Cluster Munition Monitor 2020

The Impact

Jump to a specific section of the chapter:

Introduction | Contamination | Casualties | Addressing the Impact: Coordination, Clearance, Risk Education, Victim assistance

 

Introduction

This summary highlights developments and challenges in assessing and addressing the impact of cluster munition contamination and casualties, through land release including clearance, risk education, and victim assistance during the reporting period prior to the Second Review Conference of the Convention on Cluster Munitions in Switzerland in 2020.[1] The Review Conference will mark the adoption of the Lausanne Action Plan, a new set of five-year strategic commitments to further states’ efforts to address the impact of cluster munitions. The summary reports on the impact of cluster munitions globally. It also focuses on the efforts and challenges to address the impact in the States Parties with responsibility for clearance of cluster munition remnants and to cluster munition victims. It is these states to which the convention’s obligations and the action plan commitments legally and directly apply.

The improvement of survey processes and data collection has enabled better understanding of the extent of cluster munition remnant contamination in States Parties, and has allowed the development of more realistic plans and better targeting of clearance resources.[2] In the 10 years since the Convention on Cluster Munitions came into force, States Parties have cleared at least 559km² of cluster munition contaminated land, and cleared and destroyed more than 450,000 submunitions. However, in some States Parties the rate of clearance has been slow, and in others there has been virtually no progress.

While in 2020 two States Parties announced fulfilment of their Article 4 clearance obligations, 10 States Parties remain contaminated. A further 13 non-signatories and three other areas have, or are believed to have, land containing cluster munitions on their territories.

The Convention on Cluster Munitions has successfully increased awareness of the objective of preventing new casualties and ending the suffering caused by these indiscriminate weapons. Ultimately, that awareness has resulted in more detailed and swifter reporting on casualties of cluster munition use. During the 10-year period of Cluster Munition Monitor reporting, 2010–2019, 4,315 new cluster munition casualties were recorded in 17 countries and three other areas. The vast majority of new casualties, 3,575 (83%), recorded during that time occurred in Syria as the result of new use, which included both attacks and contamination by cluster munition remnants.[3] Various estimates for casualties in cluster munition-affected countries globally since the 1960s are roughly between 56,000 and 86,000. The present total of recorded cluster munition casualties is 22,050, both from cluster munition remnants and from attacks in 34 countries and three other areas.[4]

Since entry into force of the convention some 40% of casualties were children. Affected States Parties clearly recognize children as a key risk group requiring specific and tailored risk education, because they are often growing up in contaminated areas, lack knowledge of the risks and are prone to picking up and playing with items, very often resulting in multiple casualties. Adults frequently become casualties of cluster munitions during everyday livelihood activities, where work or subsistence occupations such as agriculture, building, herding, hunting, and burning to cook or clear land, puts them at risk. While children often touch, move, or play with cluster submunitions unaware of the danger, adults do the same, but with knowledge of the risks. Adults are recorded taking risks by attempting to pick up and move submunitions to what they hope will be a safer place, out of reach of children and the community. Cluster munitions often impact the most vulnerable groups in a society, such as people who collect scrap metal for a living, migrant workers, and refugees and internally displaced people (IDPs).

The majority of cluster munition contaminated States Parties have some form of provision of risk education. In some States Parties, risk education is provided for a variety of explosive ordnance, including cluster munitions. In States Parties with greater cluster munition contamination, risk education is more targeted to the nature of contamination and behaviors associated with cluster munition remnants.

The existing level of the risk education response at the national level can be viewed as an achievement, particularly given the little attention and resources directed towards risk education internationally since the convention entered into force. A change occurred in 2019, which saw an increased focus on risk education due to the dramatic rise in casualties, particularly in the Middle East. However, more must be done to ensure that risk education can continue to improve and innovate, and provide tailored and contextual risk education to populations living with new and with legacy cluster munition remnants contamination.

The majority of all recorded cluster munition casualties for all time, 59%, occurred in States Parties. These states have obligations to assist the victims under the convention. The Convention on Cluster Munitions was the first multilateral treaty to make the provision of assistance to the victims of a specific weapon a formal obligation for all States Parties with victims.[5] After its entry into force in 2010, the convention continues to set the highest legal standards for victim assistance.

Among the 14 States Parties which have had cluster munition casualties recorded, 12 have recognized responsibility for cluster munition victims. Methods and approaches for implementing victim assistance vary significantly, particularly between those States Parties which have hundreds or thousands of cluster munition casualties and those with few reported casualties.

Cluster Munition Remnants Contamination 

Cluster munition contamination in States Parties

States Parties that have completed clearance

When the Convention on Cluster Munitions entered into force on 1 August 2010, out of the 40 States to have ratified it, 17 reported Article 4 obligations for clearance, destruction of cluster munition remnants and the provision of risk education. Each of these States Parties was obliged to clear and destroy all cluster munition remnants in areas under its jurisdiction or control as soon as possible, but not later than 10 years after becoming party to the convention.

Six States Parties have formally reported completing clearance of contamination between 2010 and 2020, including Croatia[6] and Montenegro,[7] both of which declared fulfilment of their Article 4 obligations in July 2020, before their deadlines of 1 August 2020 (see table below). However, Mauritania, which had reported fulfilment of its clearance obligations in September 2013, has since reported finding new cluster munition contamination.[8]

States Parties Albania, Guinea-Bissau and Zambia all completed clearance before the convention came into force.[9]

No State Party completed clearance of cluster munition remnants in 2018 or 2019.

States Parties that have declared fulfilment of clearance obligations since 2010[10]

Grenada, September 2012

Norway, September 2013

Mauritania, September 2013* 

Mozambique, December 2016

Croatia, July 2020

Montenegro, July 2020

*Mauritania has since reported finding new cluster munition remnants contamination.

States Parties remaining to be cleared

As of 1 August 2020, 10 States Parties had Article 4 clearance obligations: Afghanistan, Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH), Chad, Chile, Germany, Iraq, Lao PDR, Lebanon, Mauritania, and Somalia. Somalia became a State Party in 2015 and reported obligations under Article 4 in its initial Article 7 report in 2019.[11]

For some States Parties, including Colombia, Palau, and the United Kingdom (UK), the situation regarding contamination is unclear or has varying interpretations. 

Colombia stated that it had no cluster munition remnants contamination on its territory in 2017 and no known evidence of contamination has been found, [12] however no survey has been undertaken to confirm this.[13] An investigation showed that a World War II-type “cluster adapter” of United States (US) origin was used during an attack at Santo Domingo in 1998.[14] The Inter-American Human Rights Court found the Colombian Air Force used an AN-M1A2 bomb, which it said meets the definition of a cluster munition.[15] 

Palau reported that in 2010, two World War II “cluster adapter” AN-M41A1 submunitions were identified and destroyed,[16] but since then no more have been located through survey or clearance. It is therefore believed that Palau is now free of cluster munitions, although it continues to suffer a high level of contamination from other World War II-era explosive remnants of war.[17]

The UK, due to its claim of sovereignty over the Falkland Islands/Islas Malvinas may have some residual cluster munition remnants contamination present within mined areas that are still to be cleared.[18] Additionally, there are estimated to be over 2,000 crates of AN-M1A1 and/or AN-M4A1 “cluster adapter” type bombs remaining in UK waters in the cargo of a sunken World War II ship off the east coast of England.[19] The UK has not reported any cluster munition contamination in its Article 7 reports.

Extent of contamination

Massive cluster munition remnant contamination (over 1,000km²) exists in one State Party, Lao PDR, and large contamination (between 100–1,000km²) exists in one State Party, Iraq. Three States Parties are believed to have medium contamination (between 10–99km²). Five States Parties, Afghanistan, BiH, Germany, Lebanon, and Somalia have less than 10km² of contamination (see table below).

Estimated area of cluster munition remnants contamination in States Parties

Over 1,000km²

100–1,000km²

10–99km²

Less than 10km²

Lao PDR

Iraq

Chad

Afghanistan

   

Chile

BiH

   

Mauritania

Germany*

     

Lebanon

     

Somalia

* Germany has reported contamination not exceeding 11km², and has reported 2.8km² cleared, hence the Monitor considers its contamination to be under 10km².

Lao PDR is known to be the most heavily contaminated State Party. Contamination is confirmed to exist in 14 of its 17 provinces, and survey is ongoing in six of the most heavily contaminated provinces. The National Regulatory Authority (NRA) for the unexploded ordnance (UXO) Sector in Lao PDR reported to the Monitor that 1,177.55km² of confirmed hazardous areas (CHA) had been identified by the end of June 2020,[20] and it is expected that a complete picture of CHA in the six provinces will be available by June 2022.[21]

The Regional Mine Action Centre (RMAC) South in Iraq reported to the Monitor that as of the end of 2019, cluster munition remnants covered a total area of 178.64km² in the center and south of the country.[22] Cluster munition remnants are not reported as CHAs in the Kurdistan region of Iraq, although in the past operators have reported clearance of some cluster munition tasks.[23]

In its Article 4 revised deadline extension request of 29 June 2020, Chile stated that the current estimate of contamination in the country is 64.61km². This is a reduction from the original estimate of almost 97km², following the conduct of non-technical survey (NTS) which was completed in 2019.[24] However, Chile has stated that due to the usual procedures of the armed forces, unexploded submunitions may no longer exist,[25] suggesting that the actual area containing cluster munition remnants may be minimal.

Chad’s national mine action center, the National High Commission for Demining (HCND), reported that 55.4km² are contaminated with cluster munition remnants, of which 55.05km² is classified as CHA and 0.35km² as suspected hazardous areas (SHA).[26]

The initial estimate of the new contamination reported in Mauritania is 36km², contaminated with BLU-63, M42 and MK118 submunitions.[27]

Germany has identified evidence of ShOAB-0.5 submunitions on or just below the natural ground surface (not exceeding some 30cm) over an area not exceeding 11km².[28]

The Lebanon Mine Action Centre (LMAC) told the Monitor that as of the end of 2019, cluster munition remnant contamination covers 8.87km² in four areas: Bekaa, Mount Lebanon, and in the north and south of Lebanon.[29] This total includes 0.26km² of new contamination in the northeast of Lebanon, the result of a spillover from the Syrian crisis.[30] In 2018, Lebanon reviewed its recording of polygons and standardized the recording of clearance data within its database, which enabled it to establish a new baseline of 54.77km²,[31] of which almost 84% has now been cleared.[32] Lebanon hopes to have a clear picture of the remaining contamination by the end of 2020.[33] The Directorate of Mine Action Coordination (DMAC) in Afghanistan has informed the Monitor of seven recorded cluster munition contaminated areas totaling 5.8km² in two provinces at the end of 2019, although it noted that there is some evidence, generated through local requests, of additional cluster munition contamination which requires investigation.[34]

BiH Mine Action Centre (BHMAC) reported to the Monitor that as of December 2019, a total of 2.31km2 of cluster munition contamination remained in nine locations.[35] However, it stated at the Ninth Meeting of States Parties in Geneva in 2019 that 3.6 km2 was “separated” as “non-conventionally contaminated areas” following NTS.[36] Information on the release of this land previously suspected to contain cluster munition contamination by methods other than clearance was not reported in its Article 7 report for 2019, and a report was not submitted for calendar year 2018.[37] BiH did not provide information to the Monitor on land released by NTS for the period 2010–2019. BiH needs to clarify if the area separated from recorded cluster munition contaminated areas is contaminated with unmodified KB-1 and/or KB-2 DPICM scattered individually as single submunitions,[38] or if these are locally-manufactured M93 rifle grenades with modified KB-1 and KB-2 cluster submunitions, which are not covered by the convention.

The extent of contamination in Somalia is unknown but thought to be small.

Cluster munition contamination in signatories

Angola, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and Uganda are all signatories to the Convention on Cluster Munitions.

Uganda completed clearance in 2008.

The extent to which Angola is affected by cluster munition remnants remains unclear. There is no confirmed contamination, but there may remain abandoned cluster munitions or unexploded submunitions. Cluster munition contamination was a result of decades of armed conflict that ended in 2002, although it is unclear when, or by whom, cluster munitions were used. In 2018, 85 submunitions were found and destroyed and in 2019, 164 submunitions were found and destroyed. These were destroyed through explosive ordnance disposal (EOD) callouts rather than clearance.[39]

The DRC is suspected to have some small remaining areas of cluster munition contamination, although the previously known areas have been cleared. Cluster munitions have been used during the conflicts in the DRC and the presence of cluster munition remnants was previously reported in four provinces. Norwegian People’s Aid (NPA) cleared the last of these areas in Equateur in April 2017.[40] However, the Congolese Mine Action Center (Centre Congolais de Lutte Antimines, CCLAM) reported to the Monitor in August 2020 that they believed cluster munitions to be present in five provinces, although a survey would need to be conducted to confirm the extent of contamination.[41] The UN Mine Action Service (UNMAS) reported two types of cluster munition in the DRC, namely BL755 and PM-1.

Cluster munition contamination in non-signatories and other areas

Thirteen non-signatories and three other areas have, or are believed to have, land containing cluster munitions on their territories: Azerbaijan, Cambodia, Georgia, Iran, Libya, Serbia, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria, Tajikistan, Ukraine, Vietnam, Yemen, and other areas Kosovo, Nagorno-Karabakh and Western Sahara (see table below).

The only non-signatory to complete clearance of cluster munitions is Thailand, which reported clearance in 2011.

Estimated area of cluster munition remnants contamination in non-signatories and other areas

Over 1,000km²

100–1,000km²

10–99km²

Less than 10km²

Vietnam

Cambodia

Azerbaijan

Georgia

   

Libya

Iran

   

Syria

Serbia

   

Ukraine

South Sudan

   

Yemen

Sudan

   

Kosovo

Tajikistan

   

Nagorno-Karabakh

Western Sahara

       

Note: Other areas are indicated in italics.

Extent of contamination

The full extent of contamination in many of the non-signatories and other areas is not known. However, Vietnam is believed to have massive cluster munition remnant contamination (over 1,000km²), and Cambodia has large contamination (between 100 – 1,000km²). Contamination in both Vietnam and Cambodia results from intensive bombing by the US during the Vietnam War. Five non-signatories and two other areas are believed to have between 10–99km² of contamination, while six non-signatories and one other area are thought to have less than 10km².

