LANDMINES - THE FACTS



Murder and mutilation are the hallmarks of this indiscriminate weapon that can lie in wait for decades after a conflict has ended. In the heat of battle armies rarely keep track of minefields, let alone the numbers of mines they have deployed. As for mines in stockpiles - the usual reluctance of politicians and defence personnel prevents accurate disclosure. For these reasons landmine estimates are very rough. Figures relating to the wounded and the devastation caused in their lives are more reliable.1

THE BASICS 2 There are an estimated 110 million active mines scattered in over 70 countries - in terms of people this translates as one for every 17 children or 52 humans in our world. A further 110 million have been stockpiled. 2,000 people are involved in landmine accidents every month - one victim every 20 minutes. Around 800 of these will die, the rest will be maimed. One deminer is killed and two are injured for every 5,000 mines cleared. About 100,000 mines are removed each year, but until recently 2 million more were being planted each year. At the current rate it would take 1,100 years to rid the world of mines. That's assuming no new ones are laid. Nic Dunlop/Panos

WHY THEY DON'T MAKE SENSE The most commonly used mines are cheap ­ between $3 and $30 each ­ but removing them can cost 50 times as much. In 1996 the UN Secretary General increased his estimate of the resources needed to clear all existing mines from $33 billion to over $50 billion. In the same year funding for demining was less than $150 million.3 None of this includes the costs of injury, the denial of land, the loss of trade, the impassable roads. One study endorsed by high-ranking military officers from several countries found that among 26 conflicts examined since 1940 no case was found in which the use of landmines played a major role in determining the outcome. 4 Nic Dunlop/Panos Advert

WHERE THE MINES CAME FROM



In most arenas of conflict, the mines used are not indigenously produced. Click here to see a large map of the world that illustrates the sources for the landmines in a handful of countries where the problem is particularly severe.



THE WORST AFFECTED

Under normal circumstances amputations are very rare. In the US, which does not have a landmines problem, the rate is 1 per 22,000 people.

The leader in sheer number of mines in the ground is Egypt with 23 million (a mixture of anti-tank and antipersonnel), many left over from World War Two, but they haven't caused large-scale havoc because they are confined to border regions.

WHO THEY KILL



The vast majority of casualties are men, often soldiers ­ 87% in Cambodia and 76% in Afghanistan are men. But in some countries women and children account for over 30%. Advert In some cases the overwhelming number of casualties have been civilians, this often coincides with a period of refugee return to heavily mined areas. In Namibia 88% of post-1980 casualties were civilians, in Mozambique (1994) 68%, and in Georgia (1994-95) 80%. Children can be undercounted as it is estimated that 85% die before reaching a hospital. In one instance, when refugees returned to Hargeisa in northern Somalia in 1991, 75% of mine victims were children, whose natural playfulness and herding and wood-gathering occupations put them at greater risk.5

THE SOCIAL COST



Landmines are found along roads, in fields and forests, beside power pylons, near wells and river banks, in homes and public buildings. As a result they can cause economic paralysis by restricting movement in what are usually agriculture-based economies.

Without landmines agricultural production could more than double in both Afghanistan and Cambodia.

In Libya 27% of the total arable land is unusable - due to mines left behind from World War Two, over 50 years ago.

In Somalia grazing land and water sources have been badly hit. The mining of roads made inflation shoot up.

In one region of Angola in 1988 the ICRC estimated the cost of delivering one tonne of relief supplies by rail and truck would have been $89 ­ by aircraft it was $2,200. Similarly in Sudan in 1995, overland aid had to be replaced by air shipments costing $2,000 per tonne.

THE MEDICAL COST



In war-torn countries medical services are ill-equipped and in disarray. Landmine injuries present a drain on available resources as they require complex surgery and more inputs. Surgical care and the fitting of an orthopaedic appliance cost at least $3,000 per amputee in 'developing' countries. For the 250,000 amputees estimated worldwide by the UN this means a bill of $750 million.

In Cambodia 61% of mine victims went into debt to pay for their medical treatment. In Afghanistan the proportion was even higher, at 84%.

A growing child's artificial limb should be replaced every six months; adults need a new one once every three to five years. Prostheses cost around $125: for a child of ten with a life expectancy of another 50 years the total cost is about $3,125.

In most affected countries rehabilitation services are limited and care for psychological trauma is non-existent.

1 Landmines refers to both antipersonnel and antitank mines. In recent conflicts the former variety has predominated. Unless otherwise indicated, all figures are from the International Committee of the Red Cross document Anti-personnel Mines: An Overview, 1996. The ICRC bases all its figures on landmine numbers on the UN Demining Database.

2 ICRC pamphlet Landmines must be Stopped, 1997.

3 ICRC Position Paper Landmines: crucial decisions in 1997, 1997.

4 ICRC, Anti-personnel Landmines: Friend or Foe?, 1996.

5 Red Cross, Red Crescent, 1997, Issue 2

6 Shawn Roberts and Jody Williams, å, Vietnam Veterans of America Foundation, Washington DC, 1995.

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Copyright New Internationalist Magazine 1997