Landmine Monitor 2010

Support for Mine Action

S29 Opt Heading Image
© Benoît Darrieux/HI, July 2009
Residents of a village near Hargeisa, Somaliland, participate in a risk education session.

Article 6 of the Mine Ban Treaty on international cooperation and assistance recognizes the right of each State Party to seek and receive assistance from other States Parties in fulfilling its treaty obligations. The Monitor reports annually on support for mine action by affected countries and on international mine action assistance reported by donor states. The Monitor relies in most cases on responses to requests for information from donors and affected states.

Key Developments in 2009

Donors and affected states devoted approximately US$622 million to mine action in 2009.

National mine action contributions from affected states increased from $144 million in 2008 to $173 million in 2009, with Croatia and Angola accounting for 56% of the total.

In 2009, 33 donors contributed US$449 million to 54 countries and areas. This is approximately the same as in 2008 when contributions totaled $455 million and the fourth consecutive year that contributions were over $400 million.[1] Twenty-six states received less support in 2009 and 27 states received more compared to 2008.

In 2009:

  • Contributions from the top five mine action donors—the United States, European Commission (EC), Japan, Norway, and Germany—accounted for 61% of all donor funding.
  • The top five recipient states—Afghanistan, Iraq, Cambodia, Sri Lanka, and Sudan—received almost 50% of all international mine action contributions in 2009.
  • Of the 33 donors reporting contributions to mine action in 2009, 15 reported supporting victim assistance, totaling $38 million, or 9% of the global total, with 25% going to the ICRC and national Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies. The US ($10.9 million), Norway (NOK44.3 million/$7 million), and Australia (A$6.4 million/$5 million) provided 60% of all reported victim assistance funding in 2009.

New donors included Oman, Poland, and South Korea. The largest new recipient was Pakistan, which received €1.3 million ($1.8 million) from the EC for risk education. Other new recipients included Belarus, Gambia, Mali, Niger, Palau, Philippines, Syria, and Ukraine.

Assessments from the UN General Assembly totaling $69 million bolstered funding for mine action operations within peacekeeping operations. Of that, approximately $50 million in 2009 was allocated to the UN-African Union Hybrid operation in Darfur (UNAMID) and the UN Mission in Sudan (UNMIS).

International Contributions

Contributions by donor: 2005–2009[2]

Rank

Donor

Contribution ($ million)

Total

2009

2008

2007

2006

2005

1

United States

118.7

85.0

69.8

94.5

81.9

449.9

2

EC

48.1

22.8

45.7

87.3

47.7

251.6

3

Japan

48.0

51.4

35.5

25.3

39.3

199.5

4

Norway

35.7

36.7

50.2

34.9

36.5

194.0

5

Germany

23.7

26.7

18.4

18.6

21.2

108.6

6

Australia

19.4

18.2

16.7

16.5

8.9

79.7

7

Canada

18.8

43.2

45.8

28.9

20.5

157.2

8

Netherlands

18.4

28.3

23.5

26.9

19.3

116.4

9

United Kingdom

17.9

24.9

25.2

19.4

21.5

108.9

10

Switzerland

15.0

15.1

12.0

14.0

12.1

68.2

11

Sweden

14.9

18.9

17.5

14.9

11.7

77.9

12

Spain

14.6

15.6

11.8

8.5

1.9

52.4

13

Denmark

11.2

14.7

12.1

14.5

11.3

63.8

14

Belgium

10.4

10.5

10.8

7.0

6.5

45.2

15

Finland

6.9

7.4

4.9

6.3

5.9

31.4

16

Ireland

5.2

7.2

7.0

4.8

2.1

26.3

17

France

4.5

3.9

2.3

3.3

3.9

17.9

18

Italy

3.9

10.2

4.1

5.4

4.5

28.1

19

Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH)

2.5

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

2.5

20

New Zealand

2.2

2.7

2.0

0.8

0.9

8.6

21

Austria

2.1

7.2

7.0

4.8

2.1

23.2

22

Qatar

2.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

2.0

23

Czech Republic

1.3

1.2

1.2

1.2

1.4

6.3

24

Saudi Arabia

1.0

1.5

0.0

3.0

0.0

5.5

25

Luxembourg

1.0

1.2

0.9

1.3

1.3

5.7

 

Eight other donors*

1.5

0.6

0.7

25.5

8.1

36.4

 

Total

448.9

455.1

425.1

467.6

370.4

2,167.2

* The eight other donors include Andorra, Cyprus, South Korea, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Oman, Poland, and Slovenia.