Vietnam is massively contaminated by cluster munition remnants, but no accurate estimate of the extent exists, even to the nearest hundred square kilometers. An explosive remnants of war (ERW) impact survey, which began in 2004 and was completed in 2014, was published in 2018. It found that 61,308km2 or 19% of Vietnam’s land surface area was affected by ERW, but did not specify if the area was affected by cluster munition remnants. However, cluster munition remnants are reported to affect 32 of Vietnam’s 63 provinces and cities.[42] In Quang Tri province, one of the most heavily bombed areas in the country, survey is ongoing and the current estimate of total land contaminated by cluster munitions is 421.32km².[43]

The estimate of the area contaminated by cluster munitions in Cambodia is increasing due to ongoing survey. As of December 2019, the Cambodian Mine Action Authority (CMAA) reported to the Monitor that the extent of cluster munition contamination in Cambodia was 709km² (CHA covering 74km² and SHA covering 635km²).[44] The cluster munition contamination is concentrated in northeastern provinces along the borders with Lao PDR and Vietnam.[45]

Non-signatories believed to have between 10–99km² of contamination include Azerbaijan, Libya, Syria, Ukraine, and Yemen, and the areas Kosovo and Nagorno-Karabakh.

Some contamination is believed to remain in Azerbaijan in areas occupied by Armenian forces, but the extent is not known.

Contamination in Libya is a consequence of armed conflict in 2011 and renewed conflict since 2014, which has resulted in widespread explosive ordnance contamination, concentrated in urban areas.[46] The extent of cluster munition remnants contamination is unknown. National authorities have reported that it is limited to a few areas.[47]

Ongoing conflict in Syria has increased all types of explosive hazards in the country. UNMAS reported that the draft 2020 Humanitarian Needs Overview records 11.5 million people living in 2,562 communities reporting explosive hazard contamination in the last two years.[48] The extent of cluster munition remnant contamination in Syria is not known, although in 2019, surveys of explosive hazards and contaminated areas were carried out in 605 different communities in order to inform risk education messaging and to prioritize areas for future surveying, marking and removal of explosive hazards.[49]

Ukraine has reported that unexploded submunitions contaminate the Donetsk and Luhansk regions.[50] The extent of contamination is not yet known.

In 2014, Yemen identified approximately 18km² of suspected cluster munition hazards, but the escalation of armed conflict since March 2015 has increased the extent of cluster munition contamination in northwestern and central Yemen.[51] In the south, with the exception of a few areas where the frontlines have shifted, there is no cluster munition contamination. The UN Development Programme (UNDP), which has established a mine action coordination center in the south of Yemen, has developed a heat map of suspected contamination.[52]

The Kosovo Mine Action Centre (KMAC) reported 14.34km² of cluster munition contamination in 45 affected areas at the end of 2019,[53] and in Nagorno-Karabakh the HALO Trust has reported 70.48km² of cluster munition contamination.[54]

Non-signatories Georgia, Iran, Serbia, South Sudan, Sudan and Tajikistan and the area Western Sahara each have less than 10km² of known contamination.

Georgia is believed to be free from cluster munition contamination, with the possible exception of South Ossetia. The extent of contamination in Iran and Sudan is not known but believed to be small.

Serbia reported a total of 2.3km² of contamination at the end of 2019, of which 0.9km² were CHA and 1.4km² were SHA.[55]

South Sudan submitted a voluntary Article 7 report for the year 2019 and reported 6.4km² of land contaminated by cluster munitions.[56] Cluster munitions are reported to be located in the areas of Yei in Central Equatorial state, Mundri in Western Equatorial state, Wau in Western Bar Ghazal state and Maban in Unity state.

Tajikistan reported to the Monitor 1.5km² of cluster munition contamination, all of which were CHA.[57]

For Western Sahara, the Polisario Front's Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic (SADR) provided a voluntary Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 transparency report covering calendar year 2019 as well as the period of 2014 to 2019, and which provided information on cluster munition contamination. As of February 2020, Western Sahara reported 1.91km² of cluster munition contamination.[58]

Cluster Munition Casualties

The total number of cluster munition casualties for all time, recorded by the Monitor, reached 22,050 as of the end of 2019. This includes both casualties directly resulting from cluster munition attacks and from unexploded remnants. The data begins from the mid-1960s, due to extensive cluster munition attacks by the United States (US) in Southeast Asia, through to the end of 2019.

As many casualties still go unrecorded, a better indicator of the total number of casualties globally over time is roughly 56,000, calculated from various country estimates, with a high-end total of estimates at some 86,000. Some global estimates of cluster munition casualties are as high as 100,000. However, these are based on extrapolations from limited data samples, which may not be representative of national averages or the actual number of casualties.[59] The countries with the highest recorded numbers of cluster munition casualties are Lao PDR (7,755), Syria (3,580), and Iraq (3,070). The total number of casualties recorded in Syria surpassed those recorded for Iraq in 2016.

Thousands of cluster munition casualties from past conflicts have gone unrecorded, particularly casualties that occurred during extensive use in Southeast Asia, Afghanistan and the Middle East (notably in Iraq, where there have been estimates of between 5,500 and 8,000 casualties from cluster munitions since 1991).[60] Before 2008, when the Convention on Cluster Munitions opened for signature, 13,306 recorded cluster munition casualties were identified globally.[61] Since then, the number of recorded casualties has increased due to updated casualty surveys identifying pre-convention casualties, new casualties from pre-convention remnants, as well as new use of cluster munitions during attacks and the remnants they have left behind.

Cluster munition casualties in 2019

The Monitor recorded a total of 286 cluster munition casualties in 2019. These casualties occurred in nine countries, including four States Parties, and two other areas.[62] Civilians accounted for 99% of all casualties whose status was recorded in 2019, as was the case in 2018 and 2017, consistent with statistics on cluster munition casualties for all time due to the indiscriminate and inhumane nature of the weapon.

The total figure for annual casualties in 2019 includes those incurred at the time of attack (221) and from explosive cluster munition remnants (65). The real number of new casualties is likely to be much higher and fluctuations in some years may be due to variations in the availability of information and data at country level.

Cluster munition casualties in 2019

Cluster munition attacks casualties

Syria

219

Libya

2

Cluster munition remnants casualties

Iraq

20

Syria

13

Yemen

9

Afghanistan

5

Lao PDR

5

Lebanon

5

Serbia

3

South Sudan

3

Nagorno-Karabakh

1

Western Sahara

1

Note: States Parties are indicated in bold, other areas in italics. 

The 2019 total marks an increase from the total of 149 casualties recorded in 2018, which was the lowest annual global casualty figure since 2012 when the Monitor started recording cluster munition casualties from new use in Syria. The 2019 total is almost equivalent to the 289 casualties recorded in 2017, which marked a significant drop from the 971 cluster munition casualties recorded in 2016.

Overall, in 2019, 221 people were recorded killed or injured directly due to cluster munition attacks in Libya and Syria. This is an increase on the 65 casualties recorded in Syria in 2018, and the 196 casualties recorded in total due to attacks in Syria and Yemen in 2017. In 2016 and 2017, the only casualties from cluster munition attacks were recorded in Syria and Yemen.

As has been the case for each year since 2012, the majority of annual cluster munition casualties in 2019 were recorded in Syria.[63] Overall, since 2012, 81% of all cluster munition casualties globally were recorded in Syria.

Cluster munition casualties in Syria and in all other states and areas 2010–2019

CM Casualties In Syria And Other States Areas

Note: Numbers at the top of each bar indicate the total number of casualties in Syria.

Cluster munition casualties in States Parties and signatories

Since 2010, new cluster munition remnant casualties were also recorded in seven States Parties: Afghanistan, Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH), Chad, Croatia, Iraq, Lao PDR, and Lebanon; and in signatory, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

In State Party Lao PDR, the world’s most cluster munition-affected state, the number of submunition casualties continued to decrease from the 10-year high of 51 recorded in 2016 to five in 2019. Another 10 casualties in 2019 may have been due to unexploded submunitions, but the explosive item involved in each of those cases could not be adequately determined.

In 2017, in an account of the long-term humanitarian impacts of cluster munitions recorded during the reporting period, a 10-year-old girl picked up a submunition, known in Lao PDR as a “bombie,” while walking to school in the northern province of Xieng Khouang. Thinking it was a toy, she took it to her home where it exploded, killing her and injuring another 11 people, including eight children—the youngest being three years old.[64]

The majority of all recorded cluster munition casualties for all time, 59%, occurred in States Parties. Casualties directly caused by attacks before the convention in States Parties have been grossly under-recorded, with no data or estimate available for Lao PDR, the most heavily bombed country.

States Parties where cluster munition casualties have occurred (data for all time, as of 31 December 2019)[65]

State Party

Attacks

Remnants

Unknown

Total

Lao PDR

Unknown

7,755

0

7,755

Iraq

388

2,682

0

3,070

Afghanistan

25

760

0

785

Lebanon

16

734

0

750

Croatia

207

37

0

244

BiH

86

145

0

231

Albania

2

53

0

55

Colombia

44

0

0

44

Sierra Leone

28

0

0

28

Montenegro

4

4

1

9

Chad

Unknown

4

0

4

Guinea-Bissau

Unknown

Unknown

Unknown

Unknown

Mozambique

Unknown

Unknown

Unknown

Unknown

Somalia

Unknown

Unknown

Unknown

Unknown

 

A total of 604 casualties have been recorded in signatory states.[66]

Signatories where cluster munition casualties have occurred (all time, as of 31 December 2019)

Angola

DRC

Liberia

Uganda

 

Data collection for casualties and victim assistance

Article 5 of the convention requires that States Parties with victims make “every effort to collect reliable relevant data” and assess the needs of cluster munition victims. The Dubrovnik Action Plan commits States Parties to the ongoing assessment of those needs. Although data is collected on casualties, often little is known or reported about the actual number of families and communities affected by cluster munitions, who are also victims by definition. Available information indicates that their needs are likely to be extensive.

Afghanistan was finalizing a national health and disability information system, and in a related project, was registering persons with war-related disabilities to provide them with pensions.[67] In Lao PDR, the National Regulatory Authority (NRA) Survivor Tracking System, a system for collecting data on new casualties, is designed to provide an ongoing survey of all survivors’ needs.[68] In 2019, data on services provided was available through the NRA online Operations Dashboard.[69] BiH continued to report that further survey was needed to establish detailed information on cluster munition victims, specifically those who had already been identified through initial survey. Both Croatia and Lebanon needed to revise or combine their national victim databases, and a much-delayed victim survey in Croatia was expected to start in the first half of 2020.[70] The Lebanon Mine Action Center (LMAC) completed the first phase of a national needs assessment of mine/explosive remnants of war (ERW) and cluster munition victims, in 2010, prior to the convention’s entry into force for the country.[71] In 2013, LMAC, along with the UN Development Programme (UNDP), launched a survey focused on 690 victims (survivors and deceased) and their families.[72]

A mine/ERW victim census was planned to be conducted in Chad in order to update the national database.[73] Further survey was needed in order to identify cluster munition victims and/or needs in Guinea-Bissau, Iraq, Montenegro, and Sierra Leone. Mauritania and Zambia had yet to conduct initial surveys to identify or confirm if they have cluster munition victims.

Cluster munition casualties in non-signatory states and other areas

In non-signatory states and areas, 8,471 cluster munition casualties have been recorded for all time. This data includes countries that remain affected long after the attacks took place, such as Cambodia and Vietnam ; as well as those that have had new casualties due to more recent attacks occurring since entry into force of the convention in Syria, Ukraine, and Yemen.

Data was often severely lacking for casualties that were killed and injured during cluster munition attacks, including those among military personnel and other direct participants in conflict, such as combatants in non-state armed groups and militias. However, since 2010, recording of the impact of cluster munition attacks has improved significantly, and casualties recorded from attacks have outnumbered those due to cluster munition remnants. Of all recorded casualties which occurred during cluster munition attacks for all countries and areas for all time (4,514), just under half (2,102) of those casualties were reported in Syria since 2012.

Since 2010, cluster munition remnant casualties have occurred in eight non-signatory states: Cambodia, Libya, Serbia, South Sudan, Sudan, Ukraine, Vietnam, and Yemen; and three other areas: Kosovo, Nagorno-Karabakh, and Western Sahara.

Non-signatories where cluster munition casualties have occurred (all time, as of 31 December 2019)

Cambodia

Israel

Serbia

Tajikistan

Eritrea

Kuwait

South Sudan

Ukraine

Ethiopia

Libya

Sudan

Vietnam

Georgia

Russia

Syria

Yemen

 

Other areas where cluster munition casualties have occurred (all time as of 31 December 2019)

Kosovo

Nagorno-Karabakh

Western Sahara 

Addressing the Impact

Coordination

Clearance coordination

In 2019, clearance programs in eight States Parties with remaining contamination, Afghanistan, Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH), Chad, Iraq, Lao PDR, Lebanon, Mauritania, and Somalia, were coordinated through national mine action centers. The Ministry of National Defense is responsible for overseeing mine action in Chile, and the Federal Ministry of Defense in Germany is similarly responsible for overseeing clearance activities.

The Directorate of Mine Action Coordination (DMAC) in Afghanistan took over full management of the Mine Action Programme of Afghanistan from the UN Mine Action Service (UNMAS) as of 1June 2019, although UNMAS and the United States (US) continue to financially support DMAC.[74]

States Parties Afghanistan, BiH, Chad, Germany, Iraq, Lao PDR, Lebanon, and Somalia had a mine action strategy or plan in place in 2019, but not all included reference to cluster munition contamination and clearance. Chile had a plan for the execution of demining activities for the year 2019, but still needs to develop a full plan or strategy for the clearance of cluster munitions in its extension request.[75] The Lao PDR strategy, “The Safe Path Forward” was reviewed in 2015, and its 2019 Article 4 Extension Request provided a workplan for the period August 2020–July 2025.[76]

States Parties Afghanistan, BiH, Chad, Iraq, Lao PDR, Lebanon, and Somalia had national standards in place which are consistent with the International Mine Action Standards (IMAS), although the standards in Chad and Somalia do not include cluster munition remnant clearance and survey. Chile uses IMAS and a Joint Demining Manual for its Armed Forces, and clearance and survey in Germany are conducted according to German federal legislation.

