Uzbekistan

Mine Action

Last updated: 18 December 2019

20-Year Summary

The Republic of Uzbekistan’s forces have laid mines along its borders at various times, including on its borders with Afghanistan in 1998, with Kyrgyzstan in 1999, and with Tajikistan in 2000. In 2010, Secretary-General of the United Nations (UN) Ban Ki-moon criticized as “unacceptable” Uzbekistan’s emplacing of mines along parts of its border that have not been delineated.[1]

There is no mine action program in Uzbekistan and no clearance or survey has been reported in the last several years.

Treaty status

Mine Ban Treaty

State not party

Other conventions

  • Party to the Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons (CCW), but not party to the Amended Protocol II on landmines.
  • Not party to the Convention on Cluster Munitions.

 

Management and coordination

National mine action management actors

None

Operators

None

 

Impact

Extent of contamination (landmines)

Unknown

 

Addressing the impact

Land release 2014–2018 (5-year total)

None reported

 

Progress

Landmines

The extent of contamination is not known and there are no reported plans to conduct clearance.

An agreement was made with Tajikistan in 2018 on demarcation of the separate regions of the Tajik-Uzbek border. Tajikistan expected decisions to be taken in 2018 regarding clarification and identification of SHAs on the Uzbek border, and any demining operations will require agreement and cooperation between both nations.

Note: SHA = suspected hazardous area.

Contamination and Impact

Soviet troops also laid mines on the Uzbek-Afghan border. Survey on the Tajik side of the border over several years had identified a total of 57 SHAs as of December 2008 (size unknown), which were subsequently deemed to be on Uzbekistan territory. Uzbekistan had reportedly cleared 95% of the minefields along the Tajik border by the end of 2007 in demining operations conducted by Uzbek army deminers in cooperation with Tajik border troops.[2]

The first ever state visit by the president of Uzbekistan to Tajikistan took place in March 2018, and several agreements were signed between the two countries, including one on demarcation of separate regions of the Tajik-Uzbek border. Tajikistan expected decisions to be taken in 2018 regarding clarification and identification of SHAs on the Uzbek border, and any demining operations will require agreement and cooperation between both nations (see Tajikistan’s Mine Action profile for further information).[3]

In 2005, media reports cited Kyrgyz officials in Batken province as saying Kyrgyz border guards had checked previously mined areas of the border around the settlements of Ak-Turpak, Chonkara, and Otukchu, which had been cleared by Uzbek deminers, and confirmed that they were free of contamination.[4]

Mine Action Program

There is no functioning mine action program in Uzbekistan.

Land Release

There are no reports of any land release occurring in 2018 or in recent years.



[1]Ban calls Uzbekistan land mines ‘unacceptable’,” The Hindu, 6 April 2010.

[2] Email from Jonmahmad Rajabov, Director, Tajikistan Mine Action Center (TMAC), 16 February 2009; Tajikistan, Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report, “General situation,” 3 February 2008, p. 3; and “Uzbekistan started demining on Tajik border,” Spy.kz, 23 October 2007.

[3] Email from Muhabbat Ibrohimzoda, TMAC, 27 April 2018.