Somalia

Cluster Munition Ban Policy

Last updated: 26 June 2018

Summary: State Party Somalia ratified the convention on 30 September 2015 after participating in several meetings of the convention. It voted in favor of a key United Nations (UN) resolution on the convention in December 2017.Somalia has condemned new use of the cluster munitions.

Although it has not submitted an initial transparency report, due 31 August 2016, Somalia is not known to have used, produced, transferred, or stockpiled cluster munitions. Cluster munitions remnants have been cleared from the country’s border areas, but it has not been possible to determine the party responsible for this use.

Policy

The Somali Republic signed the Convention on Cluster Munitions on 3 December 2008, ratified on 30 September 2015, and the convention entered into force for the country on 1 March 2016.

It is unclear if Somalia will undertake national implementing legislation to enforce the convention’s provisions.

As of 1 July 2018, Somalia still had not submitted its initial Article 7 transparency report for the Convention on Cluster Munitions, which was originally due on 31 August 2016.

In December 2017, Somalia voted in favor of a key UN General Assembly (UNGA) resolution that calls on states outside the Convention on Cluster Munitions to “join as soon as possible.”[1] Somalia also voted in favor of the first UNGA resolution on the convention in December 2015.[2]

Somalia attended one meeting of the Oslo Process that produced the convention, in Vienna in December 2007.[3]

Somalia participated in the convention’s annual Meetings of States Parties in 2011–2012 and 2014, as well as intersessional meetings in Geneva in 2013–2014. It has not attended any meetings of the convention since then, such as the Seventh Meeting of States Parties in Geneva in September 2017.

In 2014, Somalia said, “we denounce ongoing use of cluster munitions” in South Sudan and Syria, as well as reported cluster munition use in Ukraine.[4] Somalia has voted in favor of UNGA resolutions expressing outrage at the use of cluster munitions in Syria, most recently in December 2017.[5]

Somalia is a party to the Mine Ban Treaty. It is not party to the Convention on Conventional Weapons.

Use, production, transfer, and stockpiling

In September 2014, Somalia informed States Parties that it “is not a user, producer, or stockpiling state” of cluster munitions.[6]

Cluster munitions remnants have been cleared from the country’s border areas. For example, in March 2016, deminers found an unexploded submunition from a BL755 cluster bomb in Bardera (Baardheere) in Gedo region and found a PTAB-2.5M submunition in Dinsoor in the Bay region in September 2016.[7]

Previous use

Kenya, a signatory to the Convention on Cluster Munitions, has denied an allegation that it used cluster munitions in Somalia in 2016.[8] In January 2016, a Somali media outlet reported an alleged cluster munition attack in the Gedo region of Somalia and published photographs reportedly taken at the site of the attack that show dead livestock and the remnants of UK-made BL755 cluster bombs and their submunitions.[9] The article stated that the Kenyan Defense Forces (KDF) carried out the attack against the non-state armed group al-Shabaab after Kenyan troops were forced to retreat from their base near the Somali border town of El Adde. The governor of Gedo region, Mohamed Abdi Kalil, accused the KDFof attacking the area around Bardere city “using illegal cluster bombs.”[10]

A UN investigation reported to the Security Council on 9 May 2016 that:

“In addition to civilian casualties, air strikes by the Kenyan military from 15 to 23 January in the Gedo region reportedly resulted in the killing of livestock and the destruction of water wells and houses. In this regard, allegations of cluster munitions were reported by the media and local communities. However, the Government of Kenya has officially denied them. Unexploded sub-munitions are reported to have been used by Al-Shabaab as improvised explosive devices during attacks. On 31 January, the Federal Government announced a committee to investigate the impact of the air strikes, but the committee has yet to begin its work.”[11]

The Monitor also could not conclusively determine on the basis of available evidence if Kenya used cluster munitions in January 2016. A UN Monitoring Group investigation reported that al-Shabaab repurposed unexploded submunitions from BL755 cluster munitions as components for improvised explosive devices (IEDs), according to an arms cache seized by anti-al-Shabaab forces in Bardera on 7 March 2016.[12]

Previously, in 2013, mine clearance operators working in Somalia near the border with Ethiopia cleared cluster munition remnants believed to date from the 1977–1978 Ogaden War between Somalia and Ethiopia, but it is unclear who was responsible for the use.[13] Somalia has commented that the cluster munition contamination near its border with Ethiopia dates from the “border wars of 1978–1984,” but has not indicated who was responsible for this use.[14]



[1]Implementation of the Convention on Cluster Munitions,” UNGA Resolution 72/54, 4 December 2017.

[2]Implementation of the Convention on Cluster Munitions,” UNGA Resolution 70/54, 7 December 2015.

[3] For details on Somalia’s policyand practice regarding cluster munitions through early 2009, see Human Rights Watch and Landmine Action, Banning Cluster Munitions: Government Policy and Practice (Ottawa: Mines Action Canada, May 2009), p. 153.

[4] Statement of Somalia, Convention on Cluster Munitions Fifth Meeting of States Parties, San Jose, 2 September 2014.

[5]Situation of human rights in the Syrian Arab Republic,” UNGA Resolution 71/191, 19 December 2017. Somalia voted in favor of similar resolutions in 2013–2014 and 2016.

[6] Statement of Somalia, Convention on Cluster Munitions Fifth Meeting of States Parties, San Jose, 2 September 2014.

[7] Email from Mohammad Sediq Rashid, UNMAS, 8 June 2017.

[8] UN Security Council, “Report of the Secretary-General on Somalia (S/2016/430),” 9 May 2016, p. 10, para. 51.

[9]Losses shelling forces arrested Gedo and Juba,” Calanka Media, 24 January 2016. See also, “Sawirro: Kenya Oo Qaaday Weerar Culus Oo Aar goosi Ah!!,” Somalia Memo, 24 January 2016.

[10] Mohamed Abdi Kalil (@GovernorKalil), “‪#KDF‪jets pounded #Bardere city area southern #Gedo region, killing Civilians, destroying livestock Using illegal cluster bombs #Somalia @UN,”8:02am, 5 March 2016, Tweet.

[11] UN Security Council, “Report of the Secretary-General on Somalia S/2016/430,” 9 May 2016, p. 10, para. 51. The January 2017 Report of the Secretary-General on Somalia did not include an update on the committee.

[12] Ibid.

[13] In April 2013, the director of the Somalia National Mine Action Authority (SNMAA) informed the Monitor that dozens of PTAB-2.5M and some AO-1SCh submunitions were found within a 30-kilometer radius of the Somali border town of Dolow. It is not possible to determine definitively who was responsible for this cluster munition use. The Soviet Union supplied both sides in the Ogaden War, and foreign military forcesknown to have cluster munitions fought in support of Ethiopia, including the Soviet Union and Cuba. Email from Mohammed A. Ahmed, SNMAA, 17 April 2013. Photographs of the cluster munition remnants are available here.

[14] Statement of Somalia, Convention on Cluster Munitions Fifth Meeting of States Parties, San Jose, 2 September 2014.


Mine Ban Policy

Last updated: 26 October 2017

Policy

Somalia acceded to the Mine Ban Treaty on 16 April 2012 and the treaty entered into force for the country on 1 October 2012. Somalia has not yet instituted national implementation measures, but stated that it is aware of its obligation and is “committed to doing so in the future and to reporting on these measures.”[1]

Somalia submitted its initial Article 7 report for the Mine Ban Treaty on 30 March 2013, but has not submitted an updated report since.

Somalia attended the Fifteenth Meeting of States Parties in Santiago in November–December 2016, as well as the Third Review Conference in Maputo, Mozambique, in June 2014. Somalia did not attend the treaty’s intersessional meetings in Geneva in June 2017. Somalia last made a statement at the Fourteenth Meeting of States Parties in 2015, where it asked for more international support in fulfilling its obligations.

Somalia ratified the Convention on Cluster Munitions on 30 September 2015 and will became a State Party in March 2016. Somalia is not party to the Convention on Conventional Weapons (CCW).

Several Somali factions previously renounced use of antipersonnel mines by signing the Deed of Commitment, administered by Geneva Call.