Thirty-three donors provided $449 million to mine action in 2009, compared to $455 million in 2008. The US, the EC, Japan, Norway, and Germany provided 61% of international support, compared to 49% in 2008.

Australia, BiH, Czech Republic, EC, France, Qatar, and the US increased their contributions from 2008. Eight countries decreased their contributions by 20% or more. For example, Canada decreased its contribution by $24.4 million (a decrease of 57%), and eight European countries and Japan had a cumulative decline totaling $44 million, ranging in percentage terms from a 71% decline in support by Austria to a 7% decline in support from Japan.

Presentage decrease from 2008 to 2009

Donors with the largest decreases in contributions from 2008 to 2009

Donor

Amount of decrease
($ million)

Presentage decrease
from 2008 to 2009

Canada

24.40

57%

Netherlands

9.85

35%

UK

7.02

28%

Italy

6.37

62%

Austria

5.16

71%

Sweden

3.99

21%

Denmark

3.48

24%

Japan

3.39

7%

Germany

3.00

11%

Ireland

2.00

28%


Though it is difficult to ascertain clear funding strategies based on funding in 2008 and 2009, several donors provided indications of their intentions through statements at international fora. In June 2010, Canada called on states to ensure that funding is “consistent, synergistic and mutually reinforcing,” to minimize overlap and maximize the impact of contributions in support of the implementation of both the Mine Ban Treaty and the Convention on Cluster Munitions.[3] Switzerland and Germany noted they follow a holistic approach in their mine action strategies and do not differentiate between action on mines/ERW and cluster munitions. Germany said the same holistic approach applies to victim assistance. Japan stated it intended to support the clearance of cluster munitions and victim assistance through partnerships and post-conflict peace building. Norway planned to support the Convention on Cluster Munitions under its humanitarian disarmament budget, the same channel it uses to support the Mine Ban Treaty.

International contributions by recipient: 2009[4]

Recipient

Contribution ($ million)

