic means to deal with the global crisis
believe that the reluctance of governments and the military to
analyse the problem seriously and to take real steps toward a
solution has more to do with the fear of setting a precedent
regarding long-used conventional weapons than the actual need for
landmines themselves. That this might be the crux of the issue was
revealed in the 1994 negotiations on possible legislation to place a
one-year moratorium on the production and procurement of landmines
in the United States. Expressing his opposition to the proposed bill
in a letter to Senator Mark Hatfield, Army Chief of Staff General
Gordon Sullivan wrote that " the precedent established - that of
unilateral denial to US forces of a legimitate, essential weapon,
based on potential post-conflict humanitarian concerns - threatens
the use of a wide range of military weapons " .
While the international community will likely take
only limited steps in Vienna toward its stated goal of the eventual
elimination of landmines, the process leading to the Review
Conference has been important. It has helped focus attention on the
problem and will provide a significant forum for more lobbying and
education of governments as to the long-term implications of the
continued proliferation of landmines. NGOs will come together in
Vienna for a series of activities during the Review Confe rence, and
the International Campaign is pressing for certain minimum changes
to the CCW that it considers to be essential in moving toward the
goal of a ban on landmines. These changes concern, first of all, the
treaty's scope: the Campaign believes that the CCW should be amended
to cover the use of landmines in all circumstances. Secondly, the
CCW should be amended to include automatic verification measures and
to stipulate that sufficient resources must be made available for
verification to ensure that the measures can be carried out.
Thirdly, the CCW should be amended to provide for automatic, regular
review of its provisions so that the international community will
not have to wait another ten years to come together to assess the
impact of any changes to the Convention made at the Vienna
Conference with a view to improving actual conditions on the ground
and alleviating the suffering caused by landmines. The Campaign
believes that such review should take place every 5 years, if not
sooner.
Conclusion
A few questions about landmines were recently posed
by Russell W. Ramsey from the United States Army School of the
Americas at Fort Benning, Georgia, in his assessment of the book
Landmines :
A Deadly Legacy, by Human
Rights Watch and Physicians for Human Rights. In commenting on the
book for Military Review,
Ramsey asked:
" What crop costs a hundred times more to reap than
to plant and has no market value when harvested? What weapon is
still lethal to unsuspecting human targets when the soldiers who
brought it to the battlefield have become old men? What Cold War
legacy has the greatest mathematical probability of claiming victims
now and for the next couple of generations? What weapon employed by
US forces in scrupulou s adherence to the laws of land warfare may
have inflicted more friendly than enemy casualties in several
campaigns? "
The answer is, of course, anti-personnel landmines.
These weapons have a huge impact on societies. Their effects, as
briefly outlined above, are all the more pervasive because they are
not conflict-limited. They continue for decades. Thus societies are
affected not only in the immediate term but for generations.
Landmines are not simply the cause of an immediate crisis in a
country in conflict, they are also a long-term obstacle to total
peace and post-conflict development of a society and its people.
Thus, children now living with landmines are affected. But so will
their children be, and their children's children. The only way to
end this scourge is to move quickly to fulfil the goal stated by the
international community in last year's United Nations resolution on
landmines and to eliminate landmines from the world's arsenals once
and for all.
Notes
1. The full name of the CCW is the Convention on
Prohibitions or Restrictions on the Use of Certain Conventional
Weapons which May be Deemed to be Excessively Injurious or to Have
Indiscriminate Effects.
2. The US army made the following assessment: " The
Soviet forces found it necessary to employ more than 30 million
landmines against the lightly armed rebel forces. Soviet landmine
emplacement evolved to such an extent that they employed scatterable
landmines in support of offensive operations " (
Landmine Warfare -
Trends & Projections ,
Defense Intelligence Agency and US Army Foreign Science and
Technology Center, December 1992, pp. 2-4).
3. While attention has been focused on landmines, in
many situations unexploded ordnance (UXOs) are as lethal a legacy as
landmines. While the military use a number of definitions to avoid
placing some weapons systems in the " landmines " category, others
would argue that the appropriate point of departure for any
definition is the impact on the victim.
4. Stephen Goose, " The Economics of Landmines " ,
article for UNIDIR Newsletter
, published in early 1995, citing US Army Foreign Science and
Technology Center, US Defense Intelligence Agency,
et al,
Landmine Warfare -
Mines and Engineer Munitions in
Southern Africa , May 1993, p. 15.
5. The US State Department puts the number at 20
million; the United Nations Department of Humanitarian Affairs Land
Mines Database, in a country-by-country listing of the number of
mines, states that there are at least 37 million landmines in
Africa.
6. Shawn Roberts and Jody Williams,
After the Guns Fall Silent: The
Enduring Legacy of Landmines, Vietnam Veterans of America
Foundation, Washington, DC, May 1995, working draft.
7. US State Department,
Hidden Killers: The Global Landmine
Crisis, Bureau of Political - Military Affairs, Washington,
DC, December 1994, p. 1.
8. US State Department,
Hidden Killers: The Global Problem
With Uncleared Landmines,Bureau of Political
Military Affairs, Washington, DC, July 1993, p. 38.
9. United Nations,
Assistance in Mine Clearance: Report of the Secretary-General
, New York, United Nations, A/49/357, 6 September 1994, p. 4.
10. One example is the UK's scatterable
anti-personnel mine, known as " Ranger " . A fully-charged rack can
fire 1,296 mines per minute. Lt. Col. C.E.E. Sloan, RE,
Mine Warfare on Land,
Brassey's Defence Publishers, 1986, p. 38. The US pioneered the
development of air-scatterable mines, deploying thousands of "
dragon's teeth " over Indochina. The former Soviet Union, during its
invasion and occupation of Afghanistan, dropped millions of "
butterfly " mines over the country.
11. Human Rights Watch Arms Project and Physicians
for Human Rights, Landmines: A
Deadly Legacy, Human Rights Watch, New York, October 1993,
p. 27.
12. Report of the
Secretary-General,op. cit.
, p. 8.
13. Goose, op. cit
, p. 2. See alsoDeadly Legacy
for detailed information on landmines trade and production. The Arms
Project maintains a database on the issue.
14. Steven Askin and Stephen Goose, " The Market for
Antipersonnel Landmines - A Global Survey "
Jane's Intelligence Review,
September 1994, p. 425.
15. The ICRC has produced reports on both the
Montreux symposium and the Geneva meeting on military utility. It
has also submitted documentation on various aspects of the landmines
issue to the group of government experts preparing for the Vienna
Review Conference.
16. Moratorium on
the export of anti-personnel landmines, United Nations
General Assembly resolution A/C.1/49/L.19, 1 November 1994.
17. Afghanistan, Belgium, Cambodia, Colombia,
Estonia, Iceland, Ireland, Laos, Malaysia, Mexico, Nicaragua,
Norway, Peru, Slovenia and Sweden. The Vatican has also called for a
ban (as from August 1995).
By Jody Williams.
Jody Williams, Vietnam Veterans of America Foundation, has coordinated the development of the
International Landmines Campaign since its inception at the end of 1991. After
receiving an M.A. in International Relations from the Johns Hopkins School of
Advanced International Studies, she coordinated the Nicaragua-Honduras Education
Project, which organized and led fact-finding delegations of opinion makers from
the United States to Central America. For the six years immediately prior to her
joining the Landmines Campaign, she was first director of the Children's
Project, then associate director of Medical Aid for El Salvador, with offices in
Los Angeles and San Salvador.
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