The Somalia Coalition to Ban Landmines has continued to engage on the Mine Ban Treaty with government officials, as well as with the Somali National Mine Action Agency.

Production, transfer, and stockpiling

Somalia has stated that it never had production facilities for antipersonnel mines within the country.[2] Somalia’s initial Article 7 report states that “large stocks are in the hands of former militias and private individuals.” The report also states that Somalia is “putting forth efforts to verify if in fact it holds antipersonnel mines in its stockpile.” No stockpiled mines have been destroyed since the convention came into force for Somalia.[3] Most factions involved in armed conflict in Somalia are believed to possess mines.[4] Previously, demobilizing militias have turned in mines.[5] Some mines have been turned in by armed groups for destruction in the past.[6]

No transfers of antipersonnel mines were reported during 2012 or early 2013. The Monitor has reported transfers in previous years.[7] No open sale of antipersonnel mines has been reported since 2009.[8]

Use

There have been no allegations of use of antipersonnel mines by government forces in Somalia. Previously, reports of use by al-Shabaab insurgents had been alleged in several news reports, but the Monitor has been unable to verify these reports.[9] Recent reports seen by the Monitor alleging landmine use by al-Shabaab appear to refer to command-detonated bombs rather than victim activated improvised explosive devices [10]

Non-state armed groups (NSAGs) use improvised explosive devices (IEDs) in large numbers and media often refer to command-detonated IEDs and bombs as “landmines.”[11] Victim-activated mines and other explosive devices are prohibited by the Mine Ban Treaty, but command-detonated mines and devices are not. Monitor analysis of media reports indicates that most, if not all, of the recovered explosive weapons and explosive attacks attributed to mines involve command-detonated or time-detonated bombs. In October 2011, Somali authorities and African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) forces discovered an IED-manufacturing facility in Mogadishu, after which UNMAS noted, “The presence of improvised pressure plates indicates that [al-Shabaab] intends to employ Victim Operated IEDs, against vehicles or dismounted troops.”[12]

In the past, antipersonnel mines were used by various factions in Somalia, but in recent years the Monitor has not been able to verify any reports of new use by any of the NSAGs operating in the country.

Somalia continues to suffer significant antivehicle landmine attacks.[13]



[1] Mine Ban Treaty Initial Article 7 Report (for the period 16 April 2012 to 30 March 2013), Section A (Somalia did not use the Article 7 report forms but submitted a report following the same format).

[3] Ibid., Sections B and G.

[4] The Transitional Federal Government (TFG) of the Somali Republic was created in 2004, and ceased being the official government name in 2012. The former TFG Deputy Prime Minister told the Monitor in 2005 that he believed militias in Mogadishu alone held at least 10,000 antipersonnel mines. Interview with Hussein Mohamed Aideed, Deputy Prime Minister, in Geneva, 15 June 2005.

[5] Photographs of the Disarmament, Demobilization, and Reintegration program available on the African Union Mission in Somalia (AMISOM) website in July 2009 showed mines and improvised explosive devices. See, AMISOM, “Pictures of some collected/surrendered Weapons and Ammunitions to AMISOM,” undated.

[6] See, ICBL-CMC, “Country Profile: Somalia: Mine Ban Policy,” 28 June 2013.

[7] Between 2002 and 2006, the UN Monitoring Group on Somalia published a number of reports containing allegations of the transfer of antipersonnel and other mines from a number of countries, including States Parties Eritrea and Ethiopia, to various Somali combatants. See, Landmine Monitor Report 2008, pp. 1,004–1,005; Landmine Monitor Report 2007, pp. 978–979; Landmine Monitor Report 2006, pp. 1,065–1,066; Landmine Monitor Report 2005, pp. 870–871; and Landmine Monitor Report 2004, p. 1,112. In response to the claims by the UN Monitoring Group, the Presidents of the Seventh and Eighth Meetings of States Parties wrote to the chair of the group for clarification and further information, but did not receive responses.

[8] In June 2009, Reuters reported the continued sale of mines and other weapons at markets in Mogadishu. One arms dealer claimed to sell mines (type unspecified, but likely antivehicle) for approximately US$100 apiece. “Arms Trade-Dealers revel in Somali war business,” Reuters (Mogadishu), 9 June 2009; for details including sellers and markets identified by the UN Monitoring Group, see, Landmine Monitor Report 2008, pp. 1,003–1,005.

[9] See, “Landmine danger persists in Somalia,” UN IRIN (Mogadishu), 1 February 2013; and Majid Ahmed, “Somalia struggles to deal with threat of landmines and unexploded ordnance,” Sabahi, 8 August 2013.

[10] See, for example: “5 members of Al-Shabaab killed after land mine they were planting exploded,” Wacaal media, 23 March 2015; and “Three soldiers die in landmine explosion in Jubbaland military base,” Goobjoog News, 17 September 2015.

[11] According to a June 2011 UN Monitoring Group report, “Improvised explosive device technology in Somalia is relatively low-tech compared with other conflict arenas. The most common explosives used in attacks are TNT and RDX, which can be extracted from mortars and other high explosive artillery shells. More rudimentary improvised explosive devices include anti-tank mines and medium-to-high-caliber ammunition that can be altered for remote detonation. As for fragmentation improvised explosive devices, bomb makers lay 3-10 cm pieces of rebar, nuts and bolts, and ball bearings cast in resin on top of the explosive.” UN, Report of the Monitoring Group on Somalia and Eritrea pursuant to Security Council resolution 1916 (2010), S/2011/433, 18 July 2011, p. 45, para. 138. The UN Monitoring Group found that antivehicle mines were modified for remote detonation and deployed as IEDs in Somalia, sometimes with additional metal objects (bolts, metal filings) welded to the casing to enhance the fragmentation effect. UN, “Report of the Monitoring Group on Somalia pursuant to Security Council resolution 1853 (2008),” S/2010/91, 10 March 2010, p. 50, para. 174. See, for example, recovery of “landmines” by African Union forces in, Abdulkadir Khalif, “Amisom forces uncover buried explosives,” Daily Monitor, 19 December 2011; and “Somalia: Landmine Blast Rocks Ethiopian Convoy in Beledweyne, Central Region,” Shabelle Media Network, 14 May 2012.

[12] UN Security Council, “Report of the Monitoring Group on Somalia and Eritrea pursuant to Security Council resolution 2002 (2011),” S/2012/545, 13 July 2012, para. 21, p. 167. Citing an unpublished UNMAS report, “Confirmed Find of Bomb Making Equipment – 12 October 2011,” UNMAS report, 13 October 2011.

[13] See, for example, Harun Maruf, “Somalia: Landmine Blast Kills 6 in Somalia,” AllAfrica, 24 October 2017; and “At least 19 people killed by land mine in Somalia,” Al Jazeera, 6 April 2017.


Mine Action

Last updated: 19 November 2018

 

Treaty status

Mine Ban Treaty

State Party

Article 5 deadline: 1 October 2022

Not on track to meet deadline

Convention on Cluster Munitions

State Party

Article 4 deadline: 1 March 2026

Too soon to assess likelihood of compliance

Mine action management

National mine action management actors

Somali Explosives Management Agency (SEMA) has offices in each of the five Federal States in southcentral Somalia

United Nations agencies

United Nations Mine Action Service (UNMAS)

Mine action strategic plan

National Mine Action Strategy 2017–2020

Mine action standards

National Technical Standards and Guidelines (NTSGs)

Mine action legislation

No mine action legislation exists

Operators in 2017

National:

Police explosive ordnance disposal (EOD) team, Puntland

 

International:

Danish Demining Group (DDG)

HALO Trust

Mines Advisory Group (MAG)

Norwegian People’s Aid (NPA)

Extent of contamination as of end 2017

Landmines

Not known

16.33km2 CHA and 0.17km2 recorded (antipersonnel and antivehicle mines)

Cluster munition remnants

Not known. No CHAs or SHAs recorded

Other ERW contamination

Heavy contamination from other ERW and IEDs

Land release in 2017

Landmines

0.76km2 cleared. 4 antipersonnel mines and 2 antivehicle mines destroyed

1.31km2 confirmed

Cluster munition remnants

None

Other ERW

0.09km2 battle area clearance reported. At least 1,424 other ERW destroyed and 303 small arms ammunition

Progress

Landmines and cluster munition remnants

For the first time in 2017, EOD survey teams were deployed in all five of Somalia’s federal states, despite the high levels of insecurity

No cluster munition survey has been conducted in Somalia

Note: CHAs = confirmed hazardous areas; SHAs = suspected hazardous areas; ERW = explosive remnants of war; IEDs = improvised explosive devices.