Total

2009

2008

2007

2006

2005

Afghanistan

106.6

105.1

86.3

87.5

66.8

452.3

Iraq

34.7

35.9

37.3

35.3

27.8

171.0

Cambodia

33.3

28.1

30.8

29.6

23.9

145.7

Sri Lanka

24.8

8.2

7.6

9.9

19.5

70.0

Sudan

23.0

39.1

29.2

28.9

46.9

167.1

Lebanon

21.2

27.8

28.3

68.8

6.3

152.4

Angola

18.8

22.1

19.8

48.1

35.8

144.6

BiH

18.5

24.6

17.1

15.4

15.0

90.6

Lao PDR

11.0

12.7

12.2

13.3

7.2

56.4

Colombia

10.5

9.1

8.8

4.3

2.3

35.0

Ethiopia

7.6

9.5

7.1

7.9

2.6

34.7

Chad

7.1

2.1

0.7

2.4

1.1

13.4

Mozambique

6.5

3.2

3.5

6.2

10.0

29.4

Jordan

6.4

7.1

5.7

5.6

2.0

26.8

Croatia

4.6

6.6

8.8

8.9

11.5

40.4

Vietnam

4.2

7.6

3.9

8.3

5.7

29.7

DRC

3.6

12.4

5.9

5.1

4.8

31.8

Cyprus

3.5

0.0

5.5

1.3

0.0

10.3

Tajikistan

3.5

1.9

1.3

1.1

0.9

8.7

Somaliland

3.0

3.8

1.9

2.9

3.7

15.3

Peru

2.7

1.3

0.3

1.6

0.0

5.9

Somalia

2.6

0.8

3.2

1.8

1.0

9.4

Albania

2.2

5.7

1.2

2.3

5.3

16.7

Azerbaijan

2.2

1.7

3.7

4.5

4.1

16.2

Nagorno-Karabakh

2.2

2.7

1.9

1.2

1.4

9.4

Georgia

2.1

8.7

0.0

0.0

0.0

10.8

Guinea-Bissau

2.1

1.7

1.9

0.9

0.3

6.9

Nicaragua

2.0

3.3

4.5

5.5

3.5

18.8

Pakistan

1.8

0.0

0.0

0.0

0.0

1.8

Palestine

1.7

5.1

0.0

0.0

0.0

6.8

Kosovo

1.6

2.0

0.5

2.0

1.9

8.0

Serbia

1.4

2.8

2.7

2.6

1.5

11.0

Abkhazia

1.3

0.7

1.8

3.1

3.3

10.2

Western Sahara

1.2

0.3

0.9

0.0

0.0

2.4

Yemen

1.0

1.0

1.1

4.1

2.5

9.7

Nepal

0.83

1.10

1.76

0.21

0.09

4.0

Myanmar

0.80

1.02

0.18

0.00

0.00

2.0

Uganda

0.57

0.78

1.80

1.70

1.76

6.6

Philippines

0.57

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.6

Ecuador

0.45

0.66

0.20

0.95

0.82

3.1

Eritrea

0.38

0.34

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.7

Senegal

0.34

0.66

4.60

0.92

0.81

7.3

Niger

0.14

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.1

Thailand

0.11

0.00

1.60

0.80

0.61

3.1

Palau

0.09

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.1

Belarus

0.04

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.0

Ukraine

0.04

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.0

Gambia

0.02

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.00

0.0

Global*

62.1

43.1

66.1

35.6

47.5

254.4

Note: Other areas are indicated by italics.
* Global refers to funds from donors allocated to institutions, NGOs, trust funds, and UN agencies without a designated recipient state or territory such as the ICRC, GICHD, NGOs, and all advocacy activities.

Spotlight on countries with stable and/or significant national mine action contributions

Croatia and Angola illustrate two very different ways of funding mine action at the national level. Since 2000 Croatia has taken out three World Bank loans to fund demining. Angola, on the other hand, is one of the world’s leading oil producers and invests billions of dollars in [development] projects for which clearing landmines is a major priority. There are also countries with smaller budgets that contribute a large portion of the overall annual cost of mine action. The mine action program in Chile is completely funded by the government and in Azerbaijan government support provided 80% of the funding needed in 2009. In an innovative national fundraising effort, the Lebanon Mine Action Center (LMAC) and Blom Bank, one of Lebanon’s largest banks, in May 2010 launched a strategic public-private partnership that will earn LMAC a percentage of each national and international transaction with a Blom MasterCard Giving Affinity credit card.

Affected states with a large revenue base or with the Ministry of Defense providing personnel to the mine action program as required military duty—most commonly to support the operations of the national mine action center and a contingent of deminers—have had stable funding from the national government. For example, Angola, Chad, and Sudan are major oil producers while the mine action programs in Nicaragua, Lebanon, and Jordan are under each country’s Ministry of Defense and military personnel serve as both managers and deminers.

Contributions by donor and thematic sector: 2009

Donor

Total contribution
($ million)

Advocacy
(%)

Clearance/risk education
(%)

Victim assistance (%)

Other
(%)

US

118.7

0

91

9

0

EC

48.1

0

99

0

1

Japan

48.0

1

96

3

0

Norway

35.7

15

51

20

14

Germany

23.7

2

85

2

11

Australia

19.4

3

71

26

0

Canada

18.8

5

91

4

0

Netherlands

18.4

0

96

4

0

UK

17.9

0

100

0

0

Switzerland

15.0

7

34

4

55

Sweden

14.9

3

97

0

0

Spain

14.6

1

72

26

1

Denmark

11.2

2

90

0

8

Belgium

10.4

7

65

28

0

Finland

6.9

0

79

10

11

Ireland

5.2

11

88

0

1

France

4.5

0

53

0

47

Italy

3.9

4

53

38

5

BiH

2.5

0

100

0

0

New Zealand

2.2

0

29

71

0

Austria

2.1

6

74

20

0

Qatar

2.0

0

100

0

0

Czech Republic

1.4

2

98

0

0

Saudi Arabia

1.0

0

100

0

0

Luxembourg

1.0

21

64

15

0

Recipients

A total of 54 countries and areas received $449 million from 33 donors in 2009. This is approximately the same as in 2008 when contributions totaled $455 million.

