Cluster Munition Monitor 2022

The Impact

Jump to a specific section of the chapter:

Introduction

Assessing the Impact: Contamination | Casualties

Management and Coordination

Addressing the Impact: Clearance | Risk Education | Victim assistance

 

Introduction

This summary reports on the impact of cluster munitions globally. It charts the efforts and challenges to address the impact in States Parties to the Convention on Cluster Munitions with responsibility for clearance of cluster munition remnants and for assistance to victims.

As of the end of 2021, the total number of cluster munition casualties for all time, recorded by the Monitor, reached 23,082 including casualties from both cluster munition attacks and unexploded submunitions. Estimates calculated from various sources range from 56,500 to 86,500 casualties for all time, globally.

The Monitor recorded a total of 149 cluster munition casualties in 2021 across nine countries and two other areas. This marked a sharp decrease from the 360 casualties recorded in 2020. All casualties reported in 2021 were caused by cluster munition remnants. This was the first year in a decade that saw no new casualties from cluster munition attacks.

This notable decline in casualties was immediately eclipsed by shocking reports of hundreds of casualties from cluster munition attacks in Ukraine, after Russia invaded the country in February 2022. Preliminary data indicates that as of July 2022, at least 689 casualties from cluster munition attacks were reported to have occurred in Ukraine, with many others unrecorded.

Children accounted for two-thirds of all cluster munition casualties in 2021, where the age was recorded. Men and boys made up 80% of casualties where the sex was recorded. While total annual casualties decreased in 2021, the number of new casualties in States Parties Iraq, Lao PDR, and Lebanon increased, while several non-signatory countries recorded new casualties. As has been the case each year since 2012, Syria had the highest annual casualties of any country. However, the number of casualties recorded in Syria decreased, with 2021 seeing its lowest annual recorded total since 2012.

The period 2021–2022 saw some positive developments as countries began to emerge from the COVID-19 pandemic, with mine action operations returning to near-normal in many states. The Lausanne Action Plan, which lays out the five-year strategic commitments of States Parties to further their efforts to address the impact of cluster munitions, was finally adopted during the second part of the convention’s Second Review Conference in September 2021.

Yet in many respects the period continued to be challenging. The longer-term socio-economic effects of the pandemic impacted state finances, in some cases changing funding priorities. Global insecurity and the outbreak of hostilities hampered progress towards a cluster munition free world. In Ukraine in 2022, conflict with Russia resulted in new cluster munition contamination.

In 2021, no States Parties completed clearance of cluster munition remnants. Ten States Parties remain contaminated with cluster munitions. Two signatories, 14 non-signatories, and three other areas have, or are believed to have, land containing cluster munition remnants.

States Parties reported clearing more than 61km² of land and at least 81,043 cluster munition remnants in 2021.[1] The clearance figure is slightly below that of 63km² in 2020, although two States Parties—Croatia and Montenegro—finished clearance in 2020, contributing to that overall total. Figures for any clearance that took place in Somalia during 2021 were not reported. No clearance took place in Chile in 2021. Chile conducted technical survey of its contaminated areas during 2021 and was planning to begin clearance in 2023.

Requests to extend Article 4 clearance deadlines have been made every year since the first submissions in 2019. In 2021, extension requests were granted to Afghanistan, Chile, and Mauritania. During 2022, Bosnia and Herzegovina (BiH), Chad, and Chile submitted extension requests. Only two States Parties—Iraq and Somalia—remain within their original Article 4 deadlines, but neither appear to be on target to meet them.

In 2021, the ongoing socio-economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic appeared to increase risk-taking in contaminated areas as people were forced to rely on harmful coping mechanisms. In Lao PDR and Lebanon, it was reported that economic hardship likely encouraged high-risk behaviors, as people sought to supplement falling incomes.[2] Men remained a particularly high-risk group due to livelihood activities such as cultivation, collection of forest products, hunting, and fishing, all of which can take them into contaminated areas. Children, particularly boys, were susceptible to the lure of cluster munition remnants. Both Lao PDR and Lebanon saw tragic incidents in 2021, where groups of children playing with cluster munition remnants were killed and injured.

Risk education continued to be conducted in non-signatories Libya, Syria, and Yemen, often in the context of ongoing conflict and insecurity. The outbreak of hostilities in Ukraine in early 2022 prompted operators to increase the provision of risk education via digital means, to reach as many affected people as possible. COVID-19 restrictions continued to impact the delivery of risk education in some countries.

Victim assistance efforts, under Article 5, faced increasing challenges. Slow progress in many States Parties was apparent, while such efforts in Afghanistan and Lebanon faced drastic crises in resources. In several States Parties, local and international partners worked to address major gaps in the availability, accessibility, and sustainability of healthcare and rehabilitation services. Limited progress was reported in access to economic inclusion programs and in the provision of financial assistance to victims. As in previous years, psychological support was severely lacking given the high level of need for such services.

Assessing the Impact

Cluster munition remnants contamination

Global contamination

The number of states and other areas affected by cluster munition remnants remains unchanged from 2020. In total, 26 states and three other areas were known or suspected to be contaminated by cluster munition remnants as of 1 August 2022. Ten are States Parties to the Convention on Cluster Munitions and have clearance obligations, while two are signatories. Fourteen non-signatories and three other areas are also affected by cluster munitions.

Estimated cluster munition remnants contamination (as of 31 December 2021)

Massive

(more than 1,000km2)

Large

(100–1,000km2)

Medium

(10–99km2)

Small

(less than 10km2)

Residual contamination/ unknown

Lao PDR

Vietnam

Cambodia

Iraq

 

Azerbaijan

Chile

Kosovo

Mauritania

Nagorno-Karabakh

Syria

Ukraine

Yemen

 

Afghanistan

BiH

DRC

Georgia

Germany

Iran

Lebanon

Libya

Serbia

Somalia

South Sudan

Sudan

Tajikistan

Western Sahara

Angola

Armenia

Chad

 

 

Note: States Parties are indicated in bold; signatories are underlined; and other areas are in italics.

 

Cluster munition remnants contamination in States Parties

States Parties that have completed clearance

Under Article 4 of the Convention on Cluster Munitions, States Parties are obliged to clear and destroy all cluster munition remnants in areas under their jurisdiction or control as soon as possible, but not later than 10 years after becoming party to the convention.

No States Parties reported completion of clearance of cluster munition remnants in 2021.

A total of 10 States Parties have reported completing clearance of cluster munition remnants as required by the convention.[3] Mauritania, which had reported fulfilment of its clearance obligations in September 2013, reported finding new cluster munition remnants contamination in 2019.[4]

States Parties that have declared fulfilment of clearance obligations

2020

Croatia, Montenegro

2016

Mozambique

2013

Norway

2012

Republic of the Congo, Grenada

2010

Palau, Zambia

2009

Albania

2008

Guinea-Bissau

Extent of contamination in States Parties

Action 18 of the Lausanne Action Plan requires States Parties to identify the precise location, scope, and extent of cluster munition remnants contamination in areas under their jurisdiction or control. It also requires contaminated States Parties to establish evidence-based accurate baselines to the fullest extent possible, no later than the Tenth Meeting of States Parties in 2022, or within two years after entry into force of the convention for new States Parties.

As of the end of 2021, five States Parties—BiH, Chile, Germany, Iraq, and Lebanon—had a clear understanding of their contamination based on the conduct of evidence-based surveys. Survey was ongoing in Lao PDR, while Mauritania had conducted an initial assessment of contamination. State Party Chad submitted an extension request in 2022 for the conduct of survey in the northern province of Tibesti. Afghanistan had a clear picture of contamination in accessible areas in 2021, but reported the need to survey previously inaccessible areas. Somalia had yet to conduct a survey of contamination and provided no updates on progress for 2021.

Massive cluster munition remnants contamination (more than 1,000km²) exists in one State Party, Lao PDR, while large contamination (between 100–1,000km²) exists in one State Party, Iraq. Two States Parties—Chile and Mauritania—are believed to have medium contamination (between 10–99km²). Five States Parties—Afghanistan, BiH, Germany, Lebanon, and Somalia—each have less than 10km² of contaminated land. The extent of remaining contamination in Chad is unknown as survey has yet to be conducted.

Lao PDR is the State Party most heavily contaminated by cluster munition remnants. Though the full extent of contamination is not known, 15 of Lao PDR’s 18 provinces are contaminated, with nine heavily contaminated.[5] As of the end of December 2021, the total extent of confirmed hazardous area (CHA) in surveyed areas totaled 1,522.79km², across 10 provinces.[6] Clearance operators have reported the presence of at least 186 types of munitions in Lao PDR.[7]

In Iraq, the Regional Mine Action Center for the south of the country (RMAC South), reported that as of the end of 2021, cluster munition remnants covered a total area of 178.14km² across the north, center, and south of the country.[8] The majority of contaminated areas were found in southern Iraq (157.68km²), though contamination is also found in the Middle Euphrates region (10.11km²) and in the north, including in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq (10.35km²).[9] In 2021, 29.32km² of new cluster munition remnants contaminated areas were identified through non-technical survey in the north, center, and south of Iraq. An environmental sanctuary in Basra province was found to have 10km² of contamination following initial surveys.[10]

Contamination in Chile is limited to land that was used for military training, in three ranges belonging to the Chilean Air Force and on one army base.[11] In its revised Article 4 deadline extension request, submitted in June 2020, Chile stated that its estimate of contamination was 64.61km² across the four sites, according to non-technical survey completed in 2019.[12] During 2021, a total of 33.84km² was cancelled after technical survey, leaving 30.77km² of CHA across the four sites.[13]

In 2019, Mauritania discovered previously unknown contaminated areas, dating from 1980 and 1990.[14] After an initial assessment in February 2021, 14.02km² was found to be contaminated with cluster munition remnants. These areas are all located in the region of Tiris Zemmour in the north, bordering Western Sahara.[15] In April 2022, Mauritania reported that cluster munition remnant contamination comprised 10 areas totaling 14.41km², contaminated with BLU-63 and Mk-118 submunitions.[16]

The Taliban-led government in Afghanistan stated that as of April 2022 there was a total of 9.9km2 of contamination remaining in the country. This consisted of 16 areas: 11 surveyed in 2021 and five uncleared in previous years. These areas are located in four provinces, reported as Faryab, Nangarhar, Paktya, and Samangan. A nationwide survey was needed for Afghanistan. This was considered possible due to newly available access to areas that had previously been difficult to reach, due to security concerns and the need for complex negotiations.[17]