 

(See separate mine action profile for Somaliland).

Mine Contamination

As a result of the Ethiopian-Somali wars in 1964 and 1977–1978 (also known as the Ogaden war), and more than 20 years of internal conflict, the Somali Republic is significantly contaminated with mines and ERW. According to the United Nations (UN), antipersonnel and antivehicle mines were laid as recently as 2012 in the disputed regions of Sool and Sanaag.[1]

Contamination from mines and ERW exists across Somalia’s three major regions: southcentral Somalia, including the capital Mogadishu; Puntland; and Somaliland, a self-proclaimed, though unrecognized, state that operates autonomously in the northwest. (See separate mine action profile for Somaliland.) Landmines along the border with Ethiopia, mainly as a result of legacy minefields, also continued to affect civilians in south-central Somalia.[2]

As of mid-2018, no recent national baseline of mine and ERW contamination had been established, primarily due to a lack of national capacity and a lack of access to many al-Shabaab-controlled territories.[3] In 2017, survey teams were for the first time to be deployed within all states of Somalia, adding to a better understanding of overall contamination. However, operators reported that the number of survey teams was limited and their movements at times hindered by insecurity. As such, state-wide surveys were expected to continue in 2018–2019, provided funding can be secured.[4]

In July 2018, SEMA reported that it was reclassifying contamination according to a new country structure in its national International Management System for Mine Action (IMSMA) database, consisting of the following seven states: Banaadir, Hirshabelle, Galmudug, Jubaland, Puntland, South West, and Somaliland. It noted that data had yet to be incorporated from Somaliland, along with additional missing information from Banaadir, Jubaland, and Puntland states, but as of December 2017, it reported that a total of 107 CHAs containing mine contamination and five SHAs had been recorded in the national database.[5]

According to Somalia’s Article 7 report for 2017, at the end of the year, a total of 352 areas containing a mix of explosive hazards with a total size of nearly 18.6km2 had been registered in the IMSMA database.[6] Of these, the following was reported in relation to areas suspected or confirmed to contain mines:

Mine/ERW contamination (as of December 2017)[7]

State

Type of contamination

CHAs

Area (m2)

SHAs

Area (m2)

Galmudug

AP/AV

6

2,254,395

0

0

AP/AV/CMR/ERW

1

784,352

0

0

AP/AV/ERW

1

443,903

0

0

AV

18

1,456,278

1

40,643

AV/ERW

1

0

0

0

Hirshabelle

AP

1

240,835

0

0

AP/AV

2

141,087

0

0

AV

53

6,663,754

4

124,447

South West

AP/AV

7

2,234,264

0

0

AV

17

2,106,734

0

0

Total

 

107

16,325,602

5

165,090

Note: AP = antipersonnel; AV = antivehicle; CMR = cluster munition remnant.

While no comprehensive estimates yet exist of mine and ERW contamination in Somalia, surveys completed in 2008 in Bakol, Bay, and Hiraan regions revealed that, of a total of 718 communities, around one in 10 was contaminated by mines and/or ERW.[8] Other contaminated areas lie along the border with Ethiopia, in Galguduud, Gedo, and Hiraan regions.[9] Non-technical survey initiated in 2015 identified more than 6km2 of mined area and found that 74 of 191 communities were impacted by mines and ERW, of which 13 reported an antipersonnel mine threat.[10]

In mid-2018, HALO Trust reported that it had identified 19 mined areas containing a mix of antipersonnel and antivehicle mine contamination with a size of just over 6.8km2 remaining to be addressed in southcentral Somalia.[11] In the Puntland state administration, mine and ERW contamination was assessed during Phase 2 of a Landmine Impact Survey (LIS), implemented by the Survey Action Centre (SAC) and the Puntland Mine Action Centre (PMAC) in the regions of Bari, Nugaal, and the northern part of Mudug.[12] The LIS was conducted from February to April 2005 and identified 35 communities affected by a total of 47 SHAs. The LIS estimated that about 151,000 people—around 6% of the population of some 2.5 million—live in mine-affected communities.[13]

Insecure and poorly managed stockpiles of weapons and ammunition, as well as use of IEDs and mines of an improvised nature by non-state armed groups, have a serious humanitarian impact. The extent of the threat is not well known, except in Puntland and Somaliland where a range of surveys have been carried out over the past decade.[14]

In 2018, UNMAS reported that mine and ERW contamination in Somalia continued to restrict community access to basic services and economic opportunities and remained an impediment to stability, security, and ultimately, recovery, and development.[15] HALO Trust reported that threats of minefields constrained pastoral herders from moving their flocks freely and accessing important water sources, which in a harsh desert climate plagued by famine and drought, are essential for community survival.[16]

Cluster Munition Contamination

The extent of cluster munition contamination in the Somali Republic is unknown. In 2013, dozens of PTAB-2.5M submunitions and several AO-1SCh submunitions were found within a 30km radius of the town of Dolow on the Somali-Ethiopian border in southcentral Somalia.[17] Cluster munitions were also identified around the town of Galdogob in the north-central Mudug province of Puntland, further north on the border with Ethiopia.[18] More contamination was expected to be found in southcentral Somalia’s Lower and Upper Juba regions.[19]

According to UNMAS, eight reports were submitted in September 2015 from Rabdhure, in Bakool region of South West state, showing empty RBK-250-275 cluster bomb containers, which can contain both AO-1Sch and PTAB-2.5M submunitions.[20]

Three additional reports of the identification of cluster munition remnants were made in 2016. In January 2016, several BL755 submunitions were reportedly found near Bu’ale, Middle Juba region. In March 2016, a modified BL755 submunition was found in Bardera (Baardheere), Gedo region, and in September 2016, one PTAB-2.5M submunition was reportedly found in Dinsoor, Bay region.[21] On 24 January 2016, Somali media reports circulated photos alleging that BL755 cluster munitions had been used by the Kenyan Defense Forces (KDF) during an intensive bombing campaign in Gedo region, an allegation that Kenya denied.[22] There were subsequent reports by local residents that non-state armed group al-Shabaab had discovered unexploded submunitions near Bu’ale around the same time. A UN Monitoring Group investigation later determined that unexploded submunitions of the same BL755 type were used in the manufacture of components of IEDs found in a cache of materials seized by anti-al-Shabaab forces in Bardera, reported on 7 March 2016.[23] (See Somalia’s cluster munition ban policy profile for further details.)

UNMAS reported that in 2017 it was shown two photos of the body of a BL-755 submunition being used in what it assessed to be an IED in Kismayo, Lower Juba region.[24]

The Ethiopian National Defense Forces and the Somali National Armed Forces are thought to have used cluster munitions in clashes along the Somali-Ethiopian border during the 1977–1978 Ogaden War.[25] The Soviet Union supplied both Ethiopia and Somalia with weapons during the conflict. PTAB-2.5 and AO-1Sch submunitions were produced by the Soviet Union on a large scale.[26]

While the extent of cluster munition contamination along the Somali border with Ethiopia is not known, in 2014, Somalia claimed it posed an ongoing threat to the lives of nomadic people and their animals.[27]

Program Management

SEMA maintains a presence across Somalia through its five federal state members: the SEMA Puntland State Office, SEMA Galmudug State Office, SEMA Hirshabelle State Office, SEMA South West State Office, and SEMA Jubaland Office.[28] Under each of the five members is an independent consortium of national NGOs, which implement mine action activities.