A Geneva International Centre for Humanitarian Demining (GICHD) study[5] on the motivation of donors in 2010 found that although donors continue to fund mine action based on the Mine Ban Treaty, they no longer view mine contamination strictly as an emergency issue requiring a humanitarian response. Most donors, the study found, consider mine action support as part of a broader development funding strategy which includes humanitarian assistance. More than three-quarters of the 25 donors that participated in the study indicated countries receiving assistance for mine action were also receiving other forms of aid. The study concluded the mine action community faced growing competition for financial resources from the broader peace and security field, and the integration of mine action into development plans.

Trends observes in 2009 include:

  • 10 countries and two areas received at least 15% more funds in 2009: Azerbaijan, Cambodia, Chad, Colombia, Guinea-Bissau, Mozambique, Peru, Somalia, Sri Lanka, and Tajikistan, as well as Abkhazia and Western Sahara.
  • 17 countries and four areas received at least 15% less funds in 2009: Angola, BiH, Burundi, Croatia, DRC, Ecuador, Ethiopia, Georgia, Lebanon, Mauritania, Myanmar, Nepal, Senegal, Serbia, Sudan, Uganda, and Vietnam, as well as Kosovo, Nagorno-Karabakh, Palestine, and Somaliland.
  • 13 countries received support in 2009 that did not receive or report support in 2008: Armenia, Belarus, Cyprus, Gambia, Mali, Niger, Pakistan, Palau, Philippines, Syria, Thailand, Ukraine, and Zambia.

Recipients receiving 15% or more increased support in 2009

Recipient

Percentage increase

Amount of increase
($ million)

Western Sahara

300%

0.9

Chad

238%

5.0

Somalia

225%

1.8

Sri Lanka

202%

16.6

Peru

108%

1.4

Mozambique

103%

3.3

Abkhazia

86%

0.6

Tajikistan

84%

1.6

Azerbaijan

29%

0.5

Guinea-Bissau

24%

0.4

Cambodia

19%

5.2

Colombia

15%

1.4

Note: Other areas are indicated by italics.

Recipients receiving at least 15% less support in 2009

Recipient

Percentage decrease

Amount of decrease
($ million)

Georgia

76%

6.6

Burundi

75%

0.8

DRC

71%

8.8

Palestine

67%

3.4

Serbia

50%

1.4

Senegal

48%

0.3

Vietnam

45%

3.4

Sudan

41%

16.1

Mauritania

40%

0.2

Ecuador

32%

0.2

Croatia

30%

2.0

Uganda

27%

0.2

BiH

25%

6.1

Lebanon

24%

6.6

Somaliland

21%

0.8

Myanmar

22%

0.2

Nepal

25%

0.3

Kosovo

20%

0.4

Nagorno-Karabakh

19%

0.5

Ethiopia

20%

1.9

Angola

15%

3.3

Note: Other areas are indicated by italics.

National Contributions

Contributions from affected countries to domestic mine action programs increased from 2008, but remained underreported. In 2009, 24 states reported $173 million in government financial support.[6] This compares to 24 states which contributed $144 million in 2008. Rwanda, Thailand, and Zimbabwe reported national contributions in 2008, but not in 2009. Denmark, Egypt, and Eritrea reported national contributions in 2009, but not in 2008. The UK began clearing mined areas in the Falkland Islands/Malvinas in 2009 and contracted BACTEC International Ltd. to conduct clearance operations but the value of the contract, which was completed in May 2010, was not available.

