Calling Landmines a "Deadly Attraction" for Children, UNICEF says Countries That Care About Children Must Stop Producing Landmines.
Millions of antipersonnel landmines and other explosive remnants
of war across the globe pose a vicious threat to children, who are being injured,
killed and orphaned by them long after wars are over, UNICEF said today.
“Landmines are a deadly attraction for children, whose innate curiosity
and need for play often lure them directly into harm’s way,” UNICEF
Executive Director Carol Bellamy said, attending the first World Summit on a
Mine Free World in Nairobi. “Landmines kill, maim and orphan children.
Countries have a moral responsibility to ratify the Mine Ban Treaty and rid
the world of these devastating weapons.”
Over 80 per cent of the 15,000 to 20,000 landmine victims each year are civilians,
and at least one in five are children, according to the International Campaign
to Ban Landmines (ICBL). The deadly legacy of landmines far outlasts the conflicts
that that gave rise to them. Among the most contaminated countries are Iraq,
Cambodia, Afghanistan, Colombia, and Angola.
The countries in Asia, for instance, contain some of the most heavily mine-affected
countries in the world. Landmines and unexploded ordnance (UXO) are a danger
to children in nearly half of all villages in Cambodia and nearly one-quarter
of all villages in Lao PDR, Bellamy said. Up to 800,000 tonnes of UXO and 3.5
million landmines still cover Viet Nam, where over 100,000 people have been
killed or injured since 1975.
Children are at particular risk of injury and death from landmines and other
explosive remnants of war because their small size, unfamiliar shape, and colours
can make them look like toys. Refugees and displaced children returning home
after war are in particular danger of landmines because they are most likely
to be unaware of the dangers of playing in or traversing hazardous areas, Bellamy
said.
“The cost of playing too close to a landmine is brutal,” Bellamy
said, citing such things as the loss of limbs, blindness, deafness, and injuries
to the genital area as some of the injuries landmines inflict on children.
In part because they are physically smaller than adults, children are more likely
than adults to die from landmine injuries. An estimated 85 percent of child
victims of landmines die before reaching the hospital, Bellamy said. In many
cases, landmine injuries occur far from home and without a parent or caregiver’s
knowledge.
And when treatment is available, the cost can be prohibitive for poor families,
particularly because children need more care than adults. As they grow, new
prostheses need to be fitted regularly and a child survivor may have to undergo
several amputations.
Without adequate medical treatment, children injured by landmines are often
pulled out of school, limiting their opportunities for socialization and education.
The discrimination they face limits their future prospects for education, employment
or marriage. They are often perceived as a burden to their families.
“Landmines orphan children,” Bellamy said. “When mothers are
maimed or killed, children are less likely to receive adequate nutrition, to
be immunized or to be protected from exploitation. When fathers fall victim
to landmines, children are often forced out of school and into work to supplement
family income.”
Since the Mine Ban Treaty went into force five years ago, 143 states have ratified
the treaty, which prohibits signatories from using, stockpiling, producing or
transferring landmines. Producing one landmine costs $3, yet once in the ground
it can cost more than $1,000 to find and destroy, according to the ICBL.
Despite progress, some of the largest holders of landmines – Russia, China,
India and the United States – have yet to commit themselves to the Mine
Ban Treaty.
Bellamy called on these countries to join the Mine Ban Treaty, immediately cease
production and do more to assist those whose lives have been disrupted by landmines.
“Landmines, meant to be used against soldiers
in war, are devastating the lives of children at peace,”
Bellamy added.