The Lebanon Mine Action Center (LMAC) told the Monitor that as of the end of 2021, cluster munition remnants contamination in Lebanon totaled 6.27km² of CHA in three areas: Bekaa, Mount Lebanon, and southern Lebanon.[18] This included 0.12km² of new contamination across 11 sites in the northeast of the country, and 0.11km² of hazardous areas found across three sites elsewhere and as a result of corrections to the perimeters of six existing sites.[19]

Cluster munition remnants contamination in Germany comprised an area not exceeding 11km² in Wittstock—in a former military training area located 80km northwest of Berlin.[20] As of March 2022, Germany reported clearing 4.73km² of areas suspected of contamination since 2017, leaving 6.27km² still to be cleared. Germany has provided slightly different figures as to its extent of contamination remaining.[21]

Cluster munition remnants contamination in BiH primarily results from the 1992–1995 conflict related to the break-up of the former Yugoslavia.[22] BiH reported in 2022 that the remaining area contaminated with cluster munition remnants totaled 0.77km², across 13 suspected hazardous areas (SHAs). Eight of these areas were already in the process of being cleared.[23]

In June 2021, the National High Commission for Demining (Haut Commissariat National de Déminage, HCND) in Chad reported that the last area known to be contaminated—742,657m² in Delbo village, West Ennedi province—had been cleared and was awaiting quality assurance to complete the land release process.[24] Yet Tibesti province in the northwest of the country had not been subject to survey, and in 2017–2018 Mines Advisory Group (MAG) had indicated the possibility that cluster munition remnants could be found there, particularly near former Libyan military bases.[25] In 2022, Chad submitted an Article 4 deadline extension request in order to conduct non-technical survey of 19.05km² of land in Tibesti province to confirm any contamination.[26]

The extent of contamination in Somalia is unknown but believed to be limited to border areas with Kenya, in the north of Jubaland state. No survey of contaminated areas has been possible, primarily due to a lack of funding and inaccessibility amid armed conflict.[27] Somalia had not provided any updates on contamination as of 1 August 2022.

Unconfirmed contamination in States Parties

State Party Colombia may have a small amount of residual contamination, though it states that no known evidence has been found.[28] A World War II-type “cluster adapter” of United States (US) origin was used during an attack at Santo Domingo in 1998.[29] The Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACHR) found that the Colombian Air Force had used an AN-M1A2 bomb, which it said meets the definition of a cluster munition.[30]

In the United Kingdom (UK), it is estimated that more than 2,000 crates of AN-M1A1 and/or AN-M4A1 “cluster adapter” type bombs remain in UK waters at Sheerness, off the east coast of England, in the cargo of a sunken World War II ship.[31] In February 2022, it was reported that Royal Navy specialists were undertaking survey and risk assessments of the site before any further work can be conducted to remove the ship and its contents.[32]

Cluster munition remnants contamination in signatories

Two signatories to the Convention on Cluster Munitions—Angola and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)—remain listed as having cluster munition remnants contamination. Signatory Uganda completed clearance in 2008.[33]

Angola has no confirmed contamination, but there may remain abandoned cluster munitions or unexploded submunitions. In past years, some cluster munition remnants have been found and destroyed through explosive ordnance disposal (EOD) call-outs.[34]

In August 2020, the DRC reported to the Monitor that several areas contained cluster munition remnants, although these areas had not been surveyed and their size was yet to be determined.[35] In May 2022, the DRC submitted a voluntary Article 7 report, in which it reported that survey had confirmed six CHAs totaling 0.16km². The contamination was reported to comprise cluster munition remnants dating from 1998. Four provinces in the DRC contained contaminated land: Equateur (120,398m²), Ituri (3,406m²), South-Kivu (718.8m²), and Tanganyika (37,000m²).[36] The six CHAs were reported to be marked, but were located in difficult-to-access areas.[37]

Cluster munition remnants contamination in non-signatories and other areas

Fourteen non-signatories and three other areas have, or are believed to have, land containing cluster munition remnants on their territories. The only non-signatory to have completed clearance of cluster munition remnants is Thailand, in 2011.

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 remnants contamination (more than 1,000km²), while Cambodia has large contamination (between 100–1,000km²). Four non-signatories and two other areas are each believed to have between 10–99km² of contamination, while seven non-signatories and one other area are each thought to have less than 10km². The extent of contamination in Armenia is not known.

Vietnam is massively contaminated by cluster munition remnants, but no accurate estimate of the extent exists. In 2022, Vietnam National Mine Action Center (VNMAC) reported to the Monitor that areas contaminated with explosive remnants of war (ERW), of all types, comprised more than 5.6 million hectares (56,000km²). This represents more than 17% of Vietnam’s total land area. The contamination is concentrated mostly in the central provinces of Quang Tri, Quang Binh, Ha Tinh, Nghe An, and Quang Ngai.[38]

Cambodia has raised its overall estimate of cluster munition remnants contamination in recent years after the implementation of survey. The Cambodian Mine Action and Victim Assistance Authority (CMAA) reported 698km² of total contamination, as of the end of December 2021. This represents an increase on the 658km² reported at the end of 2020.[39] Most contamination is concentrated in the northeastern provinces, along the borders with Lao PDR and Vietnam.[40]

New cluster munition remnant contamination occurred in Armenia, Azerbaijan, and in the area of Nagorno-Karabakh, as a result of use of cluster munitions during the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh in October 2020.[41]

In Armenia, new contamination from the conflict was identified in the Syunik region, bordering Azerbaijan, in 2021. During the conflict, Davit Bek, in Kapan municipality of Syunik province, was also contaminated with explosive ordnance, including cluster munitions.[42]

In Nagorno-Karabakh, the HALO Trust has worked to clear areas under the control of ethnic Armenian authorities, while the Azerbaijan National Agency for Mine Action (ANAMA) has carried out clearance in areas controlled by Azerbaijan. A survey by the HALO Trust estimated that more than 16km2 of land was contaminated, while almost 2,000 unexploded submunitions were cleared from November 2020 to November 2021. The survey found that 68% of inhabited settlements had either cluster munition contamination or evidence of cluster munition use. After the ceasefire in November 2020, more than 20% of land in Stepanakert, the capital of Armenian-controlled areas of Nagorno-Karabakh, was initially contaminated with unexploded items. By May 2022, the HALO Trust had completed clearance of all known contamination in the city. Clearance of Armenian-controlled areas in Nagorno-Karabakh was estimated to require at least another four years, yet funding was lacking and staff capacity required an increase of 40%.[43]

The extent of contamination in both Azerbaijan, and the parts of Nagorno-Karabakh controlled of Azerbaijan, was not reported in 2021.[44] However, casualties from cluster munition remnants continued to be reported in Azerbaijan into 2022, evidencing contamination.[45]

Cluster munitions have been used extensively in Syria, across 13 of its 14 governorates, since 2012. Cluster munition attacks in Syria have decreased since mid-2017,[46] yet the weapons were still in use throughout 2019 and 2020, with the last attack recorded in March 2021. Subsequent attacks may have gone unrecorded.[47] From late April until June 2019, Human Rights Watch (HRW) reported attacks on opposition-controlled areas of Aleppo, Hama, and Idleb governorates on a daily basis.[48] Prior to that, cluster munition use and contamination was reported in the governorates of Aleppo, Dar’a, Deir-ez-Zor, Hama, Homs, Idleb, and Quneitra, as well as in the Damascus suburb of Eastern Ghouta.[49]

Extensive cluster munition attacks, resulting in contamination, were reported in Ukraineduring 2022 amid the Russian invasion of the country. In 2021, the full extent of contamination from unexploded submunitions was unknown, but was limited to the Donetsk and Luhansk regions in the east and dated from conflict in 2014–2015.[50] Since Russia invaded Ukraine in early 2022, at least 10 other regions have been affected by cluster munitions: Chernihiv, Dnipropetrovsk, Donetsk, Kharkiv, Kherson, Luhansk, Mykolaiv, Odesa, Sumy, and Zaporizhzhia.

In 2014, Yemen identified approximately 18km² of suspected cluster munition hazards, though the escalation of armed conflict since March 2015 has increased the extent of contamination in northwestern and central areas of the country.[51] The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) confirmed in 2020 that cluster munition and other ERW contamination is widespread in the north.[52] In southern Yemen, with the exception of a few areas where the frontlines have shifted, there is no cluster munition remnants contamination.[53]

In Kosovo, as of the end of 2021, the Kosovo Mine Action Centre (KMAC) reported 11.37km² of cluster munition remnants contamination, across 44 affected areas.[54]

Non-signatories Georgia, Iran, Libya, Serbia, South Sudan, Sudan, Tajikistan, and the area of Western Sahara are known or believed to each have less than 10km² of cluster munition remnants contamination.

Georgia is thought to be free of contamination, though South Ossetia—a disputed territory not controlled by the government—is a possible exception.

The extent of contamination in Iran is not known but is believed to be small.

Cluster munition remnants contamination in Libya is primarily the result of armed conflict in 2011 and renewed conflict since 2014, particularly in urban areas. In 2019, there were several instances or allegations of cluster munition use by forces affiliated with the Libyan National Army (LNA), including an attack on Zuwarah airport in August 2019 where RBK-500 cluster munition remnants were found, and during attacks in and around Tripoli in May and December 2019.[55] However, contamination was reported to be lower than that from other victim-activated explosive devices such as booby-traps, antipersonnel landmines, and improvised mines.[56]

Three municipalities in Serbia remain contaminated with cluster munition remnants.[57] Serbia reported 0.99km² of contamination—made up of 0.41km² of CHA and 0.58km² of SHA—as of the end of 2021.[58]

South Sudan reported 5.49km² of contamination, with 4.84km² CHA and 0.65km² SHA.[59]

Sudan reported 0.14km2 of cluster munition remnants contamination as of the end of December 2021, with 5,820m² CHA and 136,582m² SHA.[60]

Tajikistan reported 2.07km² of cluster munition remnants contamination, all classified as CHA. This is up from the 0.79km² reported in 2020 due to the discovery of new hazard areas.[61]

Western Sahara was reported to have 2.09km² of contamination as of December 2021.[62]

Cluster munition casualties

The Monitor gathers data on cluster munition casualties recorded each year in affected states, and compiles annual casualty totals. The Monitor also records available data on past casualties, to update all-time casualty totals at the national level, and to revise aggregated global historical data on cluster munition casualties.