Despite the increases in national contributions reported in 2008 and 2009, an analysis of the data provides a mixed overall picture of national contributions. Angola, BiH, Colombia, and Croatia accounted for 75% of all national contributions in 2009. While Croatia funds almost 95% of its mine action program from national sources, the large contributions from Angola, BiH, and Colombia represented approximately 50% of the total cost of mine action in those countries in 2009. Furthermore, while 24 affected states reported national contributions, 32 affected states and areas did not report making national contributions.

Better reporting and more transparency are the two primary reasons for the increase in known national contributions. For example, Angola and Colombia reported mine action budgets and expenditures of $30 million and $16 million, respectively, on government websites. Of the $16 million reported by Colombia, $10 million was for making social security payments to landmine survivors, a type of victim assistance that goes largely unreported by most countries. Angola reported $8 million of $30 million in national contributions was directed for victim assistance, most of which went to funding the country’s largest orthopedic hospital and rehabilitation center.

Funding by Thematic Sector

Mine clearance and risk education

Eight of the seventeen largest donors allocated at least 90% of their support to clearance and risk education.

Most donors reported clearance and risk education as a combined figure, which makes it impossible to get a clear picture of the funding allocated specifically to risk education. Of the donors who reported risk education separately, the US led with its funding of 13 risk education projects in 10 countries for $2.4 million, followed by the EC in Pakistan with €1.26 million/$1.8 million, Japan with projects in two countries for ¥72.35 million/$770,000, Australia in Sri Lanka for A$200,000/$158,540, Spain to UNICEF in Colombia for $557,000, and Switzerland in Lao PDR for CHF520,000/$478,821.[7] All other risk education funding was reported together with funding for clearance.

Victim assistance

Of the 33 donors that reported support to mine action, 15 reported funding victim assistance for a total of $38 million, or 9% of all funding. Seven donors (Australia, Austria, Belgium, Italy, New Zealand, Norway, and Spain) allocated at least 20% of their funding to victim assistance. Austria provided €85,000/$118,448 to Handicap International for its Voices from the Ground study on victim assistance from a survivor’s perspective. The European Union (EU) reported it supports victim assistance through its broader development programs but did not report the amount of support. At the Special Session on Cooperation and Assistance held during the intersessional Standing Committee meetings in Geneva in June 2010, the EU said only by integrating mine action into the development agenda can sustainable results be achieved, especially in regard to victim assistance.[8]

However, the significance of the international amount of the victim assistance funding is difficult to determine. The majority of all victim assistance funding assists people of all disabilities and most of the victim assistance support is provided at the local level through a wide range of government ministries and agencies, NGOs, social service agencies, and advocacy groups.

The US, Norway, and Australia provided 60% of all victim assistance funding in 2009. Of the $10.9 million from the US, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Patrick Leahy War Victims Fund provided $6.9 million in 2009 to projects in Colombia, Lao PDR, Lebanon, Ethiopia, and the Philippines, the ICRC Special Fund for the Disabled (SFD), and the International Society of Prosthetics and Orthotics (ISPO). Norway contributed $7 million to VA and Australia $5 million. Austria, Australia, Belgium, New Zealand, Norway, Spain, Sweden, and the US reported $13.7 million, or approximately one-third of all VA funding, in support to the ICRC or to national Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies. The remainder of the victim assistance funding was for small projects with a narrow beneficiary base, illustrated by the $152,000 Japan provided to a national NGO in Syria to make artificial limbs for landmine survivors and the $56,000 provided by Germany to the Albanian Pain Association.

Seven donors (Australia, Austria, Liechtenstein, Norway, Spain, Switzerland, and the USAID Patrick Leahy War Victims Fund) supported the ICRC SFD, which supported 63 projects in 30 countries in 2009, with CHF5,417,583 ($4.99 million). However, the amount raised from donors fell short and resulted in a shortfall of CHF606,727 ($558,680).[9]

Advocacy

Fifteen governments contributed $11 million, or 3% of all funding, to advocacy efforts. More than 10% of the support from Norway, Ireland, and Luxembourg went towards advocacy, including support for the Second Review Conference of the Mine Ban Treaty in Cartagena, regional meetings held in the lead-up to the Second Review Conference in 2009, and government travel sponsorship through UNDP and the sponsorship program of the Implementation Support Unit at GICHD. The CMC, ICBL, GICHD, and Landmine and Cluster Munition Monitor also received donor support for advocacy.