Seven of these States Parties[77] use the Information Management System for Mine Action (IMSMA), including Chile. BiH has its own database, with a specific database for cluster munition contamination (CM BHMAC). BiH Mine Action Center (BHMAC) reported that this database needs to be updated.[78] Germany uses its own information management system.[79]

Risk education coordination

In 2019, 10 States Parties had institutions in place for coordinating risk education, namely Afghanistan, BiH, Chad, Chile, Croatia, Iraq, Lao PDR, Lebanon, Mauritania, and Somalia. In most cases the risk education program is coordinated by the mine action center, although for the school-based programs in Chile, Iraq, and Lao PDR, the Ministry of Education takes on a coordination role. In Croatia, the Civil Protection Directorate was responsible for risk education. Regular risk education meetings took place in 2019 in States Parties Afghanistan, Iraq, Lao PDR, and Lebanon. Chad and Somalia reported risk education matters were discussed during mine action coordination meetings.[80]

Risk education strategies are included within the national mine action strategies of Afghanistan, BiH, and Lao PDR. Lebanon had a national-level risk education curriculum to guide implementation.[81]

Afghanistan, BiH, Chad, Iraq, Lao PDR, and Lebanon all have national standards for risk education. In 2019, Lebanon reported the revision of national standards for risk education.[82] Afghanistan reported a comprehensive clean-up of risk education data in 2019, including classifying risk education programs and activity types, and developing guidelines for quality management inspectors.[83]

Involvement of victims in coordination

States Parties to the Convention on Cluster Munitions have committed to actively include cluster munition victims and their representative organizations in policy- and decision-making, so that their participation is made sustainable and meaningful.

In most States Parties to the convention, survivors were engaged in relevant activities, but generally there was no indication that survivors’ views were actively considered or acted upon.

In BiH, a victim assistance coordination body was officially established on 23 May 2018. Survivors’ representatives were involved in the two unofficial coordination meetings held in 2019 and advocated for official coordination. Somalia held survivor assistance meetings in early 2019. Coordination began again some five years after the first and only previous coordination meeting on victim assistance in Somalia, held in 2014. Croatia has not held any victim assistance coordination meetings in recent years. Montenegro and Sierra Leone were the only states where the Monitor has not identified any survivor involvement in victim assistance activities since entry into force of the Convention on Cluster Munitions. Nevertheless, disabled peoples’ organizations (DPOs) in both countries advocated for the rights of all persons with disabilities. The Sierra Leone Union on Disability Issues (SLUDI) requested the official state appointment of persons with disabilities to high-level governance positions where they can influence decisions that affect them and counter existing marginalization and discrimination at all levels.

Victim assistance planning

Among States Parties with cluster munition victims, only Sierra Leone did not have a designated victim assistance focal point, which was an action set forth in the Dubrovnik Action Plan with the deadline of the end of 2016.

Through the Dubrovnik Action Plan, States Parties without a national disability action plan committed to draft a disability or victim assistance plan before the end of 2018.

As of the end of 2019, six States Parties had current planning in place for victim assistance: Albania, BiH, Colombia, Lao PDR, Lebanon, and Mozambique. Mozambique has not reported on implementation of its specific victim assistance planning and has remained focused on the earlier broad national disability plan, which also includes references to victim assistance. Chad has not yet adopted a revised plan, while Somalia has developed a draft plan that was launched at the end of 2019. Afghanistan developed a new national disability strategy. This was the first draft to be completed since the previous strategy for 2008–2011 expired, which was before Afghanistan became a State Party to the Convention on Cluster Munitions in March 2012. Afghanistan’s draft strategy was under review in 2019.[84] Iraq was using annually updated plans, but in 2018 began the process of developing a national victim assistance and disability strategy with the Mine Ban Treaty Implementation Support Unit and European Union (EU) funding. Croatia has not replaced its plan that expired in 2014. Montenegro and Sierra Leone did not have an active victim assistance plan in place but did have disability-related activities coordinated at the national-level.

Mine action management and coordination

State Party

Coordination mechanism

Clearance strategy

Risk education coordination

Risk education strategy

Victim assistance plan

Afghanistan

DMAC

Strategy 2016–2020

Workplan 2013–2023

DMAC through a RE TWG

Included in Mine Action strategy

National disability strategy (draft under review)

BiH

BHMAC

Strategy 2019–2025

BHMAC

Sub-strategy for risk education 2009–2019

New victim assistance strategy being drafted

Chad

National Mine Action Authority in Chad (HCND)

National Mine Action Plan 2014–2019

HCND

No current strategy

No current plan

Chile

Ministry of Defense (MoD)

Partial

MoD in coordination with Ministry of Education

N/R

No current plan

Croatia

Ministry of the Interior/Civil Protection Directorate (Croatian Mine Action Center is a department)

Revised National Mine Action Strategy for 2020–2026

Ministry of the Interior, through the Civil Protection Directorate and Police Directorate

N/R

No current plan

Germany

MoD

Yes

N/A

N/A

N/A

Iraq

Directorate of Mine Action (DMA) & Iraqi Kurdistan Mine Action Agency

(IKMAA)

Prioritization Strategy

DMA and Ministry of Education

N/R

Plan drafted and adopted

Lao PDR

National Regulatory Authority for the UXO Sector (NRA)

Safe Path Forward 2016–2020

NRA through a RE TWG and Ministry of Education

Sub-section on RE in UXO sector strategy

UXO/mine Victim Assistance Strategy 2014–2020

Lebanon

Lebanon Mine Action Centre (LMAC)

Strategy 2020–2025

LMAC through RE Steering Committee

RE Curriculum

2011–2020 National Mine Action Strategy

Mauritania

National Humanitarian Demining Programme for Development (PNDHD)

No strategy

PNDHD

No strategy

No plan

Montenegro

Directorate for Emergency Situations, Ministry of Interior

No strategy

N/A

N/A

Integrated in state planning

Sierra Leone

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Disability planning

Somalia

Somali Explosive Management Authority (SEMA)

Strategy 2018–2020

SEMA

No strategy

Draft plan launched in November 2019

Note: N/A=not applicable; N/R=not reported; RE=risk education; TWG=technical working group.

Regional cooperation

During 2019, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Regional Mine Action Centre (ARMAC)–operational since 2018–implemented a project to “Enhance Awareness Programmes on the Dangers of Mines/Explosive Remnants of War [ERW] among ASEAN members states.” The project involved research and consultative meetings on risk education between July and September 2019 in the five ASEAN states affected by mines and ERW, including State Party Lao PDR, and non-signatories Cambodia, Myanmar, Thailand, and Vietnam. An ARMAC side-event was held in November 2019 at the Fourth Review Conference of the Mine Ban Treaty in Oslo, and a regional consultative meeting with all ASEAN state members was held in Siem Reap, Cambodia on 6 February 2020 to finalize the study.[85] Phase 2 of the project will involve the implementation of the study recommendations for an integrated approach[86] to risk education in projects in the region.[87]

ARMAC also has responsibility to support victim assistance in the region and during 2019 was in the development phase of establishing a regional platform to promote experience, knowledge, expertise and exchange on victim assistance among ASEAN member states.[88]

In Europe, the South-Eastern Europe Mine Action Coordination Council (SEEMACC) was established through the agreement of the directors of mine action centers in Albania, BiH, Croatia, and ITF Enhancing Human Security.[89] In 2020–2021 SEEMACC will implement a project to support regional capacity through the development of criteria for training and implementation of humanitarian demining, victim assistance and risk education.[90]

The UN Development Programme (UNDP) in Lebanon, in coordination with the Norwegian Embassy, the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and LMAC, was developing a project focusing on support to reduce risk for Syrian refugees in Lebanon in the prospect of their return home.[91]

Cluster Munition Remnants Clearance

Clearance in 2019

In 2019, approximately 82km² of cluster munition contaminated land was cleared by States Parties, an increase from 76km² cleared in 2018. At least 96,533 submunitions were cleared and destroyed in 2019.

About 78% of this area clearance was undertaken in Lao PDR, which cleared a total of 64.95km², including 46.42km² of agricultural land and 18.53km² for development.[92] This was an increase of 2.88km² from the previous year. The number of cluster munition remnants destroyed in Lao PDR also increased in 2019, with a total of 80,247 submunitions destroyed, an increase from the 78,974 recorded in 2018.[93] Lao PDR requested and received a five-year extension to its Article 4 deadline in 2019.

Croatia completed clearance of cluster munitions in July 2020. It cleared 0.04km² in 2019. Since 2010 until the end of 2019, Croatia reported the release of 5.28km2, with a remaining 0.03km² to be cleared during 2020. Throughout the 10-year period, Croatia reported having cleared and destroyed more than 3,100 cluster munition remnants.[94]

Montenegro declared completion of clearance of all cluster munitions in July 2020. No clearance was reported in 2013–2017. In 2018, 0.01km² was cleared with six submunitions destroyed. In 2019, 0.78km² was cleared with 64 submunitions destroyed.[95] In its most recent Article 7 transparency report covering calendar year 2019, Montenegro stated that the size of the remaining contaminated area in the country was 1.72km², which suggests that the remaining 0.93km² of contaminated land was released in the first half of 2020.

Iraq reported to the Monitor clearance of 6.29km² of cluster munition contaminated land in 2019 and the removal of 9,996 submunitions, which was a decrease in the amount of land cleared compared to 2018, but an increase in the number of submunitions cleared.[96]

Chad has conducted limited survey in the past. Chad reported the clearance of 4.33km² in 2019. Eighteen submunitions were found during clearance and destroyed.[97]

Afghanistan reported to the Monitor that 2.72km² of cluster munition contaminated land was cleared in 2019 with 86 submunitions destroyed.[98] This is a decrease from the 4.2km² cleared in 2018, when 217 submunitions were destroyed.[99]

Lebanon reported 1.26 km² of clearance in 2019.[100] This was an increase from its 2018 figure of 1.14km² cleared. A total of 4,037 submunitions were cleared and destroyed in 2019. Lebanon requested a five-year extension to its Article 4 deadline in 2020.

Germany only began clearance in 2017, six years after it reported contamination. Germany requested an extension to its Article 4 deadline in 2019. Germany has a time-bound plan that estimates the clearance of 1.5–2km² (150–200 hectares) per year, with completion likely by 2024.[101] Germany reported that it cleared 2.8km² between 2017 and 2019,[102] which means that its current clearance is below its projected output.

Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH) reported clearing 0.72km² of contaminated land in 2019.[103] No Article 7 report was submitted by BiH for calendar year 2018. BiH’s 2018 annual report on mine action produced by BiH Mine Action Centre (BHMAC) stated that 0.28km² was cleared in 2018 and 1,009 submunitions were destroyed.[104] In 2019, BiH reported a further 3.6km² was “separated” from the total recorded cluster munition contamination during non-technical survey (NTS) due to it being considered “non-conventionally contaminated.”[105] It was not reported to what extent previous clearance occurred in these areas.

Chile prioritized the clearance of landmines over the clearance of cluster munitions[106] and has not yet conducted any clearance of cluster munition remnants, despite having become a State Party to the Convention on Cluster Munitions in December 2010. Chile requested an extension for clearance of cluster munitions in January 2020. While no clearance took place in 2019, it was reported that NTS of the areas was completed, reducing the reported 96.88m², by 32.27m², and leaving the remaining suspected area at 64.61km².[107]

Somalia reported six contaminated areas on its historical database and there have been reports of munitions in Southwest State, Jubaland State and Puntland, However, no clearance or survey has been reported.[108]

Mauritania, which announced new unreported contamination in 2019, has yet to conduct survey or clearance.

Cluster munition remnants clearance in 2018–2019[109]

State Party

2018

2019

Clearance (km²)

CMR destroyed

Clearance (km²)

CMR destroyed

Afghanistan

4.2

217

2.72

86

BiH

0.28

1,009

0.72

85

Chad

0

0

4.33

18*

Chile

0

0

0

0

Croatia

0.86

571

0.04

186

Germany

0.98

1,537

1.35

1,814

Iraq

7.16

3,743

6.29

9,996

Lao PDR

62.07

78,974**

64.95

80,247***

Lebanon

1.14

3,583

1.26

4,037

Mauritania

0

0

0

0

Montenegro

0.01

6

0.78

64

Somalia

0

0

0

0

TOTAL

76.70

89,640

82.44

96,533

Note: CMR=cluster munition remnants; ERW=explosive remnants of war.

* Reported 21 containers but not specified if loaded.

** Total ERW destroyed: 97,624, including 31 mines, 148 big bombs, and 18,471 other ERW.

*** Total ERW destroyed: 101,512, including 40 mines, 170 big bombs, and 21,055 other ERW.

Clearance 2010–2019

In the 10 years since the signing of the Convention on Cluster Munitions, almost 560km² of land has been cleared in States Parties, with at least 452,938 submunitions cleared and destroyed.[110] State Party Lao PDR has cleared the most amount of land (80% of the total) and destroyed the greatest number of submunitions (79% of the total) during the 10-year period. Chile has yet to clear any land of cluster munition remnants.

Cluster munition remnants clearance in 2010–2019[111]

State Party

2010–2019

Clearance (km²)

CMR destroyed

Afghanistan

9.74

315

BiH

2.37

2,718

Chad

4.33

18

Chile

0

0

Croatia

5.28

3,100

Germany

2.80

3,864

Iraq

68.44

49,704

Lao PDR

448.63

357,846

Lebanon

14.87

34,063

Mauritania

1.96

1,246

Montenegro

0.79

64

Somalia

0

0

TOTAL

559.21

452,938

Note: CMR=cluster munition remnants.

Article 4 deadlines and extension requests

If a State Party believes that it will be unable to clear and destroy all cluster munition remnants within 10 years after the entry into force of the convention for the State Party, it is able to request an extension of its deadline for a period of up to five years.

The first extension requests were submitted for consideration for the Ninth Meeting of States Parties in Geneva in September 2019. In 2019, two countries, Germany and Lao PDR, asked and were granted a full five-year extension to their Article 4 deadlines. In 2020, BiH, Lebanon, and Chile have submitted requests (see table below).