As of the end of 2021, the Monitor has identified a total of 23,082 cluster munition casualties, across 39 countries and other areas, for all time. However, a better indicator of the number of casualties is derived from various state estimates, which collectively place the total up to, or more than, 56,500 global casualties.

The 149 cluster munition casualties recorded in 2021 marked a sharp fall from the 360 recorded in 2020. Notably, 2021 was the first year in a decade that saw no new recorded casualties due to cluster munition attacks.[63] Casualties from cluster munition attacks had been recorded each year from 2012, when cluster munitions were used in Syria.

Yet this progress in 2021 has been overshadowed by the devastating number of cluster munition attacks causing casualties during Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022. There have been reports of hundreds of casualties from such attacks, as well as emerging reports of casualties from contamination left by unexploded submunitions due to this new use. While these early reports do not yet represent a full or precise account of the situation, they clearly indicate the extensive and horrendous impact of cluster munitions in Ukraine.

Since the Russian invasion on 24 February 2022, preliminary data compiled by the Monitor indicates that 689 casualties were reported during cluster munition attacks in Ukraine as of July 2022.[64] These reported casualties, which sometimes occurred during indiscriminate shelling involving other weapons alongside cluster munitions, included 215 people killed and 474 injured. All of the casualties in Ukraine were civilians, where their status was reported.

In addition to local and national media reporting, HRW and Amnesty International documented extensive casualties through July 2022.[65] In June 2022, the Office of the Prosecutor General of Ukraine was reported to be investigating cluster munition attacks that had caused 317 casualties (98 killed and 219 injured). Among those casualties, seven children were killed and 25 wounded.[66] The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) reported in June 2022 that there had been extensive use of cluster munitions in Ukraine, mostly from Multiple Launch Rocket Systems, though it focused specifically on casualties from attacks with Tochka-U short-range ballistic missiles carrying cluster submunitions.[67] Among some 20 such ballistic missile strikes with cluster munitions recorded by OHCHR, 10 of the attacks resulted in a collective total of at least 279 civilian casualties (83 killed and 196 injured).[68]

Cluster munition use in Ukraine mostly affected civilian infrastructure, with attacks damaging homes, hospitals, schools, playgrounds, and in one instance a cemetery where mourners were among the casualties. Cluster munition attacks also threatened internally displaced persons (IDPs) and those seeking humanitarian aid outside improvised shelters.[69]

Data on the types of unexploded ordnance causing casualties in Ukraine was limited, yet local media reported that casualties from cluster munition remnants occurred as a result of the new contamination. At least 10 casualties (seven killed and three injured) of unexploded submunitions were reported: nine occurred in Kryvorizka district of Dnipropetrovsk province, where thousands of submunitions were cleared by the end of April. Another casualty was reported in Mykolaiv.[70]

Global cluster munition casualties

As of the end of 2021, the total number of cluster munition casualties recorded by the Monitor globally for all time reached 23,082. The total includes casualties resulting directly from cluster munition attacks (4,656) and casualties from unexploded remnants (18,426). Data begins in the mid-1960s amid extensive cluster munition attacks by the US in Southeast Asia, and continues to the end of 2021. The three countries with the highest recorded numbers of cluster munition casualties for all time are Lao PDR (7,793), Syria (4,318), and Iraq(3,134).

As many casualties go unrecorded, global casualties may be as high as 56,500; a figure that has been calculated from country estimates. Some estimates put the total number of casualties for all time at 86,500 to 100,000, yet these are based on extrapolations from limited data samples, which may not be representative of national averages or the actual number of casualties.[71]

Casualties directly caused by cluster munition attacks before the convention entered into force have been grossly under-reported. For example, no data or estimate is available for Lao PDR, the most heavily bombed country. Thousands of cluster munition casualties from past conflicts have gone unrecorded, particularly those 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 since 1991).[72] However, since the entry into force of the convention in 2010, reporting on the impact of cluster munition attacks has improved significantly.

Prior to the adoption of the convention in 2008, data on casualties from cluster munition attacks was severely lacking, including those among military personnel and other direct conflict actors, such as non-state armed group (NSAG) combatants and militias. However, even with improved reporting, the disproportionately high ratio of civilians among casualties of cluster munitions—identified during the Oslo Process which created the convention—has remained apparent.

Before 2008, a total of 13,306 cluster munition casualties had been identified globally.[73] Since then, the total number of recorded casualties has increased due to updated surveys identifying more pre-convention casualties; new casualties from historical cluster munition remnants; and due to new cluster munition attacks and further casualties from the remnants they left behind.

Cluster munition casualties have occurred in 15 States Parties to the convention, four signatory states, 17 non-signatories, and three other areas as of the end of 2021.

States and other areas with cluster munition casualties (as of 31 December 2021)[74]

More than 1,000 casualties

100–1,000 casualties

10–99 casualties

Less than 10 casualties/Unknown

Iraq

Lao PDR

Syria

Vietnam

Afghanistan

Angola

Azerbaijan

BiH

Cambodia

Croatia

DRC

Eritrea

Ethiopia

Kosovo

Kuwait

Lebanon

Russia

Serbia

South Sudan

Western Sahara

Yemen

Albania

Colombia

Georgia

Israel

Nagorno-Karabakh

Sierra Leone

Sudan

Tajikistan

Uganda

Ukraine

Chad

Guinea-Bissau

Liberia

Libya

Mauritania

Montenegro

Mozambique

Somalia

 

Note: States Parties are indicated in bold; signatories are underlined; and other areas are in italics.

*Casualties in Ukraine have increased drastically since the end of 2021 as a result of cluster munition attacks after the Russian invasion in February 2022.

 

The first cluster munition casualties in Mauritania were reported in 2021.[75] Although no casualties were identified in Mauritania before 2021, it is possible that cluster munition incidents occurred in the past that were not disaggregated from casualties caused by landmines and other ERW.

Among the 15 States Parties that had cluster munition casualties recorded up to the end of 2021, 13 have a recognized responsibility for victims under the Convention on Cluster Munitions.[76] Colombia[77] and Mozambique[78] have had cluster munition casualties reported, but have not recognized having any victims and therefore their responsibility to assist victims under the convention. Both are also party to the Mine Ban Treaty and have recognized their responsibility to assist mine survivors.

The majority of recorded cluster munition casualties for all time (57%, or 13,090) occurred in States Parties to the Convention on Cluster Munitions.

A total of 604 casualties have been recorded in signatories Angola, the DRC, Liberia, and Uganda.[79]

In non-signatory states, 8,971 cluster munition casualties have been recorded for all time.Since 2010, casualties from cluster munition attacks have only occurred in non-signatory states, with these casualties recorded in Azerbaijan, Libya, Syria, Ukraine, and Yemen.

In other areas where cluster munition casualties have occurred—Kosovo, Nagorno-Karabakh, and Western Sahara—a total of 417 casualties were recorded for all time up to the end of 2021.

Cluster munition casualties in 2021

The Monitor recorded a total of 149 cluster munition casualties in 2021 across nine countries and two other areas, including four States Parties to the Convention on Cluster Munitions and five non-signatories.[80] There was a marked decline in total global casualties in 2021, from 360 in 2020.

All casualties reported in 2021 were caused by cluster munitionremnants. Casualties of cluster munition attacks had been recorded every year from 2012 when cluster munitions were used in Syria, up to 2020. However, 2021 was the first year in a decade that no new annual casualties from cluster munition attacks were recorded.

Cluster munition casualties in Syria and all other states and areas 2012–2021

Cmcasualties2012 2021 CMM2022

 

Cluster munition remnants pose an ongoing threat. Unexploded submunitions disproportionately harm civilians, with children particularly at risk. In 2021, cluster munition remnants caused all 149 casualties attributed to cluster munitions globally, killing 59 people and injuring 90.

Cluster munition remnants casualties in 2021

Country/area

casualties

Syria

37

Iraq

33

Lao PDR

30

Yemen

29

Lebanon

8

Nagorno-Karabakh

5

Tajikistan

2

Mauritania

2

Azerbaijan

1

Sudan

1

Western Sahara

1

Note: States Parties are indicated in bold; andother areas in italics.

 

The actual number of new global cluster munition casualties each year is likely to be far higher than recorded. Inconsistency in reporting, a lack of available data due to insufficient resources, and limited access to conflict-affected areas mean that annual comparisons do not necessarily represent definitive trends. However, casualty data is adjusted over time when new information becomes available and specific patterns of harm are able to be discerned.

In 2021, as in previous years, Syria had the most recorded cluster munition remnants casualties of any country, with 37. This was a significant decrease from the 147 casualties from cluster munition remnants recorded in Syria for 2020 and the lowest annual total recorded since 2012. A further 35 casualties during cluster munition attacks were also reported in the country in 2020. Despite a relative annual decline in casualties recorded for Syria, this continued the trend of Syria having the most annual casualties recorded each year since 2012.[81]

Iraq reported 33 cluster munition remnants casualties in 2021, up from 31 in 2020. This marked the highest annual total recorded in Iraq since 2010.

Lao PDR recorded 30 cluster munition remnants casualties in 2021; a significant increase from eight in 2020, but still fewer than the 51 casualties recorded in 2016.

In Yemen, 29 cluster munition remnants casualties were recorded in 2021, up from 11 in 2020. Data collection challenges meant that casualties were likely significantly under-reported.

In Lebanon, eight casualties were recorded in 2021, all of whom were children. This marked a sharp increase on 2020, when for the first time since 2006 no casualties were recorded.

While the number of cluster munition casualties decreased globally in 2021, casualties in States Parties Iraq, Lao PDR, and Lebanon increased. For these countries, annual casualties recorded in 2021 contrasted sharply with the totals recorded when the convention entered into force in 2010, when eight casualties were recorded in Lao PDR, one in Iraq, and 14 in Lebanon.

In Azerbaijan, one casualty was recorded in 2021. In the area of Nagorno-Karabakh, five unexploded submunition casualties occurred in 2021. In the regions affected by the conflict in both Azerbaijan and Nagorno-Karabakh, strenuous efforts to raise awareness among populations at risk and to conduct urgent clearance likely contributed to reducing casualty numbers. However, casualties may have gone unrecorded.

In Tajikistan, two cluster munition remnant casualties resulted from the same incident. Prior to 2021, no casualties from cluster munition remnants had been reported in the country since 2007.