Other Funding Paths

The $449 million in support to mine action in 2009 represents government contributions under bilateral and international programs and in accordance with international treaty obligations. It does not represent the complete expenditures for field operations. Other funding sources include foundations, private fundraising by NGOs, and mine action allocations in countries with peacekeeping operations.

Twenty governments, the EC, and the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) contributed approximately $90 million to the UN Voluntary Trust Fund for Assistance in Mine Action (UN VTF) for activities in 18 countries and UN Mine Action Service (UNMAS) coordination; almost all of this was earmarked by the donor for a specific country. The donors with the largest contributions to the UN VTF were Canada, EC, Japan, and the Netherlands. Several small donors used the UN VTF to contribute to mine action. They included: Andorra, South Korea, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Oman, Saudi Arabia, and UNHCR.[10]

Donors also contributed $31.9 million to the International Trust Fund for Demining and Mine Victims Assistance (ITF) and $6.9 million to the Organization of American States (OAS) for regional mine action programs in southeastern Europe and Latin America, respectively.[11]

Eleven governments reported contributing nearly $12 million to GICHD in 2009, with Switzerland providing 75% of the total.[12]

In 2009 donors also funded mine action through UNDP’s Bureau for Crisis Prevention and Recovery for Afghanistan, Albania, Angola, BiH, Cambodia, Ethiopia, Lao PDR, Mozambique, Lebanon, Sri Lanka, and Sudan.[13] UNICEF reported funding for risk education projects in Albania, Cambodia, Colombia, Eritrea, Guinea-Bissau, Iraq, Lao PDR, Nepal, Niger, Pakistan, Senegal, Sri Lanka, Sudan, and Yemen.[14]

Peacekeeping operations

Peacekeeping operations in Chad, Cyprus, DRC, Lebanon, Somalia, Sudan (Darfur and South Sudan), and Western Sahara have mine action programs that are partially funded by appropriations assessments by the UN General Assembly as part of its peacekeeping mission budgets. The appropriation increased by 6% from $65 million in 2008 to $69 million in 2009. Approximately $50 million in 2009 was allocated to the UNAMID and UNMIS missions. The mine action program in Darfur in 2009 was funded through UNAMID at $10.8 million which included three rapid response teams and the deployment of one route verification team to conduct emergency surveys, battle area clearance, and route verification as well as risk education for the local population and internally displaced persons.[15]

States Parties Granted Extension Requests

At the end of 2009 States Parties had approved Article 5 extension requests from 17 countries and, as of August 2010, Colombia, Guinea-Bissau, and Mauritania had submitted requests totaling $2.8 billion in both international and national projected funding needs. From 2011 to 2020 the amount of international assistance needed for 14 countries (not including Guinea-Bissau) to meet their Article 5 obligations is $841 million, representing approximately 30% of all support needed to clear all mined areas as planned in the extension requests. The financial commitment from affected countries represents $1.9 billion, or 70% of the total costs reflecting progress made towards achieving national ownership of mine action programs. Venezuela, Denmark, and the UK indicated they did not need international support to meet their Article 5 obligations.

An analysis of the amount of international support needed for clearance in each country indicates that several countries fell far short of support received in 2009 than they had planned. For example, Thailand received less than 1% ($111,272) of its planned international support in 2009.

BiH committed to provide $37 million from national and local sources, but only provided $15 million in 2009. BiH’s capacity to meet its national commitment became more problematic in May 2010 when its parliament defeated a measure for funding demining on the grounds that a three-year mine action strategy had not been approved and that no new budget lines could be approved due to difficult economic times in 2009 and 2010.[16]

In 2009, Thailand committed THB900 million ($26.4 million) to the first year of its extension period, but no figures are available on the actual expenditures.[17] Thailand cleared 2.5km2 in 2009, but fell short of targets set out in its Article 5 extension request, which called for demining of 43km2 in 2009.