Status of Article 4 progress to completion

State Party

Original deadline

Extension Request

Current deadline

Expectation to meet deadline

Afghanistan

1 March 2022

N/A

1 March 2022

Uncertain

BiH

1 March 2021

Submitted in 2020

1 March 2021

Expects to complete in 2023

Chad

1 September 2023

N/A

1 September 2023

Expects to complete before 2023

Chile

1 June 2021

Submitted in 2020

1 June 2021

Expects to complete end 2025

Germany

1 August 2020

Granted in 2019 (5 years)

1 August 2025

Expects to complete end 2024*

Iraq

1 November 2023

N/A

1 November 2023

Unlikely to meet deadline

Lao PDR

1 August 2020

Granted in 2019 (5 years)

1 August 2025

Unlikely to meet deadline

Lebanon

1 May 2021

Submitted in 2020

1 May 2021

Expects to complete by 2025

Mauritania

1 August 2022

N/A

1 August 2022

Unknown**

Somalia

1 March 2026

N/A

1 March 2026

Unknown

Note: N/A=not applicable.

* Clearance is expected to be completed at the end of 2024, with final reporting and documentation completed in 2025.

** Mauritania completed in 2013 but has since reported finding new cluster munition remnants contamination.

Two States Parties­—Chad and Germany—are expected to meet their Article 4 deadlines.

Chad’s Article 7 report for the year 2019, provides a workplan for the period 2020–2021, which suggests clearance will be completed in 2021.[112]

Germany requested a five-year extension until August 2025 to clear a former military training area at Wittstock. In its request, Germany stated that it should be able to conclude this work by 2024.[113]

For most of the States Parties, it is uncertain or unlikely that they will meet their current deadlines, despite several States Parties having relatively small areas of contamination remaining, such as Afghanistan, BiH, Lebanon, and Somalia.

Afghanistan told the Monitor that it is uncertain whether it will meet its current deadline of 1 March 2022.[114] Funding for the clearance of the seven remaining areas had been pledged by the United States (US), but Afghanistan has stated that there is evidence of more cluster munition contamination that needs assessment and survey. Ongoing conflict between the government, the Taliban and other non-state armed groups is continuing to add to the explosive remnants of war (ERW) contamination in Afghanistan, particularly improvised mines, which have overtaken legacy mined areas as the largest humanitarian threat.[115] Competing priorities make it challenging for Afghanistan to address the contamination.

Iraq told the Monitor that it is unlikely to meet its deadline of 2023, and that with its current capacity the clearance would require 17 more years. To clear within the deadline, Iraq reports that it would need a capacity of 45 teams.[116]

In Lao PDR, given the size of the known contamination, the remaining challenge is enormous. At the current annual clearance rate of 50km² per year,[117] the Monitor estimates that Lao PDR will need at least 23 years from 2020 to complete the clearance of the known cluster munitions in its territory. Lao PDR has indicated that completion of survey will be one of the priorities of work during the extension period, with the expectation that additional international support will be needed.[118] In September 2016, Lao PDR launched Sustainable Development Goal 18 (SDG-18), with a 2030 target to reduce the number of unexploded ordnance (UXO) casualties to zero; to clear all UXO contamination from high priority areas and villages; to improve health and livelihood needs of victims; and to ensure government funding for remaining UXO activities.[119] This is indicative of both the impact of cluster munition contamination on the development of Lao PDR and the country’s commitment to address the contamination and its impacts.

BiH, Chile, and Lebanon both submitted new extension requests in 2020 and requested full five-year extension periods.

BiH told the Monitor that it expects to complete cluster munition clearance by 2023, two years after its current Article 4 deadline of 1 March 2021.[120] An extension request was submitted in September 2020.

Chile failed to conduct any clearance of its cluster munitions over the last 10 years due to prioritizing mine clearance[121] (which it completed in February 2020).[122] In January 2020, Chile submitted an extension request for a period of five years.[123] Chile states that the Chilean Armed Forces are scheduled to carry out the clean-up within five years and that financial planning also stipulates a five-year term.[124] As part of the extension request, Chile requested international assistance of US$1.6 million for demining equipment and the undertaking of risk education in four locations for the period 2021–2026.[125] A revised extension request was submitted on 29 June 2020.

While Lebanon has reported clearance of 84% of its cluster munition contaminated land, it is unlikely to complete the remaining 16% by its current deadline due to challenges such as the discovery of further contamination, difficult terrain, extreme weather conditions and lack of financial assistance.[126] Lebanon has estimated that if it secures the same funds as in the last three years and the Government of Lebanon meets its declared contribution for the first three years of the extension, then it will be able to complete the clearance of cluster munitions by 2025.[127]

It is unknown whether Somalia will meet its clearance deadline of 1 March 2026.

Mauritania has yet to submit details of clearance plans for the estimated 36km² of newly-found contaminated area.

Risk Education

Obligations regarding risk education

The Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4, Paragraph 2, states that each State Party shall “conduct risk reduction education to ensure awareness among civilians living in or around cluster munition contaminated areas of the risks posed by such remnants.”

Risk education in the context of the convention encompasses interventions aimed to protect civilian populations and individual civilians at the time of use of cluster munitions, when they fail to function as intended (remnants), or when they have been abandoned. Action 3.2 of the Dubrovnik Action Plan further highlights the need for risk education programs to be sensitized to age, gender and ethnic considerations and based on an assessment of need and vulnerability and an understanding of risk-taking behavior.[128]

States Parties are required to report on the measures taken to provide risk education and to ensure an immediate and effective warning to civilians living in cluster munition contaminated areas under their jurisdiction or control. This includes perimeter-marking of cluster munition contaminated areas, the provision of warning signs, and the marking of suspected hazardous areas.

Reporting

Since the First Review Conference in 2015, only five States Parties, Afghanistan, Croatia, Iraq, Lao PDR, and Lebanon, with outstanding Article 4 obligations have provided detailed information on risk education efforts. Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH), Chad, Mauritania, Montenegro, and Somalia have provided limited information regarding risk education. Chile and Germany have also provided limited information due to their contamination being confined to armed forces training areas.

Only Iraq and Lao PDR provided beneficiary numbers disaggregated by age and sex in their Article 7 transparency reports for the year 2019. Lebanon provided beneficiary numbers disaggregated by sex but not age.

Provision of risk education

States Parties Afghanistan, BiH, Croatia, Iraq, Lao PDR, and Lebanon all report conducting risk education which includes cluster munition remnants.

In State Party Lao PDR, where cluster munition contamination is the predominant type of unexploded ordnance (UXO) contamination, risk education is specifically directed to addressing the risk behaviors associated with cluster munition remnants.

In other States Parties where cluster munition remnant contamination is mixed with other forms of contamination which may be more predominant, risk education operators do not conduct specific sessions for cluster munition remnants. Afghanistan reported that risk education covers risks posed by all types of ordnance, including cluster munitions, although only two communities in two districts are directly affected by the seven known contaminated areas.[129] BiH also reported that mine/UXO risk education includes cluster munitions.[130]

Regional Mine Action Centre (RMAC) South in Iraq reported to the Monitor that information about cluster munitions was included as part of risk education sessions addressing all explosive remnants of war (ERW), but in areas closer to cluster munition contamination, more emphasis was placed on the risk behaviors with submunitions that led to casualties.[131] In the Kurdistan region of Iraq, cluster munition contamination is included as one type of contamination among others, or is not addressed as it is seen to be less of an issue.[132]

In Lebanon, some operators report including cluster munitions within their risk education, while others do not.

In States Parties Germany and Chile, cluster munition remnant contamination is confined to training ranges belonging to the armed forces. These areas are reported to be perimeter-marked with access prohibited to unauthorized persons.[133] Chile has focused on the conduct of risk education for landmines, although it has stated that cluster munitions are included within the sessions.[134] Germany has, as a precautionary and safeguarding measure, issued an official directive constraining access to the former military training area.[135]

Croatia reported in 2019 that risk education was provided throughout the 10-year period, with more than 140,000 persons reached. The last unexploded submunition casualties were reported in 2013.

Target areas, risk groups and behaviors

States Parties Afghanistan, BiH, Iraq, and Lebanon have provided risk education for cluster munitions in both rural and urban areas. In Croatia, risk education was conducted in 2019 through public campaigns at city and municipal level concerning contamination in more remote areas.[136] Risk education in Lao PDR is provided predominantly in remote rural areas in the north and in provinces bordering Vietnam and along the former route of the Ho Chi Minh trail. In Afghanistan, Iraq and Lebanon, risk education is also conducted in camps for internally displaced people (IDPs) and refugees.

National-level Information Management System for Mine Action (IMSMA) victim data is used in Afghanistan, Lao PDR, and Lebanon to inform the targeting of risk education. Afghanistan reported to the Monitor that it also maintained a priority scoring matrix to enable it to prioritize the most affected populations in terms of their proximity to the hazards, the number of recent casualties, and incidences of armed conflict.[137] In BiH and Iraq, it was reported that victim databases are incomplete, and in the case of Iraq, not openly available for interrogation.[138]

All States Parties that report on risk education cited children as a key risk group with regards to cluster munition remnants because they are often growing up in contaminated areas, lack knowledge of the risks, and are prone to picking up and playing with items. In Lao PDR, children are known to be tempted to pick up and play with submunitions because of their size and shape.[139]

Adult men and male adolescents are reported to be particularly high-risk groups in relation to cluster munition contamination due to their engagement in livelihood activities which increase the possibility of exposure to cluster munition remnants. In Afghanistan, BiH, Iraq, Lao PDR, and Lebanon, high-risk activities in rural areas include cultivation, collection of forest products, hunting and fishing, foraging, and tending animals. Activities such as digging, plowing or burning land are considered high-risk agricultural activities. In urban areas, particularly in Iraq, high-risk activities include construction work and street cleaning.

In Afghanistan, while cluster munition remnants affect fewer people, they are reported to block access to grazing and agricultural land. Migrant workers were reported to be a high-risk group in BiH due to their lack of understanding and knowledge of marking signs and indications of contamination.[140] Seasonal workers and cross-border workers were reported to be a target group in Lebanon.[141] In Croatia, target groups included members of hunting associations, the Croatian mountain rescue service, hikers, farmers and tourists.[142]

In Lao PDR it was reported that men often enter contaminated areas knowingly because of economic necessity. In some contexts, familiarity with contamination means that men will often move ordnance when they encounter them.[143] The Lebanon Mine Action Centre (LMAC) reported that farmers in the south of the country handled and moved ordnance.[144]

The collection of scrap metal and explosives is a risk activity that is recorded in both rural and urban areas. Scrap metal collection has been a common practice in Lao PDR for income generation, and is still reported in some areas, such as in the north of the country.[145] The deliberate engagement with ERW and submunitions for income generation is also reported in other States Parties, including Afghanistan.[146]

In Lao PDR it was reported to the Monitor that teenagers as a group were potentially excluded from risk education activities and that there needs to be more innovation to reach these groups as they may be particularly at risk, especially boys.[147]

Nomadic and pastoral communities were target groups for risk education in States Parties Iraq, Mauritania, and Somalia. 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.[148] However, Somalia does not report conducting risk education for cluster munition contamination.[149] Mauritania reported providing risk education to nomadic populations across the country and in areas close to suspected or confirmed hazardous areas.[150] RMAC South in Iraq reported providing risk education to nomadic Badia populations and targeting them during pastoral seasons when they gather in grassland areas with their livestock.[151]

In Lao PDR, the Hmong and other ethnic groups were potentially exposed to accidents because they practice “slash and burn” (or swidden) agriculture on a rotational basis.[152] The challenge of providing risk education to ethnic groups speaking different languages and dialects was also reported in State Party Lao PDR.[153]

IDPs and returnees were noted as risk groups in Afghanistan, Iraq, and Lebanon. In areas where people have been displaced due to conflict, such as in State Party Afghanistan, men were reported as often being the first to return to an area affected by conflict before other family members. In Lebanon, which hosts over 1.5 million Syrian refugees, risk education is provided to refugees to sensitize them to the contamination in Lebanon.[154]

Humanity & Inclusion (HI) reported risk education projects that targeted people with disabilities or were integrated into victim assistance projects.[155] In Afghanistan, the HI Mobile Team Project incorporated physical rehabilitation, psychosocial support and risk education for IDPs, returnees and host communities. Risk education teams provided sessions in rehabilitation centers for victims of explosive ordnance and other people with disabilities.[156]

In 2019, risk education was provided to people in emergency situations in Lao PDR and Lebanon. Lao PDR provided emergency risk education for villagers affected by flooding in Attapeu province,[157] and Lebanon provided emergency risk education with UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) support in the north of the country near the Syrian border after a flood.[158] In 2020, it was reported that Lao PDR would receive funding from Turkey as part of the Turkey-UNDP Partnership for Development Programme, to develop a project on strengthening early warning systems and risk education.[159]

Risk education delivery methods

States Parties Afghanistan, BiH, Chad, Iraq, Lao PDR, and Lebanon reported that risk education is carried out as an integrated part of survey and clearance activities. In cluster munition contaminated areas this is often crucial to support spot task reporting.[160]

Several States Parties also have organizations conducting standalone risk education, for example in BiH.

In Lao PDR, risk education is integrated into the school curriculum at primary level and is in the development phase at secondary level. Lebanon implements risk education activities in educational institutions across Lebanon as part of the school health curriculum.[161] In 2019, LMAC and the Ministry of Education launched training of trainers courses for the Health and Safety teachers, with the aim to cover the entire public school system throughout Lebanon.[162] In Afghanistan, key risk education messages are included for grades 2 to 12, and in BiH and Iraq risk education is provided in schools, but not as part of the curriculum.[163]

The Directorate of Mine Action Coordination (DMAC) in Afghanistan reported introducing child-focused risk education materials that have been piloted and will be used in field operations. They see it as a significant step towards employing engaging content that will help to change the behavior of children and young adults.[164]

Risk education in Afghanistan and BiH has been integrated into humanitarian and protection sectors. In BiH this is done through the work of the Red Cross, and in Afghanistan risk education has been provided for returnees through the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and at International Organization for Migration (IOM) encashment and transit centers.[165] Lebanon also reports training non-government organization (NGO) activists, social workers and health workers to deliver risk education.[166] HI in Lao PDR reported integrating risk education with the work of its rural development partners, GRET and OXFAM.[167]

Lao PDR, with its long-term cluster munition problem, has developed community-based approaches for risk education through a village volunteer network supported by UXO Lao, and through activities with the Lao Youth Union.[168] Lebanon conducted risk education through youth and scout leaders and LMAC also trained risk education focal points from the Ministry of Tourism in 2019.[169]

Mauritania conducted two prevention campaigns in 2019 as part of the National Humanitarian Demining Program for Development.[170] The risk education was conducted through administrative authorities, teachers, internal security forces (police and gendarmerie), and the army.