Mauritania recorded two casualties in 2021. Sudan and the area of Western Sahara each recorded one casualty in 2021.[82] None of these states or areas had recorded any cluster munition remnant casualties in 2020.

No disaggregated data was available on cluster munition remnants casualties in Afghanistan in 2021, which recorded three casualties in 2020. Cambodia recorded no casualties from cluster munition remnants in 2021, compared to one in 2020 which was its first casualty since 2017.

Cluster munition casualty demographics

Civilians accounted for 97% (144) of all casualties recorded during 2021. Three casualties were deminers, while another two casualties did not have their civilian or military status recorded.

A very high ratio of civilian casualties corresponds with findings based on analysis of historical data on cluster munition casualties. This consistent and foreseeable disproportionate impact on civilians is due to the indiscriminate nature of these weapons.

2021 casualties by age group, sex, and outcome

Cmcasualtiesbysexageoutcome CMM2022

In 2021, the proportion of child casualties of cluster munitions increased alarmingly, rising to two-thirds (66%) of total recorded casualties, where the age was known.[83] Previously, children accounted for 44% of casualties from cluster munition remnants in 2020.

In Lao PDR in 2021, more than half (16) of the 30 recorded cluster munition remnant casualties were children (11 boys and five girls).[84]

In Lebanon, the eight child casualties of cluster munition remnants in 2021 were all boys. Seven were from Syria and were playing when the explosions occurred, while one was from Lebanon.

In Iraq, 19 (65%) of the 33 cluster munition casualties recorded in 2021 were children (17 boys and two girls).

The average age of child casualties in 2021 was 10 years old. Twenty-two of the child casualties were under 10, while the youngest was just two years old. Of the child casualties where the sex was known, 82% were boys and 18% were girls.[85]

Where the sex was known, 20% of casualties in 2021 were recorded as ‘female’ (or 23 of 114).[86] Among those casualties, 52% were girls and 48% were women. Among the remaining 80% of casualties recorded as ‘male,’ 67% were boys and 33% were men.

In 2021, there was a marked difference in survival outcome in relation to the sex of casualties: 47% of male casualties were killed, compared to 26% of female casualties. This represented a reversal of the overall trend in 2020, when half of female casualties were killed.

Management and Coordination

Coordination, strategies, and planning

Clearance

Strong coordination is an important aspect of national ownership of mine action programs, enabling efficient and effective operations.

In 2021, clearance programs in seven States Parties with cluster munition contamination—BiH, Chad, Iraq, Lao PDR, Lebanon, Mauritania, and Somalia—were coordinated through national mine action centers. In States Parties Chile and Germany, where contamination is found only on former military bases, the defense ministries are responsible for coordinating clearance.

In Afghanistan, the international community has largely suspended its support to government institutions since the Taliban took power in August 2021. This has affected the functioning of the national Directorate of Mine Action Coordination (DMAC). In September 2021, the United Nations Mine Action Service (UNMAS) established a United Nations Emergency Mine Action Coordination Center for Afghanistan (UN-EMACCA), to serve as an independent temporary coordination body for mine action.[87] In October 2021, UNMAS reported that “all funds for the UN-EMACCA will be channeled through and controlled and managed by UNMAS and no funds will be used to support the Taliban or the de facto Government.”[88]

Action 19 of the Lausanne Action Plan requires States Parties to develop evidence-based, costed, and time-bound national strategies and workplans, as part of their Article 4 commitments. As of the end of 2021, seven States Parties—Afghanistan, BiH, Chad, Iraq, Lao PDR, Lebanon, and Mauritania—had strategic plans in place. Germany had a workplan for its extension period to 2025, while Chile prepared a workplan for clearance as part of its Article 4 extension request. Somalia’s mine action strategy expired in 2020. States Parties Afghanistan, Iraq, Lao PDR, and Mauritania updated or were in the process of updating their national mine action strategies in 2021.

With technical and financial support from the Geneva International Centre for Humanitarian Demining (GICHD), Afghanistan was developing a new five-year strategic plan during 2021.[89] It was reported that the Mine Action Programme of Afghanistan (MAPA) would likely revise the plan towards a solely humanitarian focus, considering the governance changes in 2021.[90]

In Iraq, the Directorate of Mine Action (DMA) and the Iraqi Kurdistan Mine Action Agency (IKMAA) prepared the first integrated strategic plan for the mine action sector, the National Mine Action Strategic Plan 2022–2028, with support from GICHD and UNMAS.[91] The plan was due to be completed in May 2022.[92] Yet its focus was primarily to reflect the new priorities arising from landmine contamination that occurred during the conflict with Islamic State.[93]

In Lao PDR, the national strategy, Safe Path Forward, was updated for the period 2021–2030, and was expected to be approved by mid-2022.[94] The National Regulatory Authority for the UXO/Mine Action Sector (NRA) in Lao PDR has also developed a new five-year plan for the sector covering 2021–2025, to replace the expired 2016–2020 workplan.[95]

Mauritania had in place a National Mine Action Strategic Plan for 2021–2027, which replaced its previous plan for 2016–2020.[96] The plan aims to strengthen the capacity of the National Humanitarian Demining Programme for Development (Programme National de Déminage Humanitaire pour le Développement, PNDHD) through the retraining of operational staff and deminers. It also planned for the conduct of non-technical and technical survey, and for the clearance of 27 areas.[97]

The three States Parties submitting Article 4 deadline extension requests in 2022 are required, in line with Action 20 of the Lausanne Action Plan, to provide annual workplans which include projections of the amount of cluster munition contaminated land to be addressed annually.

BiH’s National Mine Action Strategy 2018–2025 was adopted in January 2019, and addresses contamination from both mines and cluster munition remnants. However, BiH did not include a detailed workplan for clearance when it submitted its Article 4 deadline extension request in May 2022.[98]

Chad did not include a detailed workplan as part of its Article 4 deadline extension request to conduct non-technical survey in Tibesti province.[99]

In 2022, as part of its Article 4 extension request and after feedback from the Article 4 Analysis Group, Chile included a detailed workplan for clearance of cluster munition remnants based on the findings of technical survey conducted during 2021.[100] Clearance operations are planned to begin in 2023 and to be completed in 2026.[101]

Risk education

In 2021, nine cluster munition contaminated States Parties had institutions in place which served as risk education focal points: Afghanistan, BiH, Chad, Chile, Iraq, Lao PDR, Lebanon, Mauritania, and Somalia.

In most cases, the risk education program is coordinated by the respective national mine action center. For school-based programs in Chile, Iraq, and Lao PDR, the education ministry in each country takes on a coordination role.[102]

Action 27 of the Lausanne Action Plan requires that States Parties develop national strategies and workplans for risk education, drawing on best practice and standards.

Risk education is included within the national mine action strategies of Afghanistan, BiH, Iraq, Lao PDR, Lebanon, and Mauritania. The newly updated mine action strategies of Afghanistan, Iraq, Lao PDR, and Mauritania all included sections and objectives on risk education.[103]

As a core part of operational planning, States Parties should include detailed, costed, and multiyear plans for risk education within Article 4 deadline extension requests. There remains much room for improvement in this regard. In 2021, only Afghanistan included information on risk education activities and a budget for risk education, within its extension request.[104] Mauritania provided limited information on risk education, in response to questions from the Article 4 Analysis Group.[105] In 2022, neither BiH or Chad included risk education workplans or budgets in their initial extension requests. Chile did not include risk education in its extension request due to the contamination being in military zones where public access is not permitted.

Victim assistance

States Parties with responsibility for cluster munition victims are obliged under the Convention on Cluster Munitions to develop a national plan and budget for victim assistance. Action 33 of the Lausanne Action Plan commits states to designate a national focal point, and to address the needs and rights of victims according to a measurable national plan. Among States Parties with victims, all have a designated victim assistance focal point, except Croatia and Sierra Leone. No specific victim assistance coordination was reported in Afghanistan, following the Taliban takeover in 2021.

In Lao PDR, the Victim Assistance Technical Working Group continued to be responsible for coordination. In Lebanon, 10 meetings were held in 2021, which focused on organizing a national victim survey and classifying the data collected. Somalia did not report on coordination efforts following the drafting of its victim assistance strategy. Albania and Iraq reported ad hoc coordination processes, addressing specific needs as they arose.

In BiH, no in-person meetings were held in 2020–2021 due to COVID-19 restrictions, with all coordination taking place virtually. In 2021, Guinea-Bissau was developing a victim assistance coordination mechanism. Croatia’s coordination body for victim assistance remained inactive, while Montenegro and Sierra Leone had no specific coordination mechanisms in place.

As of the end of 2021, seven of the States Parties with cluster munition victims had strategies or plans in place for victim assistance and disability rights: Albania, BiH, Chad, Guinea-Bissau, Iraq, Lao PDR, and Lebanon. Chad’s National Plan of Action on Victim Assistance is reported not to have been implemented since its inception in 2018, although other project-related victim assistance planning has been carried out.

In 2021, Guinea-Bissau adopted a five-year National Strategy for the Inclusion of People with Disabilities, which was discussed in early 2022 in relation to victim assistance measures.

In Lao PDR, a Victim Assistance Framework for 2021–2025 was being developed in 2021.[106] A review of the implementation of its UXO/Mine Victim Assistance Strategy 2014–2020 was being undertaken to inform the development of the new framework, with Lao PDR’s national plan and budget to be updated once the framework is completed. This process was consultative, and included input from unexploded ordnance (UXO) survivors and stakeholders including the Lao Disabled People’s Association (LDPA), the Lao Disabled Women’s Development Centre (LDWDC), the Centre for Medical Rehabilitation, and the Cooperative Orthotic and Prosthetic Enterprise (COPE).[107]

Afghanistan and Somalia had each developed new national disability strategies in 2019, which were pending formal approval and adoption as of the end of 2021. It was not known if the plan for Afghanistan was still under consideration after the Taliban takeover in August 2021.

Four States Parties which have reported responsibility for cluster munition victims did not have an active strategy or draft plan in 2021. Croatia has not yet replaced its Action Plan to Help Victims of Mines and UXO, which expired in 2014. Mauritania did not have a specific victim assistance strategy; however, victim assistance is included in its five-year mine action strategy. Montenegro and Sierra Leone did not have victim assistance plans, yet both had a comparatively small number of recorded victims and have broader disability legislation.