The national commitments reflected in the Article 5 extension requests are impressive, and are best illustrated by Croatia, through its plan to maintain its national contribution at 95%, and by Peru and Yemen, which have made commitments to provide at least 75% of the support needed from the national government. However, actual funds committed in 2009 by some countries are a cause for concern. BiH and Thailand both made large national commitments in their extension requests, but in 2009 fell well short of meeting their commitments.

Article 5 extension request international funding needs[18]

State

International funds needed
($)

National
funding
planned
($)

Years of extension request

Average amount of international support needed per year

International support received in
2009

National support provided in 2009

Cambodia

329,396,790

0

10

32,939,679

33,275,767

3,500,000

Thailand

172,370,360

370,000,000

10

17,237,036

111,272

N/R

BiH*

106,932,000

464,068,000

10

10,693,200

18,513,072

15,482,575

Croatia

55,740,000

975,450,000

10

5,574,000

4,720,812

52,296,549

Tajikistan

36,270,000

6,050,000

10

3,627,000

3,483,332

650,582

Senegal

32,070,000

0

7

4,581,429

342,250

300,000

Mozambique

17,789,640

10,500,000

5

3,557,928

6,470,727

1,608,087

Jordan

13,000,000

14,000,000

4

3,250,000

6,436,305

3,500,000

Yemen

10,495,000

20,721,667

6

1,749,167

1,042,102

3,500,000

Chad

9,000,000

6,000,000

3

3,000,000

7,071,214

1,500,000

Ecuador

8,031,040

8,640,000

8

1,003,880

454,911

N/R

Peru

7,621,200

16,559,906

8

952,650

2,705,807

1,468,842

Uganda

5,656,000

1,250,000

3

1,885,333

578,646

N/R

Venezuela

0

14,000,000

4

0

0

0

UK

0

Unknown

Unknown

Unknown

Unknown

Unknown

Pending Approval

Colombia

24,829,892

22,642,913

3

8,276,631

10,502,603

16,486,260

Mauritania

12,310,000

4,250,000

5

2,462,000

257,366

846,000

Denmark

0

18,291,000

18 months

0

0

683,217

Zimbabwe

500,000

0

2

250,000

0

N/R

Guinea-Bissau

Unknown

Unknown

Three months

Unknown

2,068,000

0

Total

842,011,922

1,952,423,486

 

101,039,933

98,034,186

101,822,112

N/R = Not reported * In 2009, BiH fell 50% short in meeting its goal in national funding and a three-year mine action strategy had not been adopted as of 13 May 2010 and without approval, the government could not allocate funding to support the strategy[19]

 

[1]The EC revised its 2008 contribution downward to reflect only funds allocated in 2008, rather than a mix of future commitments and actual allocations. The revised EC figure for 2008 is €15,478,721 ($22,793,965), a reduction of €45,321,279 ($66,740,115) from what the Monitor reported in 2009, resulting in a revised total for 2008 global contributions. Emails from Maria Cruz Cristóbal, Mine Action Desk, Security Policy Unit, Directorate-General for External Relations, EC, 10 June and 29 August 2010. See also, Landmine Monitor Report 2009, p. 83. Average exchange rate for 2009: €1=US$1.3935. US Federal Reserve, “List of Exchange Rates (Annual),” 4 January 2010.

[2] The amount for each donor has been rounded to the nearest tenth. Source information can be found in the respective Country Profiles at www.the-monitor.org/cp.

[3] Statement of Canada, Special Session on Cooperation and Assistance, intersessional Standing Committee meetings, Geneva, 25 June 2010.

[4] The amount for each donor has been rounded to the nearest tenth. Source information can be found in the respective Country Profiles at www.the-monitor.org/cp.

[5] Jean Devlin, “Mine Action Funding: Trends, Modalities and Future
Prospects,” GICHD, November 2010.

[6] The amount for each donor has been rounded to the nearest tenth. Source information can be found in the respective Country Profiles at www.the-monitor.org/cp.