Marking

The marking of areas contaminated by cluster munition remnants varies. Lao PDR reported that UXO marking signs are only used for targeted project areas.[171]

BiH reported placing emergency marking signs around suspected areas.[172] Lebanon has fenced and marked dangerous areas, uses warning signs and partners with local communities and authorities to ensure community awareness of contaminated areas.[173] Croatia reported marking hazardous areas and providing maps of the location of hazardous areas to the local authorities and police administration.[174]

In Chile and Germany, all cluster munition remnant contaminated areas were reported as being perimeter fenced and marked to International Mine Action Standards (IMAS) using signs and barbed wire. [175]

Victim Assistance

The Convention on Cluster Munitions requires that States Parties assist all cluster munition victims in the areas under their jurisdiction. Compliance with victim assistance obligations included in the convention is compulsory, requiring States Parties with cluster munition victims to implement victim assistance activities. Specific activities to ensure that adequate assistance is provided, include the following:[176]

• Collect relevant data and assess the needs of cluster munition victims;

• Coordinate victim assistance programs and develop a national plan;

• Actively involve cluster munition victims in all processes that affect them;

• Ensure adequate, available, and accessible assistance;

• Provide assistance that is gender- and age-sensitive as well as non-discriminatory;[177] and

• Report on progress.

Among the 14 States Parties which have had cluster munition casualties recorded, 12 have recognized responsibility for cluster munition victims (see table below).

States Parties which have reported a responsibility for cluster munition victims

Afghanistan

Albania

Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH)

Chad

Croatia

Guinea-Bissau

Iraq

Lao PDR

Lebanon

Montenegro

Sierra Leone

Somalia

 

At least two other States Parties which have had cluster munition casualties reported, Colombia and Mozambique, may also have responsibility to assist cluster munition victims. Both are also States Parties to the Mine Ban Treaty and have recognized responsibility for significant numbers of mine survivors and their needs. 

In 2019, Colombia reported that “since the date of entry into force of the Convention [on Cluster Munitions] for the Colombian State there are no reports or records on victims of cluster munitions”.[178] The convention entered into force for the country on 1 March 2016, and in November 2017, the Supreme Court of Colombia upheld the decision of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACHR) case, Santo Domingo Massacre v. Colombia, regarding redress for cluster munition victims of an attack in 1998.[179] The IACHR prescribed measures for remedy that are essentially consistent with the victim assistance obligations of the Convention on Cluster Munitions.[180] In May 2009, Colombia’s then-Minister of Defense and later Nobel Peace Prize winning president, Juan Manuel Santos, acknowledged that the Colombian armed forces had used cluster munitions in the past “to destroy clandestine airstrips and camps held by illegal armed groups” and noted that the submunitions sometimes did not explode and “became a danger to the civilian population.”[181] In 2010, the Ministry of National Defense said that the Colombian Air Force last used cluster munitions on 10 October 2006 “to destroy clandestine airstrips belonging to organizations dedicated to drug trafficking in remote areas of the country where the risk to civilians was minimal.”[182]

In 2020, Mozambique reported that “at the moment there is no evidence of victims of cluster munitions.”[183] Previously, Mozambique reported on victim assistance efforts under the Convention on Cluster Munitions and also stated that “Additional surveys are needed to identify victims of cluster munitions.”[184] No such surveys were reported. However, casualties which occurred in Mozambique during the time of cluster munition attacks by Rhodesian forces were likely mostly Zimbabwe African National Liberation Army (ZANLA) forces.[185]

Non-signatories Cambodia and Vietnam are also viewed as countries with the most significant numbers of cluster munition victims in need of assistance and support.[186] Both Cambodia and Vietnam have recognized the need to assist cluster munition victims and provided information on their victim assistance efforts at early meetings of States Parties of the Convention on Cluster Munitions. Cambodia and Vietnam reported on their implementation efforts in accordance with the convention’s specific requirements of planning, coordination, and the integration of victim assistance into rights-based frameworks, such as the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD).[187]

Victim assistance obligations and relevant international frameworks

States Parties to the Convention on Cluster Munitions with victims under their jurisdictionare legally bound to implement adequate victim assistance in accordance with applicable international humanitarian law and human rights law.[188] All but two of the States Parties with cluster munition victims, Lao PDR and Lebanon, are also party to the Mine Ban Treaty, and are responsible for providing assistance to mine survivors. Most of these states have also received focused attention and support in developing victim assistance programs through the mechanisms of the Mine Ban Treaty and its Implementation Support Unit: Afghanistan, Albania, BiH, Chad, Croatia, Guinea-Bissau, Montenegro,[189] Iraq, and Somalia.

The requirement to apply human rights law has been understood foremost in terms of enhancing implementation through the CRPD, by including victim assistance in national disability rights-related coordination structures. Among States Parties to the Convention on Cluster Munitions with cluster munition victims, all but two are States Parties to the CRPD; Chad and Lebanon are signatories. Nonetheless, Lebanon’s mine action strategy for 2011–2020 has the goal that the rights of victims are fulfilled “as per the Convention on Cluster Munitions (CCM) obligations, in the spirit of the Mine Ban Treaty (MBT), and in accordance with the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD).”[190]

In September 2015, UN Member States adopted the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and its Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). They are designed to address the economic, social, and environmental dimensions of sustainable development, with an emphasis on poverty reduction, equality, rule of law, and inclusion. Therefore, the SDGs are generally complementary to the aims of the CRPD and the Convention on Cluster Munitions and offer exceptional opportunities for bridging the relevant frameworks.

More specifically, persons with disabilities are referred to directly in several of the SDGs that are highly relevant to the implementation of the CRPD and the humanitarian disarmament conventions’ action plans: education (SDG 4), employment (SDG 8), reducing inequality (SDG 10), and accessibility of human settlements (SDG 11), in addition to including persons with disabilities in data collection and monitoring (SDG 17). In the context of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, the UN and civil society consider mine action to be a vital enabler for many of the SDGs, including peace, stability and development (SDG 16), and to ensure healthy lives and promote wellbeing (SDG 3).[191] However, in 2015, the UN Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities pointed out potential future challenges to the success of development goals with regard to victim assistance:

“The Sustainable Development Goals offer a great opportunity for all, including for persons with disabilities. However, the limited capacity to implement and measure the level of impact of the SDGs is a risk that must be addressed in order to avoid another failure of the development agenda in relation to persons with disabilities.”[192]

The Monitor has been reporting such efforts since the period of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), which ran through to the end of 2015. Unlike the SDGs, the MDGs did not specifically reference persons with disabilities. However, the rights of persons with disabilities, including survivors, were identified as priorities in some development plans and programs, Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs), and other appropriate mechanisms. Several countries recognized the need to incorporate those commitments into their PRSPs. This integration into national development objectives was encouraged as a means of improving the implementation of victim assistance.[193] As can be seen in the following example from Lao PDR, there were useful lessons that were transferred from the MDGs to the period of the SDGs in some cases. 

As noted earlier (in the section on Article 4 deadlines and extension requests), Lao PDR’s current SDG 18 includes a victim assistance target to be achieved by 2030: “SDG 18.3: Meet the health and livelihoods needs of all identified UXO survivors.”[194] Similarly, in 2010, the same year that the Convention on Cluster Munitions entered into force, Lao PDR signed an MDG Compact whereby it committed to attaining a country-specific additional MDG 9 to reduce the impact of UXO by 2020–the year of the Second Review Conference of the convention. The timeline for this goal also overlaps with the first five years of the 15-year SDG period (2015–2030). The third target of Lao PDR’s MDG 9 is: “Ensure that the medical and rehabilitation needs of all UXO survivors are met” through the provision of proper assistance.[195] The Lao PDR strategy, Safe Path Forward recognizes that “meeting the obligations of the Cluster Munitions Convention will require a significant scaling up of resources and capacities during the period covered by this strategy [through 2020].”[196] In 2015, Lao PDR noted that it “has a long way to go to fully achieve the victim assistance goals within the broader disability and development frameworks.”[197] Long-term challenges to accomplishing MDG 9 include mainstreaming sustainable socio-economic development strategies and programs as well as maintaining national capacity, while also gradually reducing international support.

Approaching the Lausanne Action Plan with victim assistance priority needs first

The Convention on Cluster Munitions is the first international treaty to make the provision of assistance to victims of a given weapon a formal requirement for all States Parties. It is also the first international humanitarian law treaty to include a reporting obligation for victim assistance. At this significant milestone, a decade since its entry into force on 1 August 2010, the Convention on Cluster Munitions continues to set the highest standard in obligations for the provision of assistance as well as on reporting practices on victim assistance.

The Convention on Cluster Munitions requires that states “adequately provide” victim assistance. To fulfill this legal obligation, each State Party should determine what would be “adequate” in its national circumstances for each key aspect of victim assistance, including medical care, rehabilitation and psychological support, social and economic inclusion, and other relevant services.

As conveyed in Cluster Munition Monitor 2010, the first annual report following the entry into force of the convention, at that time, “nearly all states and areas with cluster munition victims faced significant challenges providing holistic and accessible care to affected individuals, families, and communities.”[198] While the particular challenges varied according to the specific situation in each country and were reported in the publication as such, common challenges identified in the report included a lack of resources and funding for programs, little or no progress in providing opportunities for economic inclusion and psychosocial support, as well as insufficient availability or access to services for survivors based in rural areas. 

In providing an update on progress under the Dubrovnik Action Plan, Cluster Munition Monitor 2019 included summary information on some specific priority actions and activities that have been reported as required to address victim assistance challenges. These actions and recommendations have been identified in Cluster Munition Monitor country-level reporting for victim assistance. They are compiled in a unique database of victim assistance challenges, specific actions to address challenges, and related national commitments in strategies and plans yet to be fulfilled or fully implemented. The following are updates on activities relating to some of the action points and recommendations identified in the Cluster Munition Monitor 2019 report.

Afghanistan:

  • Expand access to physical rehabilitation, particularly in provinces lacking services.
  • Provide psychosocial and psychological support, including peer support in particular to new survivors as well as those who have been traumatized and live in isolation.

Generally, victim assistance faced financial crises and shortages which affected the improvement and implementation of physical rehabilitation, psychosocial counseling, and economic inclusion. Inclusive education, once an exemplary expanding program, has since stalled due to a lack of resources. In addition to several programs and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) which are bilaterally funded by other donors, seven victim assistance projects were designed to be implemented through the Directorate of Mine Action Coordination (DMAC) during 2019, but only four received funding.[199] No new peer-support activities were reported.

Albania:

  • Provide follow-up to address the needs identified during the survivor assessment survey completed in 2016.
  • Maintain capacities of services and healthcare for amputees in remote areas.

Albania shared the results of the ALB-AID survey at the Fostering Partnerships global conference on victim assistance in Amman, Jordan.[200] It is yet to report on follow-up measures.

BiH:

  • Improve the economic inclusion of survivors and their families.
  • Increase the quality and sustainability of services for survivors and other persons with disabilities, including by upgrading community-based rehabilitation centers.

In BiH, the EU funded a two-year income-generation and socio-economic inclusion project for mine/explosive remnants of war (ERW) survivors implemented through a joint initiative of World Vision and the Organization of Amputees of Republic of Srpska. Together with BiH Mine Action Centre (BHMAC), this project also included drafting of the next BiH Mine Victim Assistance Action Plan (2019–2025).[201]

Croatia:

  • Maintain regular national coordination of victim assistance and complete the unified victim database in order to improve implementation of services according to needs.
  • Ensure that survivors’ representative organizations have adequate resources.

In Croatia, a coordination group was established in 2010 to develop a survivor database. However, by early 2015, a lack of funding delayed survey implementation.[202] In 2019, Croatia reported the survey was expected to start during the first half of 2020.[203] A four-year Swiss-Croatian cooperation program was projected to fund the victim database and also to include an economic integration needs assessment.[204]

Chad:

  • Enhance victim assistance coordination and align with disability-rights coordination.
  • Increase investment in physical rehabilitation services.

There was only one operational physical rehabilitation center, in the capital N’Djamena, but it was facing funding difficulties. The cost of treatment at the center was borne by patients.[205] Humanity & Inclusion (HI) supported the strengthening of the production capacity of the center. HI also continued to build the capacity of victim assistance and disability actors.[206]

Guinea-Bissau:

  • Train survivors and other persons with disabilities to advocate for equal opportunities and increased access to assistance.
  • Ensure that broader programs, such as international cooperation for post-conflict reconstruction and poverty reduction, reach the most vulnerable members of society.

Guinea-Bissau reported that it has been “partnering with International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) on physical rehabilitation program for all persons with disability since 2012.”[207] No specific progress was recorded.

Iraq:

  • Establish a system of data collection and analysis for persons with disabilities.
  • Implement the recommendations of the UN Assistance Mission in Iraq (UNAMI)/Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) Report on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities in Iraq.
  • Incorporate the recommendations of the 2018 National Parallel Report on the CRPD for Iraq into policy and planning.