Summary of mine action management and coordination

Mine action coordination mechanism

Clearance strategy/plan

Risk education coordination

Risk education strategy

Victim assistance

coordination

Victim assistance strategy/plan

Afghanistan

Directorate of Mine Action Coordination (DMAC)

National Mine Action Strategic Plan 2021–2026

 

DMAC through RE-TWG

Included in mine action strategy

Unknown

Disability strategy pending approval or not adopted

Albania

Ministry of Defense/

General Staff of the Armed Forces

N/A

N/A

N/A

Ministry of Health and Social Protection

National Action Plan for Persons with Disabilities (NAPPD) 2021–2025

BiH

BiH Mine Action Center (BHMAC)

National Mine Action Strategy 2018–2025

BHMAC

Included in mine action strategy

BHMAC Victim Assistance Working Group

Included in mine action strategy

Chad

National High Commission for Demining (HCND)

National Mine Action Plan 2020–2024

HCND

None

HCND

Victim assistance plan adopted in 2018 (not implemented)

Chile

Ministry of National Defense

Workplan included in 2022 Article 4 extension request

Ministry of National Defense in coordination with Ministry of Education

N/A

N/A

None

Croatia

Ministry of the Interior/Civil Protection Directorate

National Mine Action Strategy 2020–2026

Ministry of the Interior via the Civil Protection Directorate and Police Directorate

N/R

Combined, cross-ministry and institutional (including Ministry of Croatian Veterans, Ministry of Health, and the Office of the Ombudswoman for Persons with Disabilities)

None

Germany

Federal Ministry of Defence

Clearance workplan included within its 2019 Article 4 extension request (updated annually)

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

Guinea-Bissau

National Mine Action Coordination Centre (CAAMI)

N/A

CAAMI

N/A

CAAMI

Five-year National Strategy for the Inclusion of People with Disabilities (adopted in 2021)

Iraq

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

(IKMAA)

National Mine Action Strategy 2022–2028

DMA and Ministry of Education

Included in mine action strategy

DMA Victim Assistance department

Victim assistance plan (adopted by DMA in 2018)

Lao PDR

National Regulatory Authority (NRA)

Safe Path Forward III 2021–2030

 

NRA via RE-TWG and Ministry of Education and Sports

Included in mine action strategy

NRA Victim Assistance Technical Working Group

Victim Assistance Framework 2021–2025

(draft)

Lebanon

Lebanon Mine Action Center (LMAC)

Humanitarian Mine Action Strategy 2020–2025

LMAC via Risk Education Steering Committee

Included in mine action strategy

LMAC

Humanitarian Mine Action Strategy 2020–2025

Mauritania

National Humanitarian Demining Programme for Development (PNDHD)

National Mine Action Strategic Plan 2021–2027

PNDHD

Included in mine action strategy

PNDHD

None

Montenegro

Ministry of Internal Affairs, Directorate for Emergency Situations

N/A

N/A

N/A

Ministry of Health, and Ministry of Labor and Social Welfare

 

None

Sierra Leone

N/A

N/A

N/A

N/A

None

None

Somalia

Somali Explosives Management Authority (SEMA)

National Mine Action Strategic Plan 2018–2020 (expired)

SEMA

None

SEMA

Disability and victim assistance strategy pending approval

Note: N/A=not applicable; N/R=not reported; RE-TWG=Risk Education Technical Working Group.

 

Standards

Survey and clearance

States Parties Afghanistan, BiH, Chad, Iraq, Lao PDR, Lebanon, and Somalia all had national standards in place consistent with the International Mine Action Standards (IMAS). However, the standards in place in Chad and Somalia do not cover cluster munition remnants clearance and survey. Chile uses IMAS along with a Joint Demining Manual for its armed forces, while clearance and survey in Germany are conducted according to federal legislation.

In Lao PDR, there are separate standards for UXO clearance and mine clearance operations.[108]

In 2020–2021, national mine action standards in Iraq were reviewed and updated with support from UNMAS.[109] Lebanon conducted a full review of its standards during 2020.[110] Mauritania planned to conduct a review of its standards during its Article 4 extension period from 2022–2024. In 2022, it reported that its standards were being revised.[111]

Some States Parties, such as Afghanistan and Iraq, developed specific COVID-19 prevention and control guidelines for mine action operations in 2020.[112] Iraq approved and circulated the guidelines to relevant stakeholders in 2021.[113]

Risk education

Afghanistan, BiH, Chad, Iraq, Lao PDR, Lebanon, and Mauritania all have national standards in place for risk education. BiH also has an accreditation guide for risk education operators.[114]

In 2022, Iraq reported that its risk education standard had been updated in line with the revised IMAS 12.10 on Explosive Ordnance Risk Education (EORE). The Arabic version of Iraq’s risk education standard was being translated into English by international operators.[115]

In 2021–2022, Lebanon and Mauritania were in the process of updating their national standards on risk education in line with the revised IMAS 12.10.[116]

Lao PDR planned to update its national risk education standard, which was last revised in 2012; though this was not completed in 2021.[117] In Chad, progress on updating its national standard on risk education was also delayed, reportedly due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.[118]

Victim assistance

Under Action 32 of the Lausanne Action Plan, States Parties have committed to consider IMAS when integrating victim assistance into broader mechanisms, strategies, and plans.

IMAS 13.10 on Victim Assistance was fully adopted in October 2021.[119] According to this new standard, national mine action authorities and centers can, and should, play a role in monitoring and facilitating multisector efforts to address survivors’ needs. National authorities should also assist with including survivors and indirect victims of cluster munitions, and their views, in the development of relevant national legislation and policies. The standard notes that national mine action authorities are well placed to gather data on victims and their needs, provide information on services, and refer victims for support.

In 2021, Humanity & Inclusion (HI) worked with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Regional Mine Action Center (ARMAC) to promote best practices in victim assistance in ASEAN countries. This support from HI focuses on updating national victim assistance standards and contributing to international and national policy campaigns, as well as support for livelihood activities.[120]

Lao PDR and Lebanon were both working to update their respective national victim assistance standards in 2021, to bring them in line with IMAS 13.10.[121]

In 2021, government agencies that provide victim assistance services in Iraq, alongside HI and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), held a workshop to form draft national standards on victim assistance in line with IMAS 13.10, with completion targeted for 2022.[122]

Reporting

Under Article 7 of the Convention on Cluster Munitions, States Parties with cluster munition contamination must report annually on the size and location of all cluster munition contaminated areas under their jurisdiction and control, and on the status and progress of clearance and the destruction of cluster munition remnants. States Parties must submit annual transparency reports by 30 April each year.

As of 1 August 2022, only seven out of 10 States Parties with clearance obligations had submitted updated reports for calendar year 2021: BiH, Chile, Germany, Iraq, Lao PDR, Lebanon, and Mauritania.

States Parties also have an obligation to report on risk education.[123] Action 29 of the Lausanne Action Plan commits states to provide data on beneficiaries disaggregated by gender, age, and disability in their transparency reports. Only Iraq, Lao PDR, and Lebanon provided adequate reporting on risk education in their reports for 2021. BiH and Mauritania did not detail activities, or provide disaggregated beneficiary data. Chile and Germany stated that risk education was not needed, as their cluster munition remnants contamination was confined to military training areas.

States Parties must report progress on victim assistance under Article 5. Albania, BiH, Croatia, Iraq, Lao PDR, Lebanon, Mauritania, and Montenegro included information on victim assistance in their reports for 2021.

As of 1 August 2022, five States Parties with clearance obligations and/or a responsibility for cluster munition victims had not submitted their updated annual reports covering activities in 2021. Afghanistan, Chad, and Guinea-Bissau last submitted a transparency report in 2021, for activities in 2020. Somalia failed to submit an annual report in both 2020 and 2021 and Sierra Leone has not provided one since 2011.

Addressing the Impact

Cluster munition remnants clearance

Obligations regarding clearance

Under the Convention on Cluster Munitions, each State Party is 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. If unable to complete clearance on time, the State Party may request deadline extensions for periods of up to five years.

Clearance in 2021

In 2021, States Parties reported clearing some 61km² of cluster munition contaminated land, destroying more than 81,000 cluster munition remnants. The clearance figure is slightly lower than the 63km² cleared in 2020. Yet two States Parties, Croatia and Montenegro, finished clearance in 2020, contributing to the higher total.

Monitor data on cluster munition clearance in States Parties is based on information from a range of sources including reporting by national mine action programs, Article 7 transparency reports, and Article 4 extension requests. In cases where varying annual figures are reported by States Parties, details are provided in footnotes, and more information can be found in country profiles on the Monitor website.

Cluster munition remnants clearance in 2020–2021[124]

State Party

2020

2021

Clearance (km²)

CMR destroyed

Clearance (km²)

CMR destroyed

Afghanistan

0

276

0.42

32

BiH

0.34

162

0.62

2,995

Chad*

0.41

9

0

2

Chile

0

0

0

0

Croatia**

0.03

11

N/A

N/A

Germany

1.09

971

0.85

466

Iraq

5.67

6,146

10.16

8,202

Lao PDR

54.32

71,235

47.84

66,921

Lebanon

1.28

2,098

1.00

2,418

Mauritania

0

0

0.18

7

Montenegro**

0.25

15

N/A

N/A

Somalia

0

2

N/R

N/R

TOTAL

63.39

80,925

61.07

81,043

Note: CMR=cluster munition remnants; N/A=not applicable; N/R=not reported.

*Chad reported 0.41km2 cleared for the period September 2020–April 2021, but did not specify how much of this clearance took place in 2021.