SEMA was established in 2013 as the mine action center for southern Somalia, replacing the Somalia National Mine Action Authority (SNMAA) created
two years earlier.[29] SEMA’s goal was to assume full responsibility for all explosive hazard coordination, regulation, and management by December 2015.[30] However, SEMA’s legislative framework was not approved by the Federal Parliament in 2016 as expected, and was further stalled by elections held in February 2017 that resulted in a period of government paralysis.[31] Due to this lack of parliamentary approval, SEMA has not received funding from the government or UNMAS since the expiry of its grant in 2015.[32] In 2017, SEMA reported that it was lobbying to get legislation passed in parliament and confirmed that once approved, SEMA will have a dedicated budget line included in the annual government budget.[33]

UNMAS coordinates humanitarian mine action activities under the umbrella of the Global Protection Cluster within the UN Country Team. Since 2015, it reports that it has supported the development of civilian-led clearance efforts along the Somali border with Ethiopia.[34]

Puntland

The SEMA Puntland State Office, formerly known as PMAC, was established in Garowe with UNDP support in 1999. Since then, on behalf of the regional government, the SEMA Puntland State Office has coordinated mine action with local and international partners, including Danish Demining Group (DDG) and Mines Advisory Group (MAG).[35] It runs the only police EOD team in Puntland, which is responsible for collecting and destroying explosive ordnance.[36]

Strategic planning

In late 2017, a National Mine Action Strategic Plan for 2017–2020 was developed with input from SEMA, UNMAS, international operators, national NGO consortia, and international institutions. The process was supported by NPA with funding from the United Kingdom (UK) Department for International Development (DFID).[37] As of September 2018, the draft strategic plan was awaiting endorsement from Somali Minister of Internal Security.[38]

The plan focuses on setting achievable goals over the next three-year period, taking into account the challenges faced by the Somali national mine action program. Five strategic goals are elaborated, along with corresponding strategic objectives and action plans. The critical need to improve information management is highlighted as underpinning many of the challenges the program faces at every level. According to SEMA, the strategy will be reviewed every six months.[39]

The strategy notes Somalia’s status as a State Party to both the Mine Ban Treaty and the Convention on Cluster Munitions and its reporting obligations and commitments to complying with the conventions. The strategy’s five strategic goals, identified by SEMA, are as follows:

  • To enhance the capacity and capability of SEMA to lead, direct, and enable effective and efficient mine action and explosives management in Somalia.
  • To develop the Somali mine action consortia into a wholly national capacity delivering appropriate mine action support to all member states, safely, efficiently and in accordance with national and international standards, expectations, and requirements.
  • To engage with stakeholders in order to understand, and better respond to, their needs and expectations in relation to the impact of mine/ERW contamination in Somalia.
  • To reduce the risks faced by the people of Somalia to a level that allows them to go about their lives free from the impacts of mines and ERW.
  • To comply, as much as practicable, with the obligations of those treaties to which Somalia is a signatory and which are relevant to the mine and explosives management program.

 

In 2017, the recently elected Somali government approved the Somalia National Development Plan 2017–2019, outlining priorities for recovery and development. Mine and ERW contamination is recognized as a hindrance to socio-economic development and a security concern for sustainable development initiatives, and identifies mine and ERW clearance as a crucial part of stabilization efforts in the national development process.[40]

In 2015, Somalia’s Ministry of Internal Security and SEMA developed a national strategy document, the “Badbaado Plan for Multi-Year Explosive Hazard Management,” in coordination with federal state members, the UN Assistance Mission in Somalia (UNSOM), and UNMAS. An updated second “phase” of the five-year plan for the implementation of Somalia’s Article 5 obligations was officially launched in Geneva in February 2018. The new National Mine Action Strategic Plan notes that the Badbaado plan “remains extant and identifies a range of locations and tasks consistent with the goals and objectives” of the strategic plan.[41]

Legislation and standards

There is no national mine action legislation in Somalia. UNMAS developed National Technical Standards and Guidelines (NTSGs) for Somalia in 2012–2013.[42] The NTSGs are also not specific to the Somali context, and do not include specific guidance for cluster munition survey.[43] In September 2018, it was reported that SEMA was in the process of revising the NTSGs with| the aim of new, fully nationally-owned standards to be finalized by early 2019.[44]

Quality management

Operators reported that no external quality assurance/quality control (QA/QC) was carried out in 2017 due to limited capacity and resources for SEMA.

Information management

In 2017, ownership of the national IMSMA database was fully transferred from UNMAS to SEMA, with support and capacity-building from NPA.[45] SEMA reported that it assumed full ownership of the IMSMA database on 2 October 2017 and that a process to update the information in the database according to a new country structure consisting of seven states (Banaadir, Hirshabelle, Galmudug, Jubaland, Puntland, South West, and Somaliland), and four levels (federal state, province, district, and village) was underway, along with a process to verify historical UNMAS data. SEMA noted that data from Somaliland had yet to be integrated into the database, but said that it had initiated a coordination process and communications were continuing to ensure that data is shared and available for Somalia’s next transparency report.[46] Data from Banaadir, Jubaland, and Puntland states was also lacking, it reported.[47] NPA stated that reporting forms were standardized throughout the mine action sector during the year, ensuring that all operators were using the same reporting forms.[48]

Somalia’s National Mine Action Strategic Plan for 2017–2020 places considerable emphasis on remedying shortcomings in information management. It also sets objectives for SEMA to build on improvements in information management to enable a focus on improving its prioritization of tasks based on better knowledge of humanitarian needs of affected communities, operational capacities, and the changing needs of internally displaced persons.[49] According to the plan, a specific national mine action standard on information management will be developed.[50]

In Somaliland, HALO Trust reported continuing regular checks of its information management system to ensure accuracy of reporting and stated that it transfers all data to SMAC, which then inputs it into its IMSMA database.[51]

Operators

In 2017, DDG focused operations on EOD and risk education in Sool and Gurieel regions of Somaliland and southcentral Somalia. By the end of 2017, DDG was deploying a single four-strong EOD team and nine two-person risk education teams.[52]

HALO Trust continued operations in southcentral Somalia in 2017.[53] HALO reported employing an average of approximately 175 staff, but in the last quarter of 2017 it had to scale back four manual mine clearance teams as a result of a local security issue.[54]

In 2017, NPA decided to expand its operations. In February, training of one manual clearance team and two survey teams was finalized and NPA began survey and clearance in Toghdeer and Sool, in the disputed areas between Puntland and Somaliland. The two survey teams were merged to form a demining team at the end of 2017, making a total of two demining teams with 12 deminers.[55]

In May, NPA began training five survey teams to be deployed across all five states in southcentral Somalia. Each team consisted of two NPA deminers and three additional members from local consortia NGOs. The survey teams, which also carried out risk education activities, became operational in September, making it the first time that mine action survey teams were deployed in all states in Somalia.[56] In 2017, under a DFID-funded partnership project, NPA continued to provide capacity development for SEMA on managing the IMSMA database, conducting non-technical and technical survey, and trainings for SEMA management staff.[57]

UNMAS contracted Ukroboronservice to carry out mine action activities in 2017 with a capacity of four eight-person multi-task teams to conduct ERW clearance, 56 community liaison officers to deliver risk education and liaison activities, and two 18-person manual demining teams. Operations began in December 2017.[58]

Land Release (landmines)

Just over 0.93km2 of land was released in total in Somalia and Somaliland in 2017, including just under 0.9km2 through mine clearance and close to 0.04km2 reduced by technical survey. Planned operations resulted in the destruction of 91 antipersonnel mines, nine antivehicle mines, and 56 items of UXO. A further 2.4km2 of mined area was confirmed as containing antipersonnel mines across Somalia and Somaliland during the year.[59]

This compared to 2016, when just over 1.2km2 of land was released in total in Somalia and Somaliland, including less than 0.04km2 through mine clearance in Somalia, and close to 1.2km2 of mined area through survey and clearance in Somaliland. No antipersonnel mines were cleared in Somalia in 2016, though 5.3km2 was confirmed as mined through survey.[60]

(See Somaliland profile for details of land release there.)