Iraq needed to establish a unified and coordinated system of data collection and analysis for survivors and other persons with disabilities. Healthcare services for all persons with disabilities in Iraq has decreased over time, in part due to the security situation. Additional rehabilitation facilities were built in Iraq in 2018–2019, including a much-needed new center in Mosul, but the entire rehabilitation system lacked capacity to deliver enough services and devices to meet the increased needs. Iraq recognized that it needs to improve coordination among all of the 23 rehabilitation centers throughout the country, with a national referral mechanism to facilitate access to services, an increase in the number of qualified physicians and greater logistic preparations, especially for victims in remote areas.[208] The number of persons with disabilities who received vocational training through the state, compared to the size of the population of persons with disabilities in Iraq, made the figure appear insignificant to the needs.[209] The CRPD Committee Experts reviewing Iraq’s progress in September 2019 found that the challenges and consequences of “18 years of war, armed conflict and terrorism…had ravaged Iraq and…had had a disproportionate impact on persons with disabilities.”[210]

Lao PDR:

  • Improve access to rehabilitation services from remote and rural areas, including allocating resources to bring beneficiaries for rehabilitation and ensuring that transport is available.
  • Increase state support for psychological and social assistance, including peer-to-peer counseling and survivor-driven economic activities.

The national Centre for Medical Rehabilitation (CMR) in Lao PDR, operated by the Ministry of Public Health in cooperation with the Cooperative Orthotic and Prosthetic Enterprise (COPE), continued to provide physical rehabilitation services including in provincial rehabilitation centers and through community outreach mobile clinic rehabilitation teams.[211] An HI project supports transport and costs of existing healthcare providers to address a lack of healthcare and rehabilitation services at community level in two provinces.[212] In 2017, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) initiated a US$15 million five-year project for services and support to the disability sector in Lao PDR. The USAID Okard project is managed and implemented by World Education Laos (WEL), with support from partners including national government bodies and NGOs working on victim assistance. The Okard project replaced the four-year (2014–2017) USAID-funded, WEL-managed Training, Economic Empowerment, Assistive Technology, and Medical and Physical Rehabilitation (TEAM) project, and an associated project underway during the same time period, the Victim Assistance Support Team (VAST), implemented directly by WEL.[213]

Lebanon:

  • Secure sufficient survivor assistance funding.
  • Create a sustainable funding strategy for the physical rehabilitation sector that relies on international funding and national donations.

Lebanon Mine Action Centre (LMAC) reported that in 2019 many victims benefited from prosthetic services funded by the Ministry of Social Affairs. There is a strong need for funds in order to provide these services, a need for specialists, and an increased budget for rehabilitation and training.[214] There was a decrease in financial support for rehabilitation services overall, as well as for social and economic inclusion assistance.[215] DanChurchAid (DCA) Lebanon, with a national partner, the Faculty of Heath Science at the Balamand University of Beirut, supported sustainable income generation and businesses, as well as vocational, academic and business training.[216] Psychosocial support interventions for victims were also supported by DCA.[217]

Montenegro:

  • Improve the participation and economic inclusion of persons with disabilities.

Montenegro has a strategy for the Protection of Persons with Disabilities from Discrimination and Promotion of Equality 2017–2021. In 2017, the Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities reported on Montenegro’s lack of progress, stating that “the lion’s share remained” to be achieved. Committee experts inquired about the financial situation for NGOs that provided social services for persons with disabilities and the transparency of the Fund for Professional Rehabilitation and Employment of Persons with Disabilities.[218] In 2019, Montenegro reported that it had improved support for projects and programs of NGOs of persons with disabilities.[219]

Sierra Leone:

  • Improve basic healthcare and economic opportunities for survivors.

No updates were available. Sierra Leone remains one of the world’s poorest countries, and a lack of resources and support result in the underrepresentation of persons with disabilities in society.[220] The Disability Act of 2011 has been criticized for not being implemented adequately. A National Commission for Persons with Disability was established in 2012 to ensure that the Disability Act was put into practice. Inadequate coordination between the relevant disability sector actors in Sierra Leone added to existing challenges.[221]

Somalia:

  • Establish a coordination mechanism. Integrate victim assistance within disability frameworks.
  • Support needs assessment surveys to target assistance that has limited resources.

Victim assistance workshops, including government actors and representatives of persons with disabilities, were held in Somalia in 2019.[222] Applying the findings of a UN Mine Action Service (UNMAS)-funded victim assistance situational analysis in 2018, Somalia initiated an inclusive process for the development of a nationwide Victim Assistance and Disability Action Plan, which was subsequently launched in Oslo in November 2019.[223] Since the late 1990s, the Norwegian Red Cross (NRC), with ICRC support, helped physical rehabilitation centers run by the Somali Red Crescent Society (SRCS) in Galkayo, Hargeisa and Mogadishu.[224] Somalia enacted a law in December 2018 establishing a National Disability Agency with the mandate to develop livelihood training centers for persons with disabilities. Somalia fast-tracked ratification of the CRPD, on 6 August 2019, due to “intense lobbying by DPOs and responsiveness on the part of the government”.[225]



[1] Casualties mean people killed and injured, including those for whom the survival outcome is not known.

[2] Cluster munition remnants include abandoned cluster munitions, unexploded submunitions, and unexploded bomblets, as well as failed cluster munitions. Unexploded submunitions are “explosive submunitions” that have been dispersed or released from a cluster munition but failed to explode as intended. Unexploded bomblets are similar to unexploded submunitions but refer to “explosive bomblets,” which have been dispersed or released from an affixed aircraft dispenser and failed to explode as intended. Abandoned cluster munitions are unused explosive submunitions or whole cluster munitions that have been left behind or dumped and are no longer under the control of the party that left them behind or dumped them. See, Convention on Cluster Munitions, Art. 2 (5), (6), (7), and (15).

[3] Prior to the 2011 conflict and extensive cluster munition use, Syria was already counted as a state with cluster munition casualties due to the remnants from past use of cluster munitions by Israel on its territory. At least five such casualties had been recorded as of 2007. See HI, Circle of Impact: The Fatal Footprint of Cluster Munitions on People and Communities (Brussels: HI, May 2007), p. 132, bit.ly/MonitorHICircleofImpact2007.

[4] There are likely more states with cluster munition casualties. It is possible that cluster munition casualties have occurred but gone unrecorded in other countries where cluster munitions were used, abandoned, or stored in the past—such as States Parties Mauritania and Zambia and non-signatories Azerbaijan, Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Zimbabwe. Better identification and disaggregation of cluster munition casualties are needed in most cluster munition-affected states and areas. States Parties Mauritania and Zambia have both reported that survey is required to identify if they have cluster munition victims on their territories. There is also a firsthand historical account of civilian casualties from an incident with a submunition at a weapons testing range in Zimbabwe, a non-signatory state (in the period when the country was known as Rhodesia).

[5] See, Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 5 and Article 7(k). In contrast, the text relevant to victim assistance in the Mine Ban Treaty (1997) refers specifically to States Parties in a position to provide assistance, as does the text of Article 8.2 of the Convention on Conventional Weapons (CCW) Protocol V on Explosive Remnants of War (2003). The Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons Article 6.1 (not yet entered into force),contains only the obligation of assistance, without the implementation provisions found in the Convention on Cluster Munitions.

[6] Letter No. 76/20 from the Permanent Mission of the Republic of Croatia to the United Nations (UN) Office in Geneva, to the Implementation Support Unit of the Convention on Cluster Munitions, 31 July 2020, bit.ly/CroatiaLetter7620.

[7] Letter from the Permanent Mission of Montenegro to the UN Office and other international organizations in Geneva, 29 July 2020.

[8] Mauritania Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form F.

[9] See, Convention on Cluster Munitions, Country Profiles, www.clusterconvention.org/country-profiles/.

[10] The Republic of the Congo was also contaminated by cluster munition remnants. It is believed this was addressed through survey and clearance in 2012, although the country has not made a formal declaration of clearance completion.

[11] Somalia Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2018), Form F, p. 13.

[12] Colombia Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2017), Form F.

[13] Email from Camilo Serna, Sub-Director, Colombian Campaign to Ban Landmines, 30 July 2020.

[14] Organization of American States Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, “Masacre de Santo Domingo, Colombia, Caso 12.416” (“Massacre of Santo Domingo, Colombia, Case 12.416”), 22 April 2011.

[15] Inter-American Human Rights Court, “Caso Masacre de Santo Domingo vs. Colombia” (“Case of the Santo Domingo Massacre vs. Colombia”), Official Summary of the Inter-American Human Rights Court, Judgment of 30 November, 2012, www.corteidh.or.cr/docs/casos/articulos/seriec_259_esp.pdf. The Colombian government reportedly paid a total of 5,700 million pesos to victims of the attack. See also, “Condenan a 30 años a dos oficiales por bombardeo a Santo Domingo” (“Two officers sentenced to 30 years for bombing Santo Domingo”), El Tiempo, 23 November 2017, bit.ly/ElTiempoBombingSantoDomingo.

[16] Palau Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2010), Form F.

[17] Norwegian People’s Aid (NPA), “Where We Work: Palau” undated, accessed on 20 July 2020, bit.ly/NPA-Palau.

[18] Argentina also claims sovereignty over the Falkland Islands/Islas Malvinas. The UK claims sovereignty over the Islands and exercises control over them. Mine Action Review includes the UK as a State Party with Article 4 clearance obligations. See Mine Action Review, “Clearing Cluster Munition Remnants 2019,” pp. 102–108.

[19] The SS Richard Montgomery, carrying a cargo of munitions, was stranded and wrecked off the Thames Estuary, near Sheerness, in August 1944 and remains submerged there. The former UK Defence Evaluation and Research Agency has listed best estimates of the munitions which remain aboard the ship, including 2,297 cases of fragmentation bomb clusters with AN M1A1 and/or AN M4A1 “cluster adapter” submunitions. Surveys from November 2017 and April 2018 indicated that the wreck is generally stable but is showing accelerated levels of deterioration. See, “Masts to be cut from Thames Estuary wreck packed with explosives,” BBC, 4 June 2020, www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-kent-52918221; Maritime and Coastguard Agency, “Report On The Wreck Of The SS Richard Montgomery,” November 2000, p. 20; and “Fears grow that WW2 wreck could explode on Kent coast,” The Guardian, 17 August 2019, bit.ly/TheGuardianWartimeWreckExplosiveMunitions.

[20] Response to Monitor questions from Chomyaeng Phengthogsawat, Director General, NRA, 22June 2020; and UXO Operational Dashboard, undated, www.nra.gov.la.

[21] Email from Olivier Bauduin, Office of Political-Military Affairs, US Department of State, 13 July 2020.

[22] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Haitham F. Lafta, Head of Operations and QA/QC, RMAC South, 14 April 2020.

[23] Mine Action Review, “Clearing Cluster Munition Remnants 2019”, report for Iraq, p. 53, citing emails from Khatab Omer Ahmed, Planning Manager, Directorate General of Technical Affairs, Iraqi Kurdistan Mine Action Agency (IKMAA), 8 May 2018; and from Steven Warner, Desk Officer, Mines Advisory Group (MAG), 10 April 2018.

[24] Chile Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 Extension Request, 29 June 2020, pp. 4–5.

[25] Chile reports that “considering the usual procedures of the Chilean Armed Forces, which include the search and clearance of cluster munition remnants and UXOs by the EOD teams every time a military facility is used, it is highly possible that there are no more cluster munition remnants to be detonated in such polygons” (unofficial translation by ICBL-CMC), Chile Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form F, p. 5.

[26] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Brahim Djibrim Brahim, Coordinator, HCND, 15 April 2020.

[27] Mauritania Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form F.

[28] Germany Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form F, pp. 15–18.

[29] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Fadi Wazen, Operations Section Head, LMAC, 9 April 2020; and Lebanon Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form F, p. 14.

[30] Lebanon Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form F, p. 14.

[31] Lebanon Convention on Cluster munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2018), Form F, p. 15.

[32] Lebanon Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form F, p. 16.

[33] Lebanon Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2018), Form F, p. 15.

[34] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Fazel Rahman, Operations Manager, DMAC, 16 April 2020. See also, Afghanistan Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), p. 17. The report states that a commercial company has reported some cluster munition contamination in remote parts of the Panjshir region.

[35] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Ljiljana Ilic, BHMAC, 7 August 2020; and BiH Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form F, p. 14.

[36] Statement of BiH, Convention on Cluster Munitions Ninth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 2–4 September 2019.

[37] BiH Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form F, p. 14.

[38] Being identical to and undisguisable from all other unexploded submunition contamination in the administrative areas where land has been reduced. Such contamination clearly constitutes cluster munition remnants according to the definitions of Article 2 of the Convention on Cluster Munitions. In Article 2. 6 of the convention, “Abandoned cluster munitions” means cluster munitions or explosive submunitions that have not been used and that have been left behind or dumped, and that are no longer under the control of the party that left them behind or dumped them. They may or may not have been prepared for use. According to Article 27 of the convention, “Cluster munition remnants” means failed cluster munitions, abandoned cluster munitions, unexploded submunitions and unexploded bomblets.

[39] Email from Robert Iga Afedra, Capacity Development Advisor, National Intersectoral Demining and Humanitarian Assistance Commission (Comissâo Nacional Intersectorial de Desminagem e Assistência Humanitária, CNIDAH), 12 August 2020.

[40] NPA, “DR Congo: Mine Action and Disarmament,” undated, bit.ly/NPA-DRCongo; and emails from Jean-Denis Larsen, NPA, 19 and 23 May 2017.

[41] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Sudi Alimasi Kimputu, National Coordinator, CCLAM, 18 August 2020.

[42] Vietnam National Mine Action Center (VNMAC), “Report on Explosive Remnants of War Contamination in Vietnam Based on the ‘Vietnam Explosive Remnants of War Contamination Survey and Mapping – Phase 1 Project’,” 2018, p. 38.

[43] Quang Tri Mine Action Center (QTMAC) dashboard, undated, www.qtmac.vn/en-us.

[44] Email from Ros Sophal, Database Unit Manager, CMAA, 23 July 2020.

[45] South East Asia Air Sortie Database, cited in D. McCracken, “National Explosive Remnants of War Study, Cambodia,” NPA in collaboration with CMAA, March 2006, p. 15; Human Rights Watch (HRW), “Cluster Munitions in the Asia-Pacific Region,” April 2008; and Handicap International (HI), Fatal Footprint: The Global Human Impact of Cluster Munitions (Brussels: HI, November 2006), p. 11.

[46] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Thomas Calvot, HI, 20 May 2020; and UNMAS, “Programmes: Libya”, undated, www.unmas.org/en/programmes/libya.

[47] Mine Action Review, “Clearing Cluster Munition Remnants 2019,” report for Libya, p. 138. The report cites an interview with Col. Turjoman, Director, Libyan Mine Action Centre (LibMAC), Geneva, 7 February 2019.

