Nepali People Oppose Land Mines Deaths
By Kamala Sarup
At least 55 people were killed and dozens more wounded today in Nepal when a crowded bus detonated a land mine planted
by Maoists. Maoist are displaying an increasing readiness to use landmines in attacking army and civilians, as well as
infrastructure. Maoists are also using indiscriminate or victim-activated mines. These mines are exempted from the
international ban. The Maoists also use wire-detonated pressure cookers packed with explosives to target passing
military vehicles.
There is total disruption to Nepali life and the environment. In addition to the deterioration of the basic
infrastructure the reduction of health services have left Nepal with poor water and sewage systems which in turn have
led to a huge increase in endemic disease and thus Nepal is left with one of the highest mortality rates. If the
situation is not remedied with help from the international community, It will not allow for industry and agriculture to
flourish. In Nepal, landmines terrorize the population, cause death and terrible injuries, and prevent economic and
social progress. While estimates of the total number of landmines here vary, they all run into the thousands. Land mines
affect Nepal on a daily basis because they are weapons of social terror.
Even, governments of the world heeded the ICBL's call for a landmine ban by negotiating the 1997 Convention on the
Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling, Production, and Transfer of Anti-Personnel Mines and On their Destruction. The Mine
Ban Treaty prohibits in all circumstances any production, transfer or use of antipersonnel landmines. It also requires
that stockpiles be destroyed within four years of the treaty's entry into force, and that mines already in the ground be
destroyed within ten years. Since December 1997, 150 governments have signed this treaty of which 141 have ratified. But
still landmines killing thousands of iinocent Nepali people each year. We Nepali people oppose land mines because they
are indeed indiscriminate in their killing and maiming our innocent people, it also rip apart the fabric of life and
burden health facilities.
Land-mines have to be cleared. We must eliminate landmines and ban their production. We must destroy those that are
stockpiled. Landmines pose an enduring threat. Landmines continue to take thousands of innocent civilian lives.
Landmines are traumatizing the people and indiscriminate killers. Nepali people argue landmines should be banned
completely.
The landmine crisis is one of the most urgent and critical crises facing our Nation today. Landmines continue to
jeopardise the security of the people of Nepal because it has paralyzed the country. More than nine years of maoists
conflict in Nepal has left a terrible landmine legacy that poses a risk to civilians fleeing increased hostilities in
the country. And the most disturbing fact is that majority of landmine victims are civilians.
For individual and community alike many of whom are already living in poverty and insecurity, the impact of landmines
is not simply physical, it is also psychological, social and economic. Every districts in Nepal, with the exception of
Kathmandu has had people killed or injured by landmines.
The far western and eastern part of our country, previously not significantly affected, now has more than hundred mines
in area, and there are fears that the ongoing conflict in the area may lead to much wider use of landmines. As a
consequence, the delivery of electricity and water becomes more sporadic in heavily mined areas. Irrigation systems
become unusable. Transportation of goods and services is halted on mined roads and the roads themselves begin to
deteriorate.
Local businesses, unable to obtain supplies. Unemployment in those areas increases and the prices for scarce goods rise
up. In those areas dependent upon outside aid for sustenance, the mining of roads can mean a sentence to death by
starvation. Mine incidents have now been reported in 71 of 75 districts.
Landmines are responsible for depopulating vast tracts of the countryside, affecting crop harvests and interfering with
the transportation of food supplies into the cities. People cannot go to their fields, and the ever-present threat of
landmines risks livelihoods and creates a huge scare. A lack of understanding of the problem and limited information on
the location of the mines are hampering efforts to clear them.
Prevalence of landmines represented a serious threat to peace building activities, including regeneration of
agricultural production and thus demining came as the most important challenge for the Nation, which is also important
in order to avoid massive casualty rates. Because of the widespread location of mines, the major activities of the rural
population which are tilling fields, herding livestock, and foraging or wood and food have become dangerous.