Survey in 2017 (landmines)

As stated, no comprehensive overview of SHAs exists in Somalia, and as of the end of 2017, no nationwide survey had been conducted, mainly due to the security situation.[61] To this end, however, operators HALO Trust and NPA reported confirming a total of 104 areas with a size of over 2.4km2 in southcentral Somalia and Somaliland (see Somaliland profile for details).[62]

HALO Trust confirmed three areas with a total size of just under 0.9km2, two in Galmudug state (total 765,760m2) and one in Hirshabelle state (120,830m2) in southcentral Somalia in 2017.[63]

NPA, which began mine action operations in southcentral Somalia in March 2017, confirmed a total of 41 areas with a total size of nearly 418,500m2 in southcentral Somalia.[64]

 

Mined area survey in 2017[65]

Operator

SHAs cancelled

Area cancelled (m²)

Areas confirmed

Area confirmed (m²)

Area reduced by TS (m2)

NPA (Puntland)

0

0

23

294,759

0

NPA (Galmudug)

0

0

14

113,752

0

NPA (Hirshabelle)

0

0

0

0

0

NPA (Jubaland)

0

0

4

10,000

0

NPA (South West)

0

0

0

0

0

HALO (Galmudug)

0

0

2

765,761

0

HALO (Hirshabelle)

0

0

1

120,834

0

Total

0

0

44

1,305,106

0

Note: TS = technical survey.

Clearance in 2017 (landmines)

In 2017, HALO Trust reported clearing two areas in southcentral Somalia with a total size of just over 76,660m2 with the destruction of four antipersonnel mines, two antivehicle mines, and 13 items of UXO. Additionally, 35 antipersonnel mines were destroyed in EOD spot tasks in southcentral Somalia during the year.[66] This compared to 2016, when HALO Trust initiated clearance activities in southcentral Somalia in the last quarter of the year, and reported clearing three mined areas covering just over 40,000m2: one in Hirshabelle state with a size of 5,169m2 and two in Galmudug state covering 34,860m2, however no mines or UXO were found.[67]

As noted above, NPA began demining in southcentral Somalia in March 2017.[68] It did not, however, undertake any mine clearance there as operations focused on survey.[69] Previously, during 2016, it operated three battle area clearance (BAC) teams for surface ERW clearance in Mogadishu and on its outskirts in southcentral Somalia.[70]

 

Mine clearance in 2017[71]

Operator

Region

Areas cleared

Area cleared

(m²)

AP mines destroyed

AV mines destroyed

UXO destroyed

HALO

Hirshabelle

2

76,661

4

2

13

Total

 

2

76,661

4

2

13

Note: AP = antipersonnel; AV = antivehicle.

 

Land Release (Cluster Munition Remnants)

Survey in 2017 (cluster munition remnants)

No overview of areas suspected to contain cluster munition remnants exists in southcentral Somalia, and in 2017, no national cluster munition survey had been conducted, mainly due to the security situation.[72]

NPA, which deployed five survey and mine risk education teams to each of Somalia’s five federal states in 2017, did not report encountering any cluster munitions in its operations.[73]

Clearance in 2017 (cluster munition remnants)

No cluster munition clearance occurred in southcentral Somalia in 2017, as in the previous year.[74] No formal land release occurred in Puntland in 2017.[75]

HALO carried out one BAC task in 2017 in the Galguduud region, near Dhuusamareeb, clearing an area of 91,430m2 and destroying 881 items of UXO and 246 rounds of small arms ammunition.[76] NPA discontinued BAC operations at the end of 2016 and did not encounter any cluster munition remnants in its survey and mine clearance operations in 2017.[77]

UNMAS reported that Ukroboronservice teams destroyed 530 items of abandoned and/or unexploded ordnance and 57 pieces of small arms ammunition.[78]

Deminer safety

In August 2017, three HALO Trust staff members from its community outreach team (COT) were abducted by Al-Shabaab. The team had been conducting work near Fer-fer when al-Shabaab took control of the town. The three COT members were abducted and the team leader was shot although he survived and has since made a full recovery. After several weeks of negotiations between the families of the abducted staff and al-Shabaab, all three employees were released.[79]

Mine Ban Treaty Article 5 Compliance

Under Article 5 of the Mine Ban Treaty, Somalia is required to destroy all antipersonnel mines in mined areas under its jurisdiction or control as soon as possible, but not later than 1 October 2022. It is not on track to meet this deadline.

In seeking to meet its treaty deadline, Somalia must confront a number of challenges, not least of which is the security situation in much of the country. It does not effectively control mine action operations in Somaliland. In 2018, HALO and NPA stated that it was highly improbable that Somalia could meet its 2022 Article 5 deadline, primarily due to a lack of access to areas due to conflict and insecurity, an overall lack of resources for survey and clearance, and a lack of capacity of the national authority.[80] While the development of the new National Mine Action Strategic Plan for 2017–2020 is a significant step forward, if the current capacity of the national mine action program is not increased, the goals of the strategy are likely overly ambitious.[81]

The National Mine Action Strategic Plan for 2017–2020 further elaborates the following as key challenges impeding progress in mine action and towards meeting its Article 5 deadline: strained relations between mine action stakeholders and SEMA and a lack of clarity of respective roles in the sector; pressures of operating in a volatile conflict zone, including lack of access; significant political challenges relating to complex structures of localized power-holders, along with navigating political conflict at the clan, state, and federal levels; a lack of capacity for oversight and quality management; and challenges to formalize the status of local NGO mine action consortia and to move beyond the provision of mine risk education to implement survey and clearance operations under this model.[82] Additional risks identified included donor fatigue from international donors and the government; poor coordination, communication, and policy setting within the program; and poor management at the implementer level.[83]

SEMA did not receive any government funding for its staff salary costs or to carry out any mine action activities again in 2017.[84] As reported above, UNMAS stopped its funding for SEMA at the start of 2016, in the expectation that its legislative framework was due to be approved by the Federal Parliament
and that funding for SEMA would be allocated from the national budget.[85] However, due to claims that it lacks parliamentary approval, SEMA has not received funding from the government.[86] In July 2018, SEMA reported that it was working hard and lobbying to get the necessary legislation passed in parliament, and that once approved, SEMA will have a dedicated budget line included in the annual budget.[87]

GICHD and NPA in their capacity-building activities recommended that greater clarity on SEMA’s role and cohesion between SEMA and its five federal state offices, as well as national consortiums, would facilitate communication between stakeholders and more efficient implementation of mine action activities.[88] Notably, a strong commitment is elaborated in the 2017–2020 National Mine Action Strategic Plan that SEMA will work to reduce the effects of barriers, obstacles, and inefficiencies for the implementation of operations, while at the same time setting out clearer expectations on how organizations should coordinate and cooperate to achieve the national program’s strategic and operational objectives.[89]

In 2018, NPA reported that it had increased its capacity from two to three manual demining teams and was continuing its survey capacity throughout southcentral Somalia, with five teams. It was piloting a project to introduce the use of mine detection dogs (MDD) in clearance operations during the year and add an MDD team to its capacity and improving the efficiency of land release methodology.[90] NPA continued its capacity-building efforts with SEMA in 2017.[91]

In 2018, HALO Trust stated its priorities were to continue steady clearance and build capacity for increasing its operations in southcentral Somalia, in particular to expand its operations in Galmudug state. It reported that its operational costs had increased slightly due to an operational withdrawal from hard to reach areas along the Ethiopian border due to security concerns for wellbeing and safety of staff.[92]

Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 Compliance

Under Article 4 of the Convention on Cluster Munitions, Somalia is required to destroy all cluster munition remnants in areas under its jurisdiction or control as soon as possible, but not later than 1 March 2026.

It is too soon to say whether Somalia is on track to meet its Article 4 deadline, although in June 2016, SEMA had claimed to be optimistic that with adequate resources, Somalia would meet the deadline in time.[93] It highlighted the need for international assistance; greater transparency on bilaterally funded projects; better coordination and information sharing between operators, SEMA, and its Federal State member offices; and ensuring sufficient capacity to conduct independent QA/QC activities as key areas of concern.[94]

Somalia’s new National Mine Action Strategic Plan stipulates the submission of annual transparency reports for the Convention on Cluster Munitions, along with the Mine Ban Treaty. It had not, however, submitted any Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 transparency reports as of June 2018, despite the initial report being due on 31 August 2016.