**Croatia and Montenegro completed clearance of all cluster munition remnants contaminated areas in 2020.

Afghanistan reported that 0.42km² of cluster munition contaminated land was cleared in 2021, resulting in the destruction of 32 submunitions. Clearance was reported to have taken place “in April 2022,” but may have taken place in 2021 through to late March 2022, during the reporting period of Afghan calendar year 1401. No reduction via technical survey was carried out during land release and all sub-surface explosive items were addressed in the hazardous areas.[125]

BiH reported land release of 0.62km² and the destruction of 2,995 cluster munition remnants during 2021.[126] Since 2017, a total of 2.22 km² has been reported as cleared in BiH.[127]

Chad reported releasing 0.74km² of cluster munition contaminated land in the Delbo area of West Ennedi province between September 2020 and April 2021 (0.41km² cleared and 0.33km² reduced), with a total of 11 submunitions cleared and destroyed. It was not reported how much of this clearance took place in 2021.[128] In June 2021, HCND reported that the area was awaiting quality assurance to complete the land release process; this was completed in October 2021.[129]

Chile conducted no clearance in 2021, but carried out technical survey, leading to the reduction of 33.84km² of SHA and the identification of 30.77km² of remaining CHA, across four areas.[130] Chile was planning to undertake clearance of these areas from mid-2023 until June 2026.[131]

Germany cleared 0.85km² of contaminated land during 2021, destroying 466 cluster munition remnants. Between 2017 and 2021, a total of 4.38km² has been cleared within areas of suspected cluster munition remnant contamination.[132]

Iraq reported clearing 10.16km² of cluster munition contaminated land in 2021. An additional 6.48km² was released via technical and non-technical survey.[133] A total of 8,202 submunitions were cleared; 6,906 through battle area clearance and 1,296 through technical survey.[134] Most clearance took place in the south (9.71km²), though 0.45km² was cleared in the Middle Euphrates region.[135]­

As in previous years, Lao PDR cleared the most land, 47.84km², in 2021; representing 78% of all reported clearance. This included 45.14km² of agricultural land and 2.7km² of land needed for development.[136] In total, 66,921 cluster munition remnants were destroyed in Lao PDR in 2021; a decrease from the 71,235 destroyed in 2020.[137] More than 98% (47.16km²) of the total clearance for 2021 occurred in the nine most heavily contaminated provinces.[138] Commercial operators accounted for less than 3% of the land cleared in Lao PDR, clearing a total of 1.37km² (1.36km² for development and 0.01km² for agriculture) and destroying 540 cluster munition remnants. About one-third of land cleared by commercial operators was contaminated with cluster munitions (0.51km²).[139] The amount of land cleared with no cluster munition remnants found and destroyed represented just under 2% of the total amount of land cleared in Lao PDR in 2021 (0.86km²).

Lebanon reported releasing 1.24km² of cluster munition contaminated land during 2021. Of the total, 1km² was cleared, 0.1km² was cancelled through non-technical survey, and 0.14km² was reduced through technical survey.[140] The 1km² cleared was down from 1.28km² cleared during 2020. A total of 2,418 cluster munition remnants were cleared and destroyed in 2021 through surface, sub-surface, and rapid response. From 2017–2021, Lebanon cleared a total of 6.1km² of land contaminated by cluster munition remnants.

Mauritaniaundertook an initial assessment of contamination in February 2021, and submitted a request in June 2021 to extend its Article 4 clearance deadline by two years, until 1 August 2024.[141] In 2021, Mauritania cleared 0.18km² of contaminated land, destroying seven cluster munition remnants.[142]

As in 2020, Somalia provided no information on clearance of contaminated areas in 2021.

Article 4 deadlines and extension requests

If a State Party believes that it will be unable to clear and destroy all cluster munition remnants on its territory within 10 years of the entry into force of the convention for that country, it can request an extension to its clearance deadline under Article 4 for a period of up to five years.

Despite progress in addressing cluster munition contaminated areas, the first clearance deadline extension requests were submitted in 2019 by Germany and Lao PDR, both of which received five-year extensions. More requests have been submitted each year since then.

In 2020–2021, Afghanistan, BiH, Chile, Lebanon, and Mauritania submitted extension requests and were each granted extensions to their clearance deadlines. In 2022, Chile submitted a third extension request based on the completion of technical survey. Requests were also submitted in 2022 by BiH and Chad.

Status of Article 4 progress to completion

State Party

Original deadline

Extension period

(no. of request)

Current deadline

Status

Afghanistan

1 March 2022

4 years (1st)

1 March 2026

Unclear

BiH

1 March 2021

18 months (1st)

 

1 September 2022

Requested 1- year extension until 1 September 2023

Chad

1 September 2023

N/A

1 September 2023

Requested 13-month extension until 1 October 2024

Chile

1 June 2021

1 year (1st)

1 year (2nd)

1 June 2023

Requested 3-year extension until 1 June 2026

Germany

1 August 2020

5 years (1st)

1 August 2025

Expects to complete in 2025

Iraq

1 November 2023

N/A

1 November 2023

Behind target

Lao PDR

1 August 2020

5 years (1st)

1 August 2025

Behind target

Lebanon

1 May 2021

5 years (1st)

1 May 2026

Unclear

Mauritania

1 August 2022

2 years (1st)

1 August 2024

Unclear

Somalia

1 March 2026

N/A

1 March 2026

Unknown

Note: N/A=not applicable.

 

The Lausanne Action Plan notes that sustained efforts are required to ensure that States Parties complete their clearance obligations as soon as possible, and within their original Article 4 deadlines.[143] Only Iraq and Somalia remain within their original deadline, and the number of States Parties on track to meet their Article 4 obligations is decreasing.

Afghanistan hadinitially reported that it would meet its clearance deadline of 1 March 2022 as there was commitment from UNMAS and the US to support clearance of 10 areas.[144] However, the discovery of additional contamination and a change in donor commitments led Afghanistan to submit a four-year extension request until March 2026.[145] The request was granted in 2021. In May 2022, Afghanistan stated that it “commits itself to fulfilling its obligations in relation to the Convention on Cluster Munitions.” The Taliban-led government did not specifically state whether the country was on track to meet its Article 4 clearance deadline.[146

In its 2019 extension request, Germany reported that it should be able to complete clearance of the Wittstock military training area by 2024. Germany has since stated it was confident that the country would be cluster munition free by 2025.[147] In June 2022, Germany reported that 43% (4.73km²) of the 11km² of contaminated land was cleared between 2017 and 25 March 2022,[148] leaving 6.27km² to clear by 1 August 2025.[149] Challenges to the speed of clearance have included high density metal areas, essential fire maintenance work, limited demining personnel, and poor weather conditions.

Iraqreported in February 2022 that it will not meet its clearance deadline of 2023 and plans to submit an extension request.[150] RMAC South reported that challenges to clearance include the fact that national efforts are focused primarily on areas liberated from Islamic State, while new contaminated areas continue to be found through survey, particularly in the south.[151]

Lao PDR indicated that completion of survey would be the priority during its extension period, with an expectation that additional time and international support would be needed.[152] Survey was ongoing in 2021 and will form a basis for long-term planning and clearance prioritization.

In 2021, Lebanon was granted five additional years until 1 May 2026 to complete clearance. LMAC provided a detailed plan based on available assets; and despite the challenge of difficult terrain, believed that it would meet its 2026 deadline.[153] However, Lebanon reported that a decrease in dedicated international funding for cluster munition clearance affected the number of clearance teams. LMAC had also not received any government funding for clearance.[154] LMAC planned to focus on technical survey to speed up task completion, while also restricting destruction of cluster munition remnants to once per week, as opposed to every day, to enable more time for survey and clearance.[155] Operators have said that the 2026 target for completion of clearance is likely to be missed.[156]

In 2021, Mauritania was granted a two-year extension, to 1 August 2024, to complete survey and clearance.[157] During 2022, Mauritania reported that it still needed to confirm the extent of contaminated areas to confirm whether it would be able to meet this deadline.[158]

It is unknown whether Somalia will meet its clearance deadline of 1 March 2026, as it does not have an accurate picture of contamination and has no plan in place for clearance.

Three States Parties submitted extension requests during 2022.

Despite expectations that BiH would complete clearance by its deadline of 1 September 2022, it submitted a second extension request in 2022, asking for a further year.[159] According to the extension request, submitted in May 2022, this was to allow for finalization of documentation, and for additional time if any delays occurred.[160]

Chad reported in June 2021 that it was in the process of clearing its last known contaminated area and that clearance would be completed by the end of July 2021, ahead of its September 2023 deadline.[161] Yet Tibesti province, in the north, is suspected to have some cluster munition remnant contamination around former Libyan military bases. No survey has been conducted there due to insecurity and inaccessibility.[162] In 2022, Chad submitted its first extension request, seeking one year to conduct non-technical survey on 19.05km² of land in Tibesti province.

Chile has made no progress on clearance, despite having been a State Party to the convention since December 2010. In January 2020, Chile asked for an extension period of five years until 2026.[163] In June 2020, the request was revised to a one-year interim extension, to enable technical survey before submitting a second extension request with a clearance plan.[164] In June 2021, Chile submitted a second one-year extension request, without survey having taken place, citing a lack of resources and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.[165] Technical survey was undertaken later in 2021, before Chile submitted its third extension request in April 2022, for a period of three years, to clear 31km² of CHA identified in the survey. Following a preparatory phase, Chile plans to begin clearance operations in 2023 and complete clearance in 2026.[166]

The Article 4 extension requests from BiH, Chad, and Chile will be considered at the Tenth Meeting of States Parties of the Convention on Cluster Munitions in August–September 2022.

Risk education

Obligations regarding risk education

Article 4 of the Convention on Cluster Munitions 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 involves interventions aimed at protecting civilian populations and individuals, at the time of cluster munition use, when they fail to function as intended, and when they have been abandoned.

Risk education for cluster munition contamination

States Parties BiH, Iraq, Lao PDR, and Lebanon all reported conducting risk education in 2021. While Afghanistan did not report on risk education, international operators reported that they conducted risk education activities in Afghanistan in 2021 which included messaging on cluster munition remnants.[167] Risk education was also conducted in Chad and Mauritania, although it was not reported whether it specifically targeted the threat of cluster munition remnants.

In Lao PDR, risk education is specifically directed to address the risk behaviors associated with cluster munition remnants.

In other States Parties where cluster munition contamination is mixed with other forms of mine and ERW contamination, which might be more predominant, operators do not conduct specific risk education sessions related to cluster munition remnants.

In Somalia, cluster munition remnants are not included on risk education materials due to there being little evidence of contamination.[168]

Risk education targeting

The Lausanne Action Plan directs States Parties to implement context-specific, tailor-made risk education activities and interventions, which prioritize at-risk populations and are sensitive to gender, age, and disability, as well as the diversity of populations in affected communities.

Risk education direct beneficiaries in cluster munition affected States Parties by age and sex[169]

Redirectbenifsixsp CMM2022

In the majority of States Parties with cluster munition remnants contamination, the ordnance is found in rural areas and directly impacts people who rely on the land and natural resources for their livelihoods. Men are a particularly high-risk group due to their participation in activities which can take them into contaminated areas, such as cultivation, collection of forest products, and hunting and fishing.

According to risk education beneficiary data provided by States Parties Afghanistan, Chad, Iraq, Lao PDR, Lebanon, and Somalia, men formed the largest number of direct beneficiaries of risk education in 2021. At least 472,403 men were reached, representing 54% of all beneficiaries. The largest number of men (409,883) were reached through risk education conducted in Afghanistan.