Also, even though casualty and disability rates maintain a high ratio in the country, there is no disability law in
Nepal. The battle against landmines must not be delayed and requires commitment at the highest level. The threat of
landmines still casts a dark shadow across the country. To date, landmines have claimed more than thousands Innocent
Nepali civilians on a daily basis. The devastation caused by landmines in Nepal not only for the many Nepali victims,
but also to the socioeconomic well-being of the nation is appalling.
Nepal is yet to ratify the 1997 Mine Ban Treaty, even Nepal is the one most heavily impacted by landmines.
Landmines represent an enormous burden particularly for the poor. Those who suffer the most and are least able to cope
are the poor; landless peasants, subsistence farmers, internally displaced, and women are the most vulnerable and most
adversely affected.
All of these limiting factors caused by landmines severely decrease the ability of the country to attract foreign
investment which is desperately needed to stimulate the economy and provide a better standard of living for Nepali.
The increased numbers of people in certain parts of the country place a strain on the resources of the land. They make
land unsuitable for agriculture by creating giant craters or imminent danger. Mines cause irreversible damage to
ecosystems. Mines also threaten rare and endangered species.
The total number of landmine survivors continues to grow as new casualties are recorded in every district of Nepal. In
many mine-affected areas, the capacity to provide assistance to survivors is limited: most services are in urban
centers, but the majority of survivors are in rural areas; resources are directed to medical and physical rehabilitation
support is limited.
There is no separate budget and no special provisions are designed for mine victims. Even Hospitals providing assistance
to mine casualties but why there are no known programs offering physiotherapy, prosthetics, or psychological support to
mine survivors.
However, Nepal voted in favor of pro-ban UN General Assembly Resolution 56/24M in November 2001, as it had on similar
resolutions in the past. Even, on 8 April 2002, the Parliament passed a bill that added the term "landmines" to the
definition of "bomb" contained in the Terrorist and Destructive Act. But how still Maoist rebels have demonstrated the
ability to produce significant quantities of victim-activated homemade mines?.
Although the use of landmines is restricted by the general principles of international humanitarian law and more
specifically by the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons, these weapons continue to pose a threat to individuals
and communities in Nepal.Clearance of mines could take years but unless landmines are removed and destroyed, they will
pose huge ancillary social costs.
Landmine victims suffer severe emotional trauma as well. Every effort must be made to limit the environmental
destruction caused by mines. The Nepali community must all out condemn all deliberate destruction. However, Humanitarian
demining costs are elevated and in most cases drains vital funds from other badly needed investments for reconstruction.
Even, international consensus has yet to be achieved and Nepal's problem continues unabated.
Call to Action Resources should be made available to improve data collection and analysis on the socio-economic impact
of mines. Policy makers for funding of humanitarian demining assistance should, accordingly, consider at least the above
mentioned factors while deciding how to allocate funds in conflict master recovery planning.
The conflict in Nepal has dramatically exacerbated this situation, and the damage will continue if environmental
considerations are not taken into account. The educational component of mine awareness is essential. Educators are
needed to teach basic first aid to those living in mine infested areas. Educators are also needed to devise programs for
teaching children to protect themselves from the dangers of landmines. Public awareness will prove to be the most
valuable weapon to fight this crisis. Until all countries have co-operated in eliminating landmines, there is no
guarantee that they will not be used. Without a dedicated and comprehensive effort to tackle the root of the problem,
our problem can nnot be solved. To speed the process of reaching a Nepal free of landmines, International groups must be
encouraged to initiate the establishment of zones free of land mines and the international community must strengthen
de-mining, mine awareness and assistance programs in Nepal. Now, government should adopt national policies, to
immediately prohibit the use, production, import and export of antipersonnel mines. Plans should be formulated and
implemented to destroy existing stockpiles of antipersonnel mines as rapidly as possible.
Government should also commit to the destruction of emplaced mines as rapidly as possible. All mines removed from the
ground must be destroyed, and not retained for future use.
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(Kamala Sarup is editor of http://peacejournalism.com/ )