[7] Average exchange rates for 2009: ¥1=US$0.01067; A$1=US$0.7927; CHF1=US$0.92081. US Federal Reserve, “List of Exchange Rates (Annual),” 4 January 2010.

[8] Statement of the EU, Special Session on Cooperation and Assistance, intersessional Standing Committee meetings, Geneva, 25 June 2010.

[9] ICRC SFD, “2009 Annual Report,” Geneva, pp. 11 and 49. Average exchange rate for 2009: 1CHF=US$0.92081. US Federal Reserve, “List of Exchange Rates (Annual),” 4 January 2010.

[10] UNMAS, “Annual Report 2009,” September 2010, New York, p.6, www.mineaction.org.

[11]Email from Carl Case, Director, Humanitarian Mine Action, OAS, 24 February 2010; and ITF, www.itf-fund.si.

[12] Responses to Monitor questionnaire by Ira Amin, Intern, Multilateral Peace Policy Section, Directorate of Political Affairs, Political Affairs Division IV, Human Security, Federal Department of Foreign Affairs of Switzerland, 20 April 2010; Amb. Lars-Erik Wingren, Department for Disarmament and Non-proliferation, Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Sweden, 17 March 2010; and Vilde Rosén, Advisor, Humanitarian Disarmament Department for UN, Peace and Humanitarian Affairs, Royal Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 13 April 2010. Emails from Sirpa Loikkanen, Secretary, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Finland, 17 May 2010; Hanne B. Elmelund Gam, Department of Humanitarian and NGO Cooperation, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Denmark, 10 May 2010; Derek Taylor, Acting Director, Iraq and Middle East Section, AusAID, 27 May 2010; and Amb. Alain Girma, Ambassador on action against mines and explosive remnants of war to Handicap International France, 4 May 2010. Italy CCW Amended Protocol II Article 13 Report, Form B, 25 September 2009; Belgium, Article 7 Report, Form J, 30 April 2010; Spain Article 7 Report, Form J, 30 April 2010; and Canada Article 7 Report (for the period 19 April 2009 to 20 April 2010), Form J.

[13] UNDP, www.undp.org.

[14] Emails from Ghada Kachachi, Chief, Child Protection, UNICEF, 18 May 2010; Amy Delneuville, Child Protection Officer, UNICEF, 4 April 2010; Kutloano Leshomo, Communication and Donor Relations Specialist, UNICEF, 14 June 2010; Christina de Bruin, Head of Field Office, UNICEF, 16 May 2010; Aurora Bushati, Education Officer, UNICEF, 30 March 2010; Nguyen Thi Thanh An, Childhood Injury Prevention Specialist, UNICEF , 12 May 2010; Sebastian Kasack, Mine Action Specialist, UNICEF, 25 April 2010; Djanabou Mahonde, Chief, Child Protection, UNICEF, 10 May 2010; Sonia Polonio, Child Protection Specialist, UNICEF, 23 April 2010; Plong Chhaya, Project Officer Child Protection and Office Emergency Focal Point, UNICEF, 10 May 2010; Fatuma H. Ibrahim, Chief, Child Protection, UNICEF, 5 May 2010; Farman Ali, Child Protection Officer, UNICEF, 2 May 2010; and Danee Luhar, Child Protection Officer, Mine Action, UNICEF, 30 April 2010. Colombia Article 5 deadline Extension Request, 29 March 2010, p. 31; and UN, “2010 Portfolio of Mine Action Projects,” New York, p. 324.

[15] UNMAS, “Annual Report 2009,” September 2010, New York, p.121, www.mineaction.org.

[16] Ibid.

[17] Average exchange rate for 2009: THB1=US$0.02936. Oanda, www.oanda.com.

[18] GICHD, “States Parties’ Requests for Extension,” www.apminebanconvention.org.

[19] Interview with Fuad Kasumovic, Deputy Minister of Finance and Treasury, Jasmina Karisik, Advisor of Deputy Minister of Finance and Treasury, and Huse Sepic, Head, Budget Planning Department, Ministry of Finance, Sarajevo, 13 May 2010.