[48] UNMAS, “Programmes: Syria”, undated, www.unmas.org/en/programmes/syria. This represents an increase from the 2019 Humanitarian Needs Overview report which reported 10.2 million people living in contaminated areas. UNOCHA, “Humanitarian Needs Overview 2019: Syrian Arab Republic,” March 2019.

[50] National Security and Defense Council and State Emergency Services of Ukraine (SESU), “Humanitarian demining in Ukraine: current issues and challenges,” Mine Ban Treaty Fourteenth Meeting of States Parties, side-event, Geneva, 2 December 2015.

[51] UNDP, “Grant Progress Report for 1 October–31 December 2015,” 25 January 2016.

[52] Email from Stephen Bryant, Chief Technical MA Advisor, UNDP, 11 August 2020.

[53] Email from Ahmet Sollova, Director of KMAC, 10 July 2020.

[54] Email from Alina Aslanian, HALO Trust Program Officer, 30 July 2020.

[55] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Sladjana Košutić, Senior Advisor for Planning, International Cooperation and European Integration, Serbian Mine Action Centre, March 2020.

[56] South Sudan Convention on Cluster Munitions voluntary Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019) p. 3.

[57] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Muhabbat Ibrohimzoda, Director, Tajikistan National Mine Action Centre, 25 April 2020.

[58] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Bidi Salec, Information Management Officer, Sahrawi Mine Action Coordination Office (SMACO), 4 June 2020.

[59] Calculated by the Monitor based on known data and various countries estimates recorded in Humanity & Inclusion (formerly Handicap International, HI) data. HI, Circle of Impact: The Fatal Footprint of Cluster Munitions on People and Communities (Brussels: HI, May 2007), bit.ly/MonitorHICircleofImpact2007.

[60] Ibid., p. 104; and UNDP, “Cluster Munitions Maim and Kill Iraqis–Every Day,” 10 November 2010, bit.ly/UNDPClusterMunitionsIraq.

[61] Global cluster munition casualty data used by the Monitor includes the global casualty data collected by HI in 2006 and 2007. In 2007, HI reported an all-time total of 13,306 cluster munition casualties. See, HI, Circle of Impact: The Fatal Footprint of Cluster Munitions on People and Communities (Brussels: HI, May 2007), bit.ly/MonitorHICircleofImpact2007.

[62] The Monitor systematically collects data from a wide array of sources, including national reports, mine action centers, mine clearance operators, and victim assistance service providers, as well as national and international media reporting.

[63] This data includes casualties from both attacks and cluster munition remnants.

[64] Casualty data for 2017 in Lao PDR received by email from Bountao Chanthavongsa, UXO Victim Assistance Officer, NRA, 21 February 2018; and, Legacies of War, “Four–Decade–Old Bomb Mistaken for Toy, Kills and Injures 13 in Laos,” 23 March 2017, bit.ly/LegaciesOfWar23Mar2017.

[65] No precise number or estimate of casualties is known for Guinea-Bissau, Mozambique, or Somalia. In addition, there are known to be countries, including States Parties to the Convention on Cluster Munitions, with cluster munition victims, including persons who were injured on the territory of other states.

[66] In Cluster Munition Monitor 2019, Liberia has been added as a country with cluster munition casualties due to a casualty reported in newly identified incidents that occurred during cluster munition attacks in the 1990s.

[67] Afghanistan Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (calendar year 2019).

[68] Lao PDR Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (calendar year 2015), Form H; Lao PDR Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (calendar year 2014), Form H; interview with Bountao Chanthavongsa, NRA, Vientiane, 11 June 2015; and statement of Lao PDR, Convention on Cluster Munitions Sixth Meting of States Parties, Geneva, 6 September 2016.

[69] NRA, “Operations Dashboard,” undated, www.nra.gov.la/report.php.

[70] Croatia, CCW Amended Protocol II Article 13 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form B.

[71] The survey covered people affected in the period from July 2006 to the end of 2010. Email from Col. Rolly Fares, Head of Information Management and Victim Assistance Section, LMAC, 31 May 2011.

[72] LMAC, “National Victim Needs Assessment Survey,’’ 1 June 2013, bit.ly/LMACVictimNeedsSurvey.

[73] Chad, Mine Ban Treaty Fourth Article 5 deadline Extension Request, 13 August 2019, p. 29.

[74] Response to Monitor questionnaire from Fazel Rahman, Operations Manager, Directorate of Mine Action Coordination (DMAC), Afghanistan, 16 April 2020.

[75] Observation and Comments of the Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 Analysis Group on the Extension Request submitted by Chile in accordance with Article 4.5 of the convention, 2020, p. 1.

[76] Lao PDR Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 Extension Request, pp. 20–21 and Annex 10.

[77] Afghanistan, Chad, Chile, Iraq, Lao PDR, Lebanon, and Somalia.

[78] BiH Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), p. 23.

[79] Germany Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 Extension Request, Answers to the Analysis Group, 8 February 2019, p. 5.

[80] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Brahim Djibrim Brahim, Coordinator, HCND, 15 April 2020; and by Hussein Ibrahim Ahmed, UNMAS, 9 May 2020.

[81] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Habbouba Aoun, Landmines Resource Centre, University of Balamand, 9 June 2020.

[82] Lebanon Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form G, p. 18.

[83] Afghanistan Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form G, pp. 19–20.

[84] Afghanistan Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form J.

[85] Hal Judge, “Report on Integrated Approaches to EORE in ASEAN Members States,” (Phnom Penh, ARMAC, April 2020), bit.ly/ARMACIntegratedApproachestoEORE.

[86] ARMAC refers to an “integrated approach” as linking risk education within other mine action activities and relief and development efforts. See Lydia Davies, “An Introduction to Integrated Approaches to Mine Risk Education”, in ARMAC “Exploring Mine/ERW Risk Education in ASEAN,” February 2020, pp. 6–7, bit.ly/ARMACMagazineFeb2020.

[87] Personal communication with Dwi Prameswari, ARMAC, Skype call, May 2020.

[88] ARMAC, “Projects and Programmes: Victim Assistance,” undated, bit.ly/ARMACProjectsProgrammesVA.

[89] ITF Enhancing Human Security is a humanitarian, non-profit organization established by the Government of Slovenia in March 1998, with the initial purpose to help BiH in the implementation of the peace agreement and post-conflict rehabilitation. See: www.itf.si/about-us/itf-in-a-nutshell.

[90] ITF Enhancing Human Security, “Regional Activities: SEEMACC,” undated, www.itf.si/seemacc.

[91] Lebanon Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form G, pp. 18–20.

[92] Lao PDR CCW Protocol V Article 10 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form A.

[93] Lao PDR Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form F, p. 7; and CCW Protocol V Report (for calendar year 2019), Form A, p. 2. The Mine Action Review records higher figures for clearance of submunitions in 2018, at 90,798. See Mine Action Review, “Clearing Cluster Munition Remnants 2019,” 1 August 2019, p. 62.

[94] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Civil Protection Directorate, 28 April 2020; and Letter No. 76/20 from the Permanent Mission of the Republic of Croatia to the UN Office in Geneva, to the Implementation Support Unit of the Convention on Cluster Munitions, 31 July 2020, bit.ly/CroatiaLetter7620.

[95] Montenegro Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form F, p. 15.

[96] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Haitham F. Lafta, Head of Operations and QA/QC, RMAC South, 14 April 2020. Cluster munition remnant clearance in Iraq was conducted by EOD teams affiliated with the Ministry of Defense Military Engineering, and in coordination with RMAC and other clearance organizations.

[97] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Brahim Djibrim Brahim, Coordinator, HCND, 15 April 2020.

[98] Email from Ahmad Fahim, Data/GIS Associate, DMAC, 27 August 2020. This figure for clearance is different from the 3.6km² reported in Afghanistan’s Article 7 Report for 2019, but it was confirmed as the correct figure by DMAC.

[99] Ibid.; and Afghanistan Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form F, p. 15.

[100] Lebanon Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019) Form F, p. 15.

[101] Germany Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 Extension Request, 2019, p. 3 and p. 40.

[102] Germany Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019) Form F, p. 17.

[103] BiH Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form F, p. 15.

[104] BiH Ministry of Civil Affairs, BiH Demining Commission, BHMAC, “Izvještaj o Protiuminskom Djelovanju za 2018 Godinu” (“Report on Mine Action in Bosnia and Herzegovina for 2018”), 2019.

[105] Statement of BiH, Convention on Cluster Munitions Ninth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 2–4 September 2019.

[106] Chile Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 Extension Request, January 2020, p. 8.

[107] Chile Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form F, p. 6.

[108] Somalia Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form F, p. 8.

[109] For BiH clearance data: BiH Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form F. BiH's extension request submitted in September 2020 reports that 146 submunitions were cleared and destroyed, and 0.44km2 of land cleared in 2019. BiH Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 Extension Request, 23 September 2020, p. 6. BiH Ministry of Civil Affairs, BiH Demining Commission, BHMAC, 2019 “Izvještaj o Protiuminskom Djelovanju za 2018 Godinu” (“Report on Mine Action in Bosnia and Herzegovina for 2018”), p. 17. Mine Action Review reports that BiH cleared 0.44km² in 2018. See Mine Action Review, “Clearing Cluster Munition Remnants 2019,” p. 18. For Iraq clearance data: figures were provided by email by Haitham F. Lafta, Head of Operations and QA/QC, RMAC South, 14 April 2020 and 13 August 2020. In 2018, 5.5km² of land was cleared and 3,629 submunitions were cleared and destroyed by RMAC South including BLU 63, BLU 61, BLU 97 and M24, while 1.66km² of land was cleared and 114 submunitions were destroyed by RMAC North including BLU 63 and BLU 97. For Germany clearance data: Germany has provided cumulative figures for 2017–2019. The annual figures are based on calculations by the Monitor, based on these cumulative figures. The total cumulative figure of clearance completed in 2017–2019 is 2.8km² and 3,864 items of cluster munition remnants destroyed. See also, Germany Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form F.

[110] The figures reflect the data on clearance and ordnance destroyed that was reported by States Parties or is publicly available.

[111] For Afghanistan clearance data: email from Ahmad Fahim, Data/GIS Associate, DMAC, 27 August 2020. The figures provided to the Monitor by DMAC for the 10-year period differ to the reporting of clearance in Afghanistan’s Article 7 reports. Clearance of cluster munitions was conducted in Afghanistan from 2017–2019. According to the Article 7 reports for this period, a total of 9.7km² was reported cleared and 731 submunitions were destroyed. For BiH clearance data: response to Monitor questionnaire by Ljiljana Ilic, BHMAC, 7 August 2020. For Chad clearance data: response to Monitor questionnaire by Brahim Djibrim Brahim, Coordinator, HCND, 15 April 2020. In the questionnaire response, the 10-year figure of 3.6 km² for clearance is given, but no other evidence has been found to support this. For Croatia clearance data: response to Monitor questionnaire by Civil Protection Directorate, 28 April 2020; and Letter No. 76/20 of the Permanent Mission of the Republic of Croatia to the UN Office in Geneva, to the Implementation Support Unit of the Convention on Cluster Munitions, 31 July 2020, bit.ly/CroatiaLetter7620. Croatia reported clearance of 5.28km² from 2010-2019 and 0.03km² cleared in 2020. For Iraq clearance data: response to Monitor questionnaire by Haitham F. Lafta, Head of Operations and QA/QC, RMAC South, 14 April 2020. For Germany clearance data: Germany Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form F, p. 17. Figures for the period 2017 (when Germany commenced clearance) to 2019. For Lao PDR clearance data: Lao PDR NRA Dashboard, undated, www.nra.gov.la/report.php. For Lebanon clearance data: Response to Monitor questionnaire by LTC Fadi Wazen, Operations Section Head, LMAC, 9 April 2020. For Mauritania clearance data: Mauritania Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019) Form F, p. 14. For Montenegro clearance data: Montenegro Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 reports (for calendar years 2011–2019); and ICBL-CMC, “Country Profile: Montenegro: Mine Action,” 2010–2019.

[112] Chad Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), pp. 3–4.

[113] Germany Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 Extension Request, 15 January 2019.

[114] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Fazel Rahmen, Project Manager Operations, DMAC, 16 April 2020. However, in Afghanistan’s Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Afghanistan reports that it hopes to release all cluster munition contaminated sites by October 2021. Afghanistan Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), p. 18.

[115] See, for example, reports that armed opposition groups mined the highway linking Kabul and Ghazni during fighting in August 2018. “Intense fighting as Taliban presses to take Afghan city,” Reuters, 12 August 2018.

[116] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Haitham F. Lafta, Head of Operations and QA/QC, RMAC South, 14 April 2020.

[117] Lao PDR Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 Extension Request, 2019, Part B, p. 7.

[118] Lao PDR, Convention on Cluster Munition Article 4 Extension Request, Executive Summary, 26 February 2019, www.clusterconvention.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/Part-A-Executive-Summary.pdf.

[119] Statement of Lao PDR on National Implementation Efforts, Convention on Cluster Munitions Seventh Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 4–5 September 2017; and Lao PDR Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 Extension Request, 2019, Part B, p. 4.

[120] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Ljiljana Ilic, BHMAC, 7 August 2020.

[121] Chile Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 Extension Request, 24 January 2020. p. 5.

[122] Antipersonnel Mine Ban Convention, “Chile Ends Mine Clearance Operations: The Americas a step closer to becoming a mine-free region,” 3 March 2020, bit.ly/APMBCChileEndsMineClearanceOperations.

[123] Chile Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 sioExtension Request, January 2020, p. 5.

[124] Response of Chile to the Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 Analysis Group, 8 May 2020.

[125] Chile Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 Extension Request, revised, 29 June 2020, p. 19; and Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form I, p. 12.

[126] Lebanon Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form F, p. 16.

[127] Lebanon Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 Extension Request, p. 5.

[128] Convention on Cluster Munitions, Dubrovnik Action Plan, p. 11, bit.ly/CCMDubrovnikActionPlan.

[129] Afghanistan Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), pp. 19–20.

[130] BIH Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form G, p. 18.

[131] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Haitham F. Lafta, Head of Operations and QA/QC, RMAC South, 13 August 2020.