No clearance of cluster munition remnants was reported in the last five years.

 

The Monitor acknowledges the contributions of the Mine Action Review (www.mineactionreview.org), which has conducted the primary mine action research in 2018 and shared all its country-level landmine reports (from “Clearing the Mines 2018”) and country-level cluster munition reports (from “Clearing Cluster Munition Remnants 2018”) with the Monitor. The Monitor is responsible for the findings presented online and in its print publications.

 


[1] UNMAS, “Annual Report 2012,” New York, 2013, p. 21. Sovereignty over these territories is claimed by both the self-declared independent Republic of Somaliland and Puntland. 


[2] UNMAS, “UN-suggested Explosive Hazard Management Strategic Framework 2015–2019,” undated, pp. 6 and 12.

[3] Email from Chris Pym, Programme Manager, HALO Trust, 14 May 2018.

[4] Email from Claus Nielsen, Programme Manager, NPA, 22 March 2018.

[5] Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2017), Form C.

[6] Ibid., Form J.

[7] Ibid.

[8] UNMAS, “Annual Report 2011,” New York, August 2012, p. 68. 


[9] Response to Monitor questionnaire from Klaus Ljoerring Pedersen, Danish Demining Group (DDG), 8 May 2012; and Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for 16 April 2012–30 March 2013), Form C. 


[10] Email from Tom Griffiths, Regional Director North Africa, HALO Trust, 25 May 2016.

[11] Email from Chris Pym, HALO Trust, 14 May 2018.

[12] Email from Mohamed Abdulkadir Ahmed, Director, SEMA, 14 October 2016; and SAC, “Landmine Impact Survey, Phase 2: Bari, Nugaal and Northern Mudug Regions,” 2005, p. 5. Phase 1 and Phase 3 of the LIS covered regions of Somaliland in 2003 and 2007, respectively.

[13] SAC, “Landmine Impact Survey, Phase 2: Bari, Nugaal and Northern Mudug Regions,” SAC, 2005, p. 5. Of the 35 communities, nine were categorized as “high impact” and nine as “medium impact”, while eight sites were identified for spot-clearance tasking.

[14] UNMAS, “2015 Portfolio of Mine Action Projects, Somalia,” undated.

[15] UNMAS, “2018 Portfolio of Mine Action Projects, Somalia,” undated.

[16] Email from Chris Pym, HALO Trust, 14 May 2018.

[17] Emails from Mohamed Abdulkadir Ahmed, SEMA, 14 June 2016; and from Mohammad Sediq Rashid, Project Manager, UNMAS Somalia, 8 June 2017. UNMAS reported in June 2017 had these had since been cleared.

[18] Response to questionnaire by Mohamed Abdulkadir Ahmed, SEMA, 19 June 2015.

[19] Presentation by Mohamed Abdulkadir Ahmed, SEMA,“Somalia Weapons Contamination: Addressing Key Challenges to Meeting Clearance Deadlines under the Mine Ban Convention and Convention on Cluster Munitions,” African Union and ICRC workshop, Addis Ababa, 5 March 2013.

[20] Email from Mohammad Sediq Rashid, UNMAS, 8 June 2017.

[21] Ibid.

[22] UN Security Council, “Letter dated 7 October 2016 from the Chair of the Security Council Committee pursuant to resolutions 751 (1992) and 1907 (2009) concerning Somalia and Eritrea addressed to the President of the Security Council,” S2016/919, 31 October 2016, pp. 171–173.

[23] Ibid.

[24] Emails from Ghirmay Kiros, ETM Operations Officer, UNMAS, 27 and 29 June 2018.

[25] Email from Mohamed Abdulkadir Ahmed, SNMAA, 17 April 2013.

[26] Ibid.

[27] Statement of Somalia, Convention on Cluster Munitions Fifth Meeting of States Parties, San José, 2–5 September 2014.

[28] Email from Mohamed Abdulkadir Ahmed, SEMA, 14 October 2016.

[29] Interview with Mohamed Abdulkadir Ahmed, SEMA, in Geneva, 9 April 2014; and email from Kjell Ivar Breili, UNMAS, 12 July 2015.

[30] Response to questionnaire by Mohamed Abdulkadir Ahmed, SEMA, 19 June 2015.

[31] Emails from Mohamed Abdulkadir Ahmed, SEMA, 14 June 2016; and from Hilde Jørgensen, NPA, 3 May 2017.

[32] Emails from Terje Eldøen, NPA, 22 October 2016; and from Mohamed Abdulkadir Ahmed, SEMA, 14 October 2016.

[33] Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2017), Form J.

[34] UNMAS, “Programmes: Somalia,” undated.

[35] UNMAS, “UN-suggested Explosive Hazard Management Strategic Framework 2015–2019,” p. 9.

[36] Response to questionnaire by Mohamed Abdulkadir Ahmed, SEMA, 19 June 2015.

[37] “Somalia National Mine Action Strategic Plan,” Draft Version, February 2018, p. 3. SEMA previously developed a separate national mine action policy, which as of May 2017, had received one reading in the Somali Parliament but had yet to be ratified. The document only existed in Somali and no translations were available, nor had any versions been disseminated to national or international mine action operators. Operators raised concerns that the policy was drafted with little to no input from international mine action stakeholders or the international donor community. Its status as at June 2018 was unclear, however, greater attention and focus was being given to the new National Mine Action Strategic Plan. Emails from Claus Nielsen, NPA, 18 June 2018; from Tom Griffiths, HALO Trust, 31 May 2017; and from Hilde Jørgensen, NPA, 3 May 2017.

[38] Emails from Claus Nielsen, NPA, 18 June and 10 September 2018.

[39] Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2017), Form J.

[41] “Somalia National Mine Action Strategic Plan,” Draft Version, November 2017.

[42] Email from Terje Eldøen, Programme Manager, NPA, 5 June 2016; and response to questionnaire by Mohamed Abdulkadir Ahmed, SEMA, 19 June 2015.

[43] Response to questionnaire by Mohamed Abdulkadir Ahmed, SEMA, 19 June 2015; and, email from Tom Griffiths, HALO Trust, 19 May 2017.

[44] Email from Claus Nielsen, NPA, 22 March and 10 September 2018.

[45] Ibid., 22 March 2018.

[46] Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2017), Form C.

[47] Ibid., Form J.

[48] Ibid.

[49] “Somalia National Mine Action Strategic Plan,” Draft Version, February 2018, p. 5.

[50] Ibid., p.5

[51] Email from Chris Pym, HALO Trust, 14 May 2018.

[52] Email from Roger Fasth, Global Operations Manager, DDG, 26 June 2018.

[53] Emails from Tom Griffiths, HALO Trust, 19 May 2017; and from Chris Pym, HALO Trust, 14 May 2018.

[54] Email from Chris Pym, HALO Trust, 14 May 2018.

[55] Emails from Claus Nielsen, NPA, 22 March and 10 September 2018.

[56] Ibid.

[57] Email from Anna Roughley, DfID Project Coordinator, NPA, 23 May 2017.

[58] Emails from Ghirmay Kiros, UNMAS, 20 and 24 June 2018.

[59] Emails from Tom Griffiths, HALO Trust, 19 May 2017; and from Chris Pym, HALO Trust, 14 May 2018.

[60] Emails from Tom Griffiths, HALO Trust, 19 and 31 May 2017; and from Hilde Jørgensen, NPA, 3 May 2017.

[61] UNMAS, “2017 Portfolio of Mine Action Projects, Somalia,” undated. 

[62] Emails from Chris Pym, HALO Trust, 14 May 2018; and from Claus Nielsen, NPA, 22 March 2018.

[63] Email from Chris Pym, HALO Trust, 14 May 2018.

[64] Email from Claus Nielsen, NPA, 22 March 2018.

[65] Emails from Chris Pym, HALO Trust, 14 May 2018; and from Claus Nielsen, NPA, 22 March 2018.