In BiH, accidents are common in spring and autumn during agricultural work, and when people go to the forest to collect firewood and other raw materials. The Bosnia and Herzegovina Mine Action Center (BHMAC) reported that people often knowingly enter contaminated areas for economic reasons. Target groups for risk education in BiH include farmers, mountaineers, hunters, and people collecting wood and other resources.[170]

In Iraq, since 2020, the DMA has implemented an intensive risk education campaign aimed at Bedouin people in the southern governorate of Al-Muthanna, to address a rise in incidents in spring when Bedouins gather to graze livestock and plant crops.[171] Tourism seasons in Missan and Wassit governorates, and the grazing, transportation, and hunting seasons in Al-Muthanna and Samawah Badia were also a focus of risk education campaigns.[172] This focus continued in 2021, combined with the dissemination of messages via mobile phones and social media.[173]

In Afghanistan, communities living in proximity to hazards were targeted: returnees and IDPs, nomads, scrap metal collectors, and travelers.[174] In Chad, nomads, animal herders, traditional guides, and trackers remained high-risk groups due to their transit through desert areas which may be contaminated.[175] In Mauritania, shepherds, nomads, artisanal miners, and fisherfolk were all considered important groups for risk education.[176]

In Lao PDR, agricultural activities and the collection of natural resources were highlighted as high-risk activities in risk education materials. Casualties in Lao PDR in 2021 were most often caused by people digging the land, cutting grass, or making fires for warmth or cooking.[177]

In 2021, the longer-term social and economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic appeared to increase risks, with people forced to rely on harmful coping mechanisms. In both Lao PDR and Lebanon, economic hardship encouraged risk-taking as people tried to supplement diminishing livelihoods.[178] The collection of scrap metal and explosives remains a common practice in some areas of Lao PDR. A rise in the price of scrap in 2021 likely led to more people taking up scrap metal collection, putting them at risk from cluster munition remnants and other ERW.[179]

In Lebanon, refugees were particularly affected, as the impacts of the pandemic combined with other national crises.[180] The approximately 1.5 million Syrian refugees residing in Lebanon are regarded as a priority group for risk education, as several refugee camps and settlements are in close proximity to hazardous areas, while refugees are less familiar with the contamination.[181] In 2021, Lebanon provided risk education to Syrian refugees near the northeastern border.[182]

Children, particularly boys, remain susceptible to the lure of cluster munition remnants. Living in contaminated areas, they often lack sufficient knowledge of the risks and are prone to picking up and playing with items. Children remained a key target group for all affected States Parties in 2021; a total of 191,847 boys (22% of beneficiaries), and 122,085 girls (14%), were reached through risk education in Afghanistan, Chad, Iraq, Lao PDR, Lebanon, and Somalia.

In Iraq, children often participate in livelihood activities such as shepherding, foraging, or scrap metal collection, placing them at risk.[183] Young adult men are likely to engage in risk-taking behavior and occupations such as scrap metal collection, daily laboring, or agriculture. This group was reported to be the most difficult to reach through risk education sessions, partly due to their lack of interest in participating.[184] Adolescent boys were also cited as a difficult group to reach in Lao PDR.[185]

Risk education reached fewer women and girls in States Parties in 2021. They accounted for a collective 24% of all recorded beneficiaries in Afghanistan, Chad, Iraq, Lao PDR, Lebanon, and Somalia. In some contexts, such as in Afghanistan and Iraq, this was partly due to difficulty accessing women and girls in rural and conservative areas.[186]

Risk education delivery

Given the strong links between risk-taking behaviors, livelihoods, and vulnerability, as highlighted by the economic impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, it is important to integrate risk education efforts within wider mine action, humanitarian, and development initiatives.

Mine action operators in Afghanistan, BiH, Chad, Iraq, Lao PDR, Lebanon, and Mauritania all reported that risk education was integrated with clearance and survey activities in 2021.

BiH reported working with development operators to identify alternative sustainable livelihood activities, which would not expose people to the dangers of cluster munition contamination.[187]

In Chad, a new project began in Lake province in 2021 to provide risk education to community focal points, humanitarian workers, and schoolteachers.[188] Yet risk education was not reported to have been conducted in Tibesti, thought to be the most heavily contaminated province.

Risk education is conducted in schools in Lao PDR and Lebanon. In Lao PDR, risk education is integrated into the primary school curriculum for grades 1 to 5, across 10 of its 18 provinces, and was in the process of being integrated into the secondary school curriculum.[189] Lebanon implemented risk education in educational institutions under the school health curriculum.[190]

Risk education was conducted in schools in Afghanistan, BiH, Chad, Iraq, and Somalia in 2021, but not as part of the formal curriculum. In Iraq, the DMA was working with the Ministry of Education to integrate risk education into the curriculum for grades 5 and 6, and was developing plans to train groups of teachers in risk education delivery in all governorates.[191]

Teenagers, particularly adolescent boys, were seen as a particularly challenging group to reach effectively through traditional risk education methodology. In Lao PDR, HI launched a pilot project to better target youths, through improved materials and outreach. This project included the participation of survivors.[192]

World Education Laos began implementation of a three-year risk education project in 2021. It targets out-of-school children, youths, agricultural workers, and speakers of ethnic minority languages via non-formal education centers, media platforms, and using youth volunteers.[193]

Training local committees, or community focal points, has been particularly beneficial in States Parties where affected communities are remote, with varied languages; and where local people may distrust outsiders. This also builds a local capacity to support risk education and reporting.

In Chad, local committees were established to provide risk education orally in local languages, and via the distribution of leaflets during risk education sessions.[194]

In Lao PDR, a network of community volunteers supported by UXO Lao, the national operator, provided risk education in ethnic minority languages and reported evidence of cluster munition and ERW contamination.[195]

The use of digital media for risk education continued to expand in 2021. In Lebanon, LMAC and its implementing partners produced a risk education virtual reality video, delivered a risk education Facebook campaign, and began production of an interactive digital app.[196]

In Iraq, IKMAA and DMA participated in digital risk education workshops organized by MAG, which aimed to promote digital methods and boost the capacity of staff to produce materials.[197]

Mauritania supplemented its risk education radio campaign with online audiovisual content.[198]

In 2020 and 2021, HI used a risk education video with messages in sign language and subtitles in Iraq. HI also provided inclusion awareness training and positive disability inclusion messages for all risk education agents and community focal points across their programs.[199]

Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic

COVID-19 restrictions continued to create challenges for risk education delivery during 2021. In Iraq, operators were able to resume community sessions but with restricted numbers. Schools also remained closed for the first 10 months of the year.[200]

In Lebanon, new standard operating procedures, developed to facilitate the safe delivery of risk education during the COVID-19 pandemic, continued to be implemented in 2021.[201]

Some States Parties combined COVID-19 safety messages with risk education. In Afghanistan, UNMAS and the HALO Trust integrated such messages into their sessions.[202]

States Parties and operators used social media and other digital means to reach as many people as possible with risk education messages whilst social distancing measures were in place.

Monitoring and evaluating risk education

In Iraq, Danish Refugee Council conducted a Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices (KAP) survey in 2021 in Basra and Ninewa governorates. It confirmed that while at-risk people had an acceptable level of knowledge about explosive ordnance, risk-taking was underpinned by socio-economic factors. Men, teenage boys, and children were the most at-risk groups, and were the most prone to engaging in unsafe risk-taking behaviors such as scrap metal collection, daily laboring, or agricultural work.[203]

In Lao PDR, the Center for International Stabilization and Recovery (CISR) began a study to identify improvements and best practices for risk education implementing partners in 2021.[204]

Risk education in non-signatory states

In non-signatories Libya, Syria, Ukraine, and Yemen, as well as in Nagorno-Karabakh, risk education was carried out in 2021 to alert communities to the risk of contamination from recent or ongoing conflict. Risk education specifically addressed the threat posed by cluster munition remnants.

In Libya, risk education was conducted alongside clearance and survey operations. The HALO Trust provided risk education combined with mechanical clearance, to inform communities of the danger of clearance operations and raise awareness of the prevalence of ERW in rubble and damaged buildings.[205] Migrants and refugees in Libya were found to have lower awareness of contamination than Libyans.[206] Risk education materials were developed in multiple languages to ensure that migrants and refugees were reached.[207]

The HALO Trust provided risk education in Nagorno-Karabakh in 2021. Messaging on cluster munition remnants was a key part of its messaging for children. It also trained risk education trainers in five provinces of Armenia as part of an Action Against Hunger project.[208]

In Syria and Yemen, risk education continued amid ongoing conflict in 2021, although delivery was limited in both countries due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[209]

In Syria, in-person sessions were held with smaller groups of participants, and sessions held in IDP camps were sometimes cancelled. The security of risk education and community liaison teams was a major concern for operators amid continued conflict.[210] Both the HALO Trust and HI trained community volunteers in risk education delivery, to enable them to pass on messages within their communities when risk education teams were unable to visit.

In Yemen, migrants travelling to Aden were a high-risk group, and challenging to reach. Danish Refugee Council provided risk education to migrants through a mobile caravan.[211] UNDP implemented a risk education project from November 2021 to January 2022, to reach newly displaced people from Marib, in cooperation with the International Organization for Migration (IOM).[212]

In Ukraine, risk education increased from February 2022 in response to hostilities and the mass movement of people fleeing the conflict. In the initial weeks of Russia’s invasion, risk education stakeholders used digital approaches to reach as many people as possible. Metro and train stations were targeted with videos and printed materials, and interpersonal risk education was provided in shelters.[213]

Risk education activities were conducted by 10 organizations. Digital messaging reached some three million people, while 30,000 people had received in-person risk education by the end of June 2022.[214] Digital methods were the most prevalent means of reaching beneficiaries in Ukraine after the conflict began in early 2022.[215] For example, the BezMin (Without Mines) Facebook page, which was initially designed for conflict-affected areas in eastern Ukraine, was adapted to target at-risk audiences nationwide, in both the Russian and Ukrainian languages.[216]

The State Emergency Service of Ukraine (SESU) developed an app to report ordnance, whilst hotlines were disseminated for the reporting of objects including unexploded submunitions. [217]

In 2022, the EORE Advisory Group produced a detailed guidance note, which included safety messages on cluster munitions, to support authorities and humanitarian workers responding to the crisis in Ukraine and to inform the provision of emergency risk education.[218] GICHD published a guide to explosive ordnance in Ukraine for operators conducting mine action activities that “aims to help those in the field manage the risks they face.”[219]

Victim assistance

Obligations regarding victim assistance

As stated in the preamble to the Convention on Cluster Munitions, States Parties are determined “to ensure the full realisation of the rights of all cluster munition victims and recognising their inherent dignity.” The convention requires that States Parties assist all cluster munition victims in areas under their jurisdiction, and report on progress.