[132] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Peter Smethers, Fondation Suisse de Déminage (FSD), 22 April 2020; Madeline Achurch, HALO Trust, 30 April 2020; Goran Knezevic, HI, 7 April 2020; Celine Cheng UNMAS, 11 May 2020; and Alexandra Letcher, Community Liaison Manager, Mines Advisory Group (MAG), 21 May 2020.

[133] Chile Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019) Form F, p. 4; and Germany Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2014), Form F.

[134] Chile Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form G, p. 10.

[135] Germany Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form G, p. 20.

[136] Croatia Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form G, p. 22.

[137] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Fazel Rahmen, Project Manager Operations, DMAC, 16 April 2020.

[138] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Zorica Lucic, ICRC, 29 April 2020; Goran Knezevic, HI, 7 April 2020; and Madeline Achurch, Program Officer, HALO Trust, 30 April 2020.

[139] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Tamsin Haigh, Project Officer, HALO Trust, 30 April 2020.

[140] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Zorica Lucic, ICRC, 29 April 2020.

[141] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Fadi Hamze, Explosive Ordnance Risk Education (EORE) Project Manager, 22 May 2020.

[142] Croatia Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form G, p. 22.

[143] Hal Judge, “Report on Integrated Approaches to EORE in ASEAN Member States,” (Phnom Penh, ARMAC, April 2020), bit.ly/ARMACIntegratedApproachestoEORE; response to Monitor questionnaire by Tamsin Haigh, HALO Trust, 30 April 2020; and Julien Kempeneers, HI, 20 May 2020.

[144] Lebanon Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form G, p. 18.

[145] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Julien Kempeneers, HI, 20 May 2020.

[146] Afghanistan Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), pp. 19–20.

[147] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Julien Kempeneers, HI, 20 May 2020.

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

[149] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Hussein Ihrahim Ahmed, UNMAS Somalia, 9 May 2020.

[150] Mauritania Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), p. 16.

[151] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Haitham F. Lafta, Head of Operations and QA/QC, RMAC South, 13 August 2020.

[152] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Julien Kempeneers, HI, 20 May 2020. “Swidden” agriculture refers to the practice of rotational agriculture where secondary forest area is cleared (normally by burning) and farmed for a number of years before being left fallow to regenerate. The clearance and burning of land are seen as a high-risk activity on land that may contain cluster munition remnants.

[153] Hal Judge, “Report on Integrated Approaches to EORE in ASEAN Members States,” (Phnom Penh: ARMAC, April 2020), bit.ly/ARMACIntegratedApproachestoEORE.

[154] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Fadi Hamze, EORE Programme Manager, HI, 22 May 2020.

[155] The HI Comprehensive Approach to Humanitarian Mine Action encompasses integrated programs with advocacy, clearance, risk education and victim assistance. Such programs are implemented by HI in States Parties Afghanistan, Iraq, Lao PDR, and Lebanon.

[156] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Zareen Khan Mayar, EORE Technical Advisor, HI, 22 May 2020.

[157] NRA, “Minutes of the MRE TWG, Quarter 3, 6 September 2019”, 23 September 2019.

[158] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Habbouba Aoun, Landmines Resource Centre, University of Balamand, 9 June 2020.

[159] “Laos, Turkey partner on UXO RE Disaster Preparedness,” Vientiane Times, 20 July 2020, bit.ly/VientianeTimes20July2020.

[160] A key message in risk education is for civilians to report any ordnance they come across during their daily activities. When reported to clearance operators, EOD teams are often able to quickly clear and dispose of reported items. Community reporting may also identify areas that require further survey to establish the extent of contamination. Risk education teams working with clearance and EOD teams enables these processes to be conducted efficiently.

[161] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Habbouba Aoun, Landmines Resource Centre, University of Balamand, 9 June 2020.

[162] Lebanon Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019) Form G, p. 18.

[163] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Zareen Khan Mavar, EORE Teaching Assistant, HI, May 2020; Alexandra Letcher, Community Liaison Manager, MAG, May 2020; and Goran Knezevic, Risk Education Technical Coordinator, HI Iraq, 22 May 2020.

[164] Afghanistan Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), pp. 19–20.

[165] Ibid.

[166] Lebanon Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), pp. 18–20.

[167] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Julien Kempeneers, AVR/HMA Coordinator, HI, 20 May 2020.

[168] Lao PDR Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form G, p. 12.

[169] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Habbouba Aoun, Landmines Resource Centre, University of Balamand, 9 June 2020.

[170] Mauritania Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), p. 16.

[171] Lao PDR Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form G, p. 13.

[172] BiH Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form G.

[173] Lebanon Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form G, pp. 18–20.

[174] Croatia Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form G, p. 22.

[175] Chile Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019) Form F, p. 4; and Germany Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019) Form G, p. 20.

[176] These activities, to be implemented in accordance with applicable international humanitarian and human rights law, also include medical care, rehabilitation, and psychological support, as well as provision for social and economic inclusion.

[177] Increasingly this obligation is understood to include measures that address disability-sensitivity, diversity, and intersectionality.

[178] Colombia Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), form H.

[179] “César Romero Pradilla vs. Johan Jiménez Valencia,” Supreme Court of the Republic of Colombia, 23 November 2017, bit.ly/CorteSupremaColombia2017.

[180] All casualties occurred at the time of the attack and no unexploded submunition casualties have been reported in Colombia. As identified in Case No. 12.416 (Santo Domingo Massacre vs. the Republic of Colombia) heard before the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, 17 civilians were killed and 27 were injured during a cluster munition attack in Santo Domingo, Colombia, on 13 December 1998. Inter-American Court of Human Rights, “Case: Massacre of Santo Domingo vs. Colombia Sentence of 30 November 2012,” undated, www.corteidh.or.cr/docs/casos/articulos/seriec_259_ing.pdf. See also See, ICRC, “Colombia, Case of the Santo Domingo Massacre,” www.casebook.icrc.org/case-study/colombia-case-santo-domingo-massacre.

[181] Carlos Osorio, “Colombia destruye sus últimas bombas de tipo racimo” (“Colombia destroys its last cluster bombs”), Agence France-Presse, 7 May 2009.

[182] Colombia Ministry of National Defense presentation on cluster munitions, Bogotá, December 2010.

[183] Mozambique Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form H.

[184] See, for example, Mozambique Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2010), Form H; and MozambiqueConvention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2014), Form H.

[185] Peter J. H. Petter-Bowyer, Winds of destruction: the autobiography of a Rhodesian combat pilot. (Victoria: Trafford Publishing, 2003); and “The Struggle For Land in Zimbabwe (1890–2010)…alpha bombs as Rhodies attack Chimoio,” The Patriot, 1 June 2017, bit.ly/ThePatriot1Jun2017.

[186] “Draft Oslo Progress Report,” Convention on Cluster Munitions, undated, pp. 7 and 9, bit.ly/CCMOsloProgressReport; and “Lusaka Progress Report,” Convention on Cluster Munitions, 13 September 2013, p. 9, bit.ly/CCMLusakaProgressReport.

[187] Statement of Cambodia, Convention on Cluster Munitions Third Meeting of States Parties, Oslo, 12 September 2012, bit.ly/MonitorCMM15VAfn26a; and statement of Vietnam, Convention on Cluster Munitions Second Meeting of States Parties, Beirut, 14 September 2011, bit.ly/MonitorCMM15VAfn26b. Vietnam stated that it is “among the countries most affected by cluster munitions and other explosive remnants of war.” It also stated, “Viet Nam has signed the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and adopted a Law on Persons with Disabilities, which provides an important legal framework for the care for and assistance to victims of ERW.” Vietnam identified the Ministry of Labour, War Invalids and Social Affairs as the focal point for victim assistance.

[188] Convention on Cluster Munitions, Article 5.1. Applicable international human rights law and humanitarian law includes the CRPD, the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), the Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW), the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR), and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), CCW Protocol V on Explosive Remnants of War, and the Geneva Conventions.

[189] Until 2008, as Serbia and Montenegro.

[190] LMAC “Mine Victim Assistance (MVA) Department,” bit.ly/LMAC-MVADepartment.

[191] Geneva International Centre for Humanitarian Demining (GICHD)/UNDP, “Leaving no one behind: Mine action and the Sustainable Development Goals,” (Geneva: GICHD/UNDP, July 2017), bit.ly/GICHDUNDPLeavingNoOneBehind.

[192] Statement by Catalina Devandas Aguilar, Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, Mine Ban Treaty Fourteenth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 30 November 2015.

[193] Including States Parties Albania (local plans), Guinea-Bissau, Mozambique, signatory Uganda, and non-signatories Ethiopia, and Tajikistan. See ICBL-CMC, “Equal Basis 2015: Inclusion and Rights in 33 Countries,” 2 December 2015, bit.ly/MonitorEqualBasis2015; and ICBL-CMC, “Equal Basis 2014: Access and Rights in 33 Countries,” 3 December 2014, bit.ly/MonitorEqualBasis2014.

[194] UNDP-Lao PDR, “Moving-Towards-Achieving-SDG-18,” undated, bit.ly/UNDPLaosAchievingSDG18. See also, statement of Lao PDR on National Implementation Efforts, Convention on Cluster Munitions Seventh Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 4–5 September 2017; and Lao PDR Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 Extension Request, 2019, Part B, p. 4.

[195] Lao PDR MDG 9, “Reducing UXO Impact,” 20 October 2010, bit.ly/MDGsCompactLaos.

[196] Government of Lao PDR, “The Safe Path Forward II: National Strategic Plan for the UXO Sector in the Lao People’s Democratic Republic 2011–2020,’’ 22 June 2012.

[197] NRA for the UXO/Mine Action Sector in Lao PDR, “HRTM 2015: UXO Sector Working Group Progress Report,” 15 November 2015.

[198] ICBL, Cluster Munition Monitor 2010, Casualties and Victim Assistance, (Ottawa: Mines Action Canada, October 2010), bit.ly/CMM2010CasualtiesandVA.

[199] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Fazel Rahmen, Project Manager Operations, DMAC, 16 April 2020.

[200] Presentation by Irena Mitro, Head of Policies and Strategies for Social Protection and Integrated Services, Ministry of Health and Social Protection of Albania, at Fostering Partnerships, Global Conference on Assistance to Victims of Anti-Personnel Mines and Other Explosive Remnants of War, and Disability Rights, Amman, 12 September 2019.

[201] BiH Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), form H; World Vision, “EU and World Vision support rehabilitation and social inclusion of landmine survivors in Bosnia and Herzegovina,” 24 July 2019, bit.ly/WorldVisionBiH24July2019; EU, “EU improves lives of landmine victims in BIH,” 3 November 2017, bit.ly/EUimproveslivesminevictimsBiH; World Vision Austria, “Jahresbericht 2017” (“Annual Report 2017”), undated, p. 10; BiH Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2017), Form J; and World Vision, “Mine Survivors Improve Entrepreneurial Skills,” 4 April 2018, bit.ly/WorldVisionBiH4April2018.

[202] Emails from Maja Dundov Gali, Croatia Mine Action Center (CROMAC), 7 April 2015; and Marija Breber, MineAid, 10 April 2015.

[203] Croatia CCW Amended Protocol II Article 13 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form B.

[204] Croatia Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form H.

[205] “Society: the Kabalaye orthopedic and rehabilitation center is on the brink,” Tchadinfos.com, 26 August 2018, bit.ly/TchadInfos26Aug2018.

[206] Email from Marie-Cécile Tournier, Chad Country Director, HI, 28 April 2020.

[207] Guinea-Bissau Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), form H.

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

[209] Iraqi Alliance of Disability Organizations (IADO), “The Parallel Report for Government’s Report on the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disability (CRPD),” (Baghdad: IADO, 2018), pp. 67–68. The report was written by Hashim Al-Azzawi, General Supervisor, Falah Al-Yasiri, Legal Expert and Muwafaq Al-Khafaji, International Expert, in collaboration with HI.

[210] OHCHR, “Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities discusses the impact of the armed conflict on persons with disabilities in Iraq,” 11 September 2019, bit.ly/OHCHR-CRPD11Sep2019.

[211] COPE, “Reaching Remote Communities,” undated, bit.ly/COPELaosCommunityOutreach.

[212] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Benoit Couturier, HI Lao PDR, 15 May 2020.

[213] WEL, “TEAM Laos Project Overview,” undated; TEAM, “Project Updates,” undated; and interview with WEL VAST, in Vientiane, 12 June 2015.

[214] Lebanon Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form H.

[215] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Lt. Fadi Wazen, Operations Section Head, LMAC, 9 April 2020.

[216] DCA, “Where We Work And What We Do: Lebanon,” October 2019, bit.ly/DCALebanon.

[217] Lebanon Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form H.

[218] Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, “Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities considers the initial report of Montenegro,”18 August 2017, bit.ly/CRPDMontenegroAug2017.

[219] Government of Montenegro, Ministry for Human and Minority Rights, “The Government of Montenegro is working intensively to reduce discrimination against persons with disabilities,” 29 March 2019, bit.ly/Montenegro29Mar2019.

[220] HI, ‘‘Sierra Leone’’, undated, www.hi-us.org/sierra_leone.

[221] Westminster Foundation for Democracy, “Advancing disability rights in Sierra Leone,” 6 January 2020, bit.ly/WFDdisabilityrightsSierraLeone.

[222] UNSOM, “UNSOM Victim Assistance Workshop, 19 November 2019,” bit.ly/UNSOM-VAWorkshop2019; and UNMAS, ‘‘Somalia plans to develop a strategy to assist survivors of mine explosions,’’ 30 June 2019, bit.ly/UNMAS-Somalia30Jun2019.

[223] Statement of Somalia, Mine Ban Treaty Fourth Review Conference, Oslo, 25–29 November 2019; and UNMAS, “Victim Assistance Assessment Report in Somalia,” 12 December 2018, bit.ly/UNMAS-VASomaliaDec2018.

[224] ICRC MoveAbility, “Disability Rehabilitation Inclusion, Somalia,” undated, p. 1, bit.ly/MoveAbilitySomalia.

[225] Patrick Onyango, “One Year On: Somalia’s Commitments to Persons with Disabilities Signify a Return to the International Human Rights System,” Disability Rights Fund, October 2019, bit.ly/DisabilityRightFundSomalia2019.