[66] Email from Chris Pym, HALO Trust, 14 May 2018.

[67] Email from Tom Griffiths, HALO Trust, 31 May 2017. HALO Trust also destroyed 365 items of UXO during BAC of 66,300m2 and marked or destroyed 106 items of UXO in 19 completed UXO tasks, out of 124 surveyed.

[68] Email from Hilde Jørgensen, NPA, 3 May 2017.

[69] Email from Claus Nielsen, NPA, 22 March 2018.

[70] Email from Hilde Jørgensen, NPA, 3 May 2017. NPA completed approx. 32.5km2 of surface BAC using a mechanical asset in 2016.

[71] Emails from Chris Pym, HALO Trust, 14 May 2018; and from Claus Nielsen, NPA, 22 March 2018.

[72] Emails from Anna Roughley, NPA, 23 May 2017; from Bill Marsden, MAG, 27 April 2018; and from Claus Nielsen, NPA, 22 March 2018; and UNMAS, “Portfolio of Mine Action Projects, Somalia,” 2017.

[73] Email from Claus Nielsen, NPA, 13 June 2018.

[74] Emails from Chris Pym, HALO Trust, 14 May 2018; from Bill Marsden, MAG, 27 April 2018; and from Claus Nielsen, NPA, 22 March 2018.

[75] Email from Bill Marsden, MAG, 13 June 2018.

[76] Email from Chris Pym, HALO Trust, 14 May 2018.

[77] Email from Claus Nielsen, NPA, 13 June 2018.

[78] Emails from Ghirmay Kiros, UNMAS, 20 and 24 June 2018.

[79] Email from Chris Pym, HALO Trust, 14 May 2018.

[80] Ibid.; and from Claus Nielsen, NPA, 22 March 2018.

[81] Email from Chris Pym, HALO Trust, 14 May 2018.

[82] “Somalia National Mine Action Strategic Plan,” Draft Version, November 2017, p. 12; and Petra L. Aldrich, “Evaluation Report on ‘The potential for impact: Humanitarian Mine Action in Somalia,’” August 2017.

[83] “Somalia National Mine Action Strategic Plan,” Draft Version, November 2017, p. 15.

[84] Emails from Chris Pym, HALO Trust, 14 May 2018; from Bill Marsden, MAG, 27 April 2018; and from Claus Nielsen, NPA, 22 March 2018.

[85] Emails from Terje Eldøen, NPA, 5 June and 14 June 2016. A seven-month grant from UNMAS expired in December 2015 under which SEMA was expected to have established itself as a sustainable government entity. Email from Mohammad Sediq Rashid, UNMAS, 8 June 2017.

[86] Email from Mohammad Sediq Rashid, UNMAS, 8 June 2017.

[87] Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2017), Form J.

[88] GICHD, “Somali Explosive Management Authority (SEMA), Key Findings and Recommendations for Capacity Development Support,” 3 November 2011; and NPA, “Somalia Capacity Development Project: Phase 1 Final Report, 2015–2017,” 22 February 2017.

[89] “Somalia National Mine Action Strategic Plan,” Draft Version, November 2017.

[90] Email from Claus Nielsen, NPA, 22 March 2018.

[91] Ibid.

[92] Email from Chris Pym, HALO Trust, 14 May 2018.

[93] Email from Mohamed Abdulkadir Ahmed, SEMA, 14 June 2016.

[94] Ibid.


Support for Mine Action

Last updated: 19 November 2018

In 2017, seven donors contributed US$8.8 million for mine action activities in the Federal Republic of Somalia, this is $2.1 million less than in 2016 (a 19% decrease).[1]

The largest contribution came from the United Kingdom (UK) ($3.5 million), with two additional countries—Norway and Germany—contributing more than $1 million each. Two donors, Italy and Norway, contributed a combined total of $1.5 million to support victim assistance activities in 2017.

International contributions: 2017[2]

Donor

Sector

Amount (national currency)

Amount

(US$)

UK

Clearance and risk education

£2,709,059

3,491,977

Norway

Clearance and victim assistance

NOK18,871,000

2,282,442

Germany

Clearance

€1,000,000

1,130,100

Denmark

Clearance and risk education

DKK6,000,000

909,684

Netherlands

Clearance

€527,202

595,791

Finland

Various

€200,000

226,020

Italy

Victim assistance

€150,000

169,515

Total

   

8,805,529

 

International support to Somalia’s mine action activities has fluctuated greatly since 2013, ranging from a minimum of $7.9 million in 2014 to a maximum of $14.5 million in 2013.

Summary of contributions: 2013–2017[3]

Year

International contribution

($)

2017

8,805,529

2016

10,903,537

2015

8,180,172

2014

7,869,335

2013

14,542,886

Total

50,301,459

 



[1] Germany Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report, Form J, 2 March 2018; Italy Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report, Form I, April 2018; United Kingdom Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report, Form I, 30 April 2018; Netherlands Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report, Form J, April 2018; Emails from Ingrid Schoyen, Senior Advisor, Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 25 September 2018; and from Olivia Douwes, Policy Officer, Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 12 September 2018; Responses to Monitor questionnaire by Mikko Autti, Desk Officer, Finland Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 10 October 2018; and by Trine Louise Magard Hansen, Head of Section, Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 30 October 2018.

[2] Average exchange rate for 2017: DKK6.5957=US$1; €1=US$1.1301; NOK8.2679=US$1; £1=US$1.289. US Federal Reserve, “List of Exchange Rates (Annual),” 11 January 2018.

[3] See previous Monitor reports.


Casualties

Last updated: 26 June 2018

 

Casualties[1]

All known casualties (between 1999 and 2017)

3,225 mine/unexploded remnants of war (ERW) casualties: 1,267 killed; 1,606 injured; 352 unknown

Casualties in 2017

Annual total

55

55% increase from 25 in 2016

Survival outcome

17 killed; 38 injured

Device type causing casualties

27 ERW; 28 undifferentiated mines/ERW

Civilian status

55 civilian

Age and gender

12 adults:
4 women; 8 men

43 children:
39 boys; 4 girls


Casualties in 2017—details

Casualties were reported in the following regions of the Somali Republic (excluding Somaliland): Banadir, Bay, Galguduud, Gedo, Hiran, Lower Juba, Lower Shabelle, Middle Shabelle, and Mudug.

The 55 casualties reported for 2017 represents a marked increase from the 25 casualties reported for 2016.[2] However, it is similar to the 56 casualties reported for 2015.

The Monitor identified 3,225 mine/ERW casualties in Somalia (excluding Somaliland) between 1999 and the end of 2016. Of these, 1,267 people were killed, 1,606 were injured, and for the remaining 352 casualties it was unknown if they survived their injuries.[3] In 2018, the UN Mine Action Service (UNMAS) reported that the total number of casualties for all time was 1,529. Detailed information was available for 1,238, of which 344 were killed and 894 were injured.[4]

UNMAS reported that new, used, or emplaced improvised mines (victim-activated improvised explosive devices, IEDs) certainly resulted in casualties in 2017, however, these are not included in the 55 mine/ERW casualties reported for 2017.[5] UNMAS reported 96 casualties as a result of victim-activated IEDs, 61 injured and 35 killed. UNMAS does not disaggregate data based on gender and age for IED casualties.[6]

Cluster munition casualties

The number of cluster munition casualties in Somalia is not known. In a 2014 statement to the Convention on Cluster Munitions, Somalia recognized that there are cluster munition victims in Somalia living in severe conditions with mostly unmet needs.[7]



[1] Unless otherwise indicated, casualty data for 2017 is based on an email from Mustafa Bawar, Senior Information Management Officer, UN Mine Action Service (UNMAS), 13 February 2018.

[2] Previously, 22 casualties were reported for 2016 (see 2017 Somalia casualty profile). UNMAS has revised the total for 2016 to 25, based on additional information. Email from Mustafa Bawar, UNMAS, 20 March 2018.

[3] Monitor analysis of casualty data since 1999.

[4] Email from Mustafa Bawar, UNMAS, 13 February 2018.

[5] Ibid.

[6] Ibid., 20 March 2018.

