Launch of Landmine Monitor Report 2002
Hon. Marian Hobbs
9 October 2002 Speech Notes
Launch of Landmine Monitor Report 2002, Wed Oct 9, 12.15pm, Beehive Foyer
Toward a Mine-Free world is the sub title of this report. If only…….
Global progress in halting the use
of mines (including in hotspots such as Angola, Eritrea,
Ethiopia and Sri Lanka) has been offset by the massive new
mine-laying operations of India and Pakistan, particularly
in the Kashmir region.
This is the fourth annual report
of the International Campaign to Ban Landmines.
As the foreword tells us Landmine Monitor is an attempt by civil society to hold governments accountable to the obligations they've taken on with respect to antipersonnel mines.
This
is fundamental in disarmament. Assessing accountability and
ensuring transparency are resource- and time-consuming
tasks.
The Landmine Monitor, produced by the
International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL), fulfils this
role. It reports independently and comprehensively on
developments, highlighting any progress or inaction on the
part of states.
As of a week ago 129 states had acceded
to the Ottawa Convention banning anti-personnel mines and 17
states had signed but not ratified it.
But 15,000 to
20,000 people, mostly innocent civilians and especially
children, are killed or maimed by mines every year, on top
of the hundreds of thousands who already live with
disabilities caused by mines.
New Zealand continues to be
a steadfast supporter of the Convention and those NGOs
working within the framework of the Convention such as New
Zealand’s own Campaign Against Landmines (CALM), the
International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL) and the
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).
New
Zealand has contributed approximately NZ$12.8 million in
both financial and in-kind contributions to mine action
programmes since 1992/1993.
The New Zealand Defence Force
(NZDF) was involved in demining programmes in Afghanistan
and Kosovo and presently has demining personnel in Laos,
Cambodia and Mozambique.
Financial help has come through
New Zealand Official Development Assistance.
New Zealand,
together with Australia and other regional partners,
continues to offer assistance to states wishing to accede to
the Convention including East Timor.
The Landmine
Research Group in the School of Engineering at the
University of Auckland has continued to investigate new
technologies for detecting landmines and has links with
similar research teams overseas.
There are no stockpiles
or mined areas in New Zealand. New Zealand does, however,
have a limited quantity of inert practice mines used only
for training personnel in counter-mine clearance operations.
We also have Claymore mines which, used in a
command-detonated mode, are permitted under the
Convention.
We have never produced mines nor do we import
or export them. Calvert Plastics, based in Lower Hutt,
produces dummy mines for demining training and for drill
practice for personnel in mine contaminated areas. These
are used in New Zealand and they offer an example to the
rest of the world of how training in mine awareness can be
conducted in a way consistent with obligations under the
Convention.
It is also a unique trade opportunity for
New Zealand. Efforts have been made to raise international
awareness of these dummy mines and the idea has been
explained to the Second Meeting of States Parties to the
Convention. It received a favourable response from the ICBL
and Human Rights Watch.
"The human misery caused by landmines is beyond description. But one thing is certain. The majority of victims are innocent civilians - children, women and agricultural workers. Tragically victimized while in the midst of attempting, in the most miserable of circumstances, to rebuild their lives after years of conflict."
-A World Without Mines, Boutros Boutros-Ghali