[7] Statement of Somalia, Convention on Cluster Munitions Fifth Meeting of States Parties, 3 September 2014.


Victim Assistance

Last updated: 21 October 2018

Victim assistance action points

  • Integrate victim assistance within arising disability frameworks.
  • Support needs assessment surveys to target assistance that has limited resources.
  • Map existing resources and services, identify the gaps and propose solutions.

Victim assistance planning and coordination[1]

Government focal point

Somalia Explosive Management Authority (SEMA)

Coordination mechanisms

None

Coordination regularity/frequency and outcomes/effectiveness

No Victim assistance meetings were held

 

The United Nations Assistance Mission in Somalia (UNSOM) held a multi-stakeholder meeting on persons with disabilities in December 2017[2]

Emergency sector integration

UNSOM Human Rights Cluster Disability Team Focal Point[3]

Plans/strategies

None: The Somali National Mine Action Strategy 2018–2020, the “Badbaado Plan” does not include victim assistance

Disability sector integration

 

No formal integration. In June 2018, the government of Somalia established the National Disability Agency and planned to enact a national disability bill to align with the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD), which Somalia has signed but not yet deposited

Survivor inclusion and participation

None reported

Reporting (Article 7 and statements)

Somalia submitted victim assistance information in Form J of its Article 7 Report for calendar year 2017 and a representative of SEMA made a statement on victim assistance during the 16th Meeting of States Parties in December 2017

 

International commitments and obligations

Somalia has significant numbers of mine/ERW survivors and needs, and is responsible for cluster munition victims

The Total number of survivors is not known. The Monitor has recorded 1,606 people injured by mines/explosive remnants of war (ERW) in the period 1999–2017. In 2014, SOCBAL surveyed 850 mine/ERW survivors in Mogadishu alone. In 2001, United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS) reported 1,731 injured mine/ERW casualties were recorded in Bayand Bakool regions (2,626 people killed) between 1995 and 2000[4]

Mine Ban Treaty

Yes

Convention on Cluster Munitions

Yes

Convention on Convention Weapons (CCW) Protocol V

Not party

Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD)

Signed 2 October 2018

 

Laws and policies

In June 2018, the Council of Ministers approved a bill to establish the National Agency for Persons with Disabilities in Somalia. The bill was presented before the Cabinet by the Ministry of Women and Human Rights.[5] In January 2018, disabled people’s organization (DPO) Institute of Education and Professional Development (Instituto de Educação e Desenvolvimento Profissional, IEDP), which has also been engaged in victim assistance, sent out a press release expressing concern that the process of establishing a commission was biased.[6]

The draft federal constitution protects the rights of persons with disabilities but does not guarantee access to buildings, information, or communications.[7] At the July 2018 Global Disability Summit in London, Somalia committed to the development and passage of a “National Disability Bill” and a national disability policy to implement same and make buildings and education more inclusive.[8] A network of DPOs in Somalia held a Victim Assistance Day commemoration on 4 April 2016 to make a complaint against a lack of support and cooperation with service provider institutions operated in the country by UNMAS and Somali government.[9]

Overall, persons with disabilities are among the most vulnerable and are at risk of social exclusion in Somalia. Poverty and social exclusion are interlinked, with a lack of employment being the major cause of poverty. Efforts have been made in the Somali government to improve the employment participation rate but significant obstacles to gaining, and retaining, employment remained. Access to education and to vocational training, limited availability of housing, assistive technology, and accessible transport are still lacking.[10]

Major Developments in 2017–2018

The Somalia Explosive Management Authority took over management of the International Management System for Mine Action (IMSMA) database and the reporting of casualties from UNMAS.[11] The ongoing conflict with the non-state armed group Al Shabaab and persistent drought continued to make humanitarian access and needs important in Somalia, with many basic services unavailable in much of the country.[12]

In 2018, UNMAS created a victim assistance consultancy post in Mogadishu to conduct a victim assistance situational analysis within the disability assistance program at the policy and implementation levels. The role was intended to engage with the key disability/victim assistant stakeholders, map existing resources and services, identify the gaps, and propose solutions.

Needs assessment

SEMA proposed to conduct national surveys of landmine victims to determine the numbers of victims and their needs and requested, but not received, international support for the survey.[13] The Southwest Mine Action Consortium (SOWMAC) led needs assessments in its catchment area and identified multiple areas for intervention, including basic needs of shelter and healthcare, as well as economic-integration activities, provision of assistive devices, and educational opportunities for children of survivors.[14]

Medical care and rehabilitation

Medical care in Somalia is supported by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), which supports emergency surgical services at two hospitals in Mogadishu and hospitals in Baidoa and Kismayo. The Somali Red Crescent Society remains the primary provider of rehabilitation services and assistive devices, but the range is limited with no such services available in the southwest of the country.[15] Psychological support remains a lacking in Somalia.[16]

Socio-economic and psychosocial inclusion

No improvement is reported in the provision of socio-economic support or in the social inclusion of survivors in Somalia.[17] The government of Somalia committed to establishing vocational training centers for persons with disabilities to provide entrepreneurial skills and workforce development. Those efforts would be aligned with policies and programs to expand access to credit for micro-enterprises and targeted support for small business creation.[18]

Cross-cutting

Women with disabilities continue to be vulnerable to sexual violence and forced marriage. The government of Somalia proposed to focus on women and girls in their efforts to support persons with disabilities to address the double stigma of gender and disability in Somalia.[19] The Somalia Disability Empowerment Network (SODEN) supported a survey of educational accessibility in Mogadishu.[20]

Victim assistance providers and activities

Name of organization

Type of activity

Government

Somalia Explosive Management Authority (SEMA)

Casualty data; victim assistance focal point

Southwest Mine Action Consortium

Local NGO, activities unknown

National Disability Agency

Coordination, policy development

National

Somali Red Crescent Society

Rehabilitation services, assistive devices

IEDP

Vocational training, promoting formal education for children with disabilities, income-generation for women with disabilities

Somali Disability Empowerment Network (SODEN)

Awareness raising, advocacy

International

ICRC

Emergency medical care

 


[1] Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2017), Form J; statement of SEMA, Mine Ban Treaty 16 Meeting of States Parties, Vienna, December 2017; and Somalia Ministry of Women and Human Rights, Form for Submitting Commitments, Global Disability Summit 2018.

[3] Ibid.

[4] UNDP/UNOPS, “Somalia Mine Action Progress Report, January–June 2001,” p. 6; Landmine Monitor Report 2001, pp. 261–262.

[6] IEDP, Press release, “Complain for Corruption Against the National Human Right Commission Election,” 1 January 2018.

[7] United States Department,of State, “Human Rights Report 2017, Somalia,” undated.

[8] Somalia Ministry of Women and Human Rights, Form for Submitting Commitments, Global Disability Summit 2018.

[9]International Victim Assistance Day 2016 Somalia,” Somali Online Media, 6 April 2016.

[10] Mohamed Farah, “Disability and Social Exclusion in Somalia,” SODEN, undated.

[11] Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2017), Form J.

[12] ICRC, “Annual Report 2017, Somalia,” undated.

[13] Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2017), Form J; and statement of Somalia, Session on Mine Victim Assistance, Mine Ban Treaty 16th Meeting of States Parties, December 2017.

[14] Response to Landmine Monitor Questionnaire by Mohamed Mohamud, Executive Director, SOWMAC, 21 May 2018.

[15] ICRC, “Somalia: Encouraged by colleagues, a woman heads Mogadishu rehab centre.” 7 March 2017; and Response to Landmine Monitor Questionnaire by Hussein Diad Mohamed, Project Manager, SOWMAC, 14 May 2018.

[16] US State Department, “Human Rights Report 2017, Somalia,” undated.

[17] Response to Landmine Monitor Questionnaire by Mohamed Mohamud, SOWMAC, 21 May 2018.

[18] Somalia Ministry of Women and Human Rights, Form for Submitting Commitments, Global Disability Summit 2018.

[19] US State Department, “Human Rights Report 2017, Somalia,” undated; Somalia Ministry of Women and Human Rights, Form for Submitting Commitments, Global Disability Summit 2018.