Specific activities to ensure adequate assistance is provided under Article 5 include:[220]

  • Collecting data and assessing the needs of cluster munition victims;
  • Coordinating victim assistance programs and developing a national plan;
  • Actively involving cluster munition victims in all processes that affect them;
  • Providing adequate and accessible assistance, including medical care, rehabilitation, psychological support, and socio-economic inclusion;
  • Providing assistance that is gender- and age-sensitive, and non-discriminatory.[221]

Thirteen States Parties to the Convention on Cluster Munitions have reported having responsibility for cluster munition victims.

States Parties which have a reported responsibility for cluster munition victims

Afghanistan

Albania

BiH

Chad

Croatia

Guinea-Bissau

Iraq

Lao PDR

Lebanon

Mauritania

Montenegro

Sierra Leone

Somalia

 

The Lausanne Action Plan’s commitments on victim assistance largely reflect the obligations enshrined in the convention.

Action 34 commits States Parties to provide first-aid and long-term medical care to cluster munition victims. It also requires them to ensure access to adequate rehabilitation, psychological, and psychosocial support services as part of a broader public health approach. Ideally, States Parties should have a national referral mechanism and a directory of services. Victim assistance should be provided in a non-discriminatory manner, and be sensitive to gender, age, and disability.

Action 35 requires States Parties to facilitate the social, educational, and economic inclusion of cluster munition victims. Such measures may take the form of employment referrals, access to micro-finance institutions, livelihood support, and rural development and social protection programs.

Action 37 commits States Parties to endeavor to support the training, development, and official recognition of multidisciplinary, skilled, and qualified rehabilitation professionals.

Medical care

Medical responses for victims include first-aid, field trauma response, emergency evacuation, transport, and immediate medical care, as well as addressing longer-term healthcare needs.

In Afghanistan, people living in remote areas lacked access to healthcare, due to a lack of health facilities and hazardous road conditions. War trauma and physical injuries left needs far beyond the capacity and resources of Afghanistan’s health system.[222] Overall, healthcare in the country was supported by donors via the Sehatmandi Project.[223] From August 2021, a pause in funding to the project left 90% of supported health facilities at risk of closure.[224]

In response to the failing health system, ICRC launched a six-month project to support hospitals in coordination with local authorities. ICRC reported that its long-standing dialogue with the Taliban had enabled it to carry out activities after the political transition.[225] A non-governmental organization (NGO) working in Afghanistan, EMERGENCY, also maintained a network of first-aid posts and primary health centers, with an ambulance service for isolated areas.[226] In Afghanistan, access to healthcare services was inadequate, especially for women. Women in Afghanistan are often not allowed to travel alone, and there is a shortage of trained female healthcare personnel.[227]

In Lao PDR, the Ministry of Health, with support from partners World Education Laos and the Quality of Life Association, provided medical treatment to survivors of cluster munitions in 2021.[228] World Education Laos partnered with the NRA to administer the War Victims Medical Fund, which provided emergency assistance to survivors and their families, including medical expenses, transportation, and funeral expenses.[229] In Houaphan and Xieng Khouang provinces, which have recorded among the highest numbers of cluster munition remnants incidents, HI supported healthcare operators to provide services free of charge or to provide financial support for urgent healthcare issues. Community focal points in Houaphan received first-aid training.[230] In heavily affected Luang Prabang province, HI also provided technical support to increase access to health services for persons with disabilities.[231]

Hospitals in Lebanon were forced to restrict essential health services, and limit the distribution of medicine, as the healthcare system deteriorated due to the economic crisis.[232] In 2021, ICRC trauma care training for LMAC personnel and first responders in cluster munition contaminated areas was not carried out, due to administrative constraints.[233]

Syrian refugees requiring reconstructive surgery and post-operative rehabilitation in Lebanon were treated at the Weapon Traumatology Training Centre, in the city of Tripoli, which ICRC had established in September 2014. However, the center closed in March 2021, in part due to financial constraints.[234]

Iraq reported that no emergency medical services are available in remote areas, meaning that injured survivors are evacuated by companions or receive first-aid from organizations working nearby.[235] ICRC provided medicines, supplies, and training for emergency and surgical care at an additional hospital in Anbar governorate in 2021 to build capacity to treat injuries.[236]

Timely referrals to medical care are important, especially if the available services are adequate when a patient arrives. Training healthcare workers on rehabilitation and disabilities, as carried out by HI in Chad, can improve identification and referral to rehabilitation centers.[237] In Chad, survivors requiring additional surgery following an amputation were referred to a hospital in N’Djamena.[238]

Mauritania reported that the government covers the costs of medical care for survivors.[239]

Access to healthcare in Sierra Leone is constrained by distances, costs, a lack of skilled medical staff, and poor service quality. Resources are unevenly distributed, with the vast majority of referral hospitals concentrated in the urban area of the capital, Freetown.[240]

Physical rehabilitation

Rehabilitation, which includes physiotherapy and the provision of assistive devices such as prosthetics, orthotics, mobility aids, and wheelchairs, aims to help cluster munition victims regain or improve mobility, and to engage in everyday activities. Comprehensive rehabilitation requires a multidisciplinary approach involving doctors, physiotherapists, prosthetists, social workers, and other specialists

The Rehabilitation 2030 initiative, launched in 2017, focuses on coordinated global action to improve rehabilitation through strengthening health systems and integrating rehabilitation into all levels of healthcare. The World Health Organization (WHO) has designed the Systematic Assessment of Rehabilitation Situation (STARS) tool to facilitate effective prioritization and strategic planning for rehabilitation in countries. This was complimented by the launch, in May 2022, of the Global Report on Assistive Technology, by the WHO and the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF). The report contains a wide-ranging dataset and analysis of current assistive technology access, and is the first of several planned reports on actions taken to improve access to assistive technology.

Integrating rehabilitation into national health systems, including by developing universal health coverage, is considered key to the sustainability of rehabilitation services, and is recommended by the WHO. Yet, to date, rehabilitation has not been a priority in many affected States Parties.

Healthcare systems in many States Parties with responsibility for cluster munition victims are underfunded and lack the necessary infrastructure and expertise. In some States Parties, such as Afghanistan and Lebanon, the quality of healthcare systems has severely deteriorated due to broader national economic and political conditions. Therefore, significant challenges remained to providing adequate, accessible, and affordable rehabilitation.

In Afghanistan, ICRC supported rehabilitation centers in seven provinces and provided materials, training, and technical assistance to six orthopedic workshops.[241] HI resumed its activities in four provinces after only a few days of service interruption amid the Taliban takeover in August 2021, and continued to operate its rehabilitation center in Kandahar. The number of beneficiaries increased as the end of fighting and lifting of roadblocks allowed more people to access the center. HI has been supporting the Ministry of Public Health to improve the skills of physiotherapists and prosthetics technicians through enhanced training.[242] The Swedish Committee for Afghanistan (SCA) continued to provide rehabilitation services, and commenced a new rehabilitation program in Bamyan province in June 2022.[243]

Albania needs to follow-up to address needs identified during a survivor assessment survey in 2016, and to maintain healthcare and rehabilitation services for amputees in remote areas. The Prosthetics Department at Kukes Regional Hospital, which is in the cluster munition impacted area, suffers from a lack of funding. Its work has also been hampered by inconsistent supplies for three years, with no materials available locally. Training for staff was also needed to build capacity. The Ministry of Health and Social Welfare is required to supply prosthetic materials to Kukes Regional Hospital and the National Ortho-Prosthetic Center in Tirana, but the level of support is unknown. Albania reported that prosthetics services at Kukes Regional Hospital were under strain due to the poor functioning of the national prosthetics center in Tirana.[244]

Chad needs more investment in physical rehabilitation. HI increased support for physical rehabilitation through PRODECO, an European Union (EU)-funded development project, running from 2017 through 2021.[245]

In Croatia, where substantial rehabilitation services are available, the Ombudsman for Persons with Disabilities noted the complexity and length of the procedure to obtain orthopedic aids.[246]

In Guinea-Bissau, the only physical rehabilitation center was supported by ICRC, which also covered treatment costs for some patients.[247] However, ICRC ended its support for the center at the end of 2021.[248] In January 2022, a dialogue of national stakeholders on victim assistance and disability rights discussed responses to the ICRC withdrawal.[249]

Iraq needs to improve coordination among its 23 rehabilitation centers. There was no national referral mechanism due to financial constraints and security issues. Community rehabilitation units require financial support for logistics, vehicles, and specialist personnel. Gender-sensitive services were available, as women staff were employed in rehabilitation and medical centers.

There was no progress during 2021 on increasing access to services in rural areas of Iraq, and no extension of rehabilitation to all governorates, due to the lack of funding.[250] ICRC opened a physical rehabilitation center in Erbil in March 2022. It is the largest such facility in Iraq, and will also address the needs of people from nearby governorates, as well as displaced persons and refugees, particularly those from Syria.[251] ICRC outreach activities enabled persons with disabilities in remote areas to obtain assistive devices and referrals for rehabilitation.[252]

Lao PDR needs to improve access to rehabilitation services, including to survivors from remote and rural areas.[253] In 2021, HI supported the Ministry of Health to integrate rehabilitation, while supporting the monitoring of outcomes of the National Rehabilitation Action Plan.[254]

In 2021, the Center for Medical Rehabilitation, operated jointly by the Ministry of Health and COPE, provided physical rehabilitation to 43 survivors in Lao PDR. This marked a significant increase from 2020, when six survivors were assisted.[255] In May 2022, NRA and COPE signed an agreement to implement a project for mobile rehabilitation services in Houaphan and Xieng Khouang provinces.[256]

Lebanon needs to secure sufficient funding for victim assistance and introduce a sustainable funding strategy for the physical rehabilitation sector.[257] The COVID-19 pandemic has placed added strain on its health and rehabilitation systems.[258] In 2021, ICRC supported five physical rehabilitation centers in Lebanon and provided assistive devices.[259]

In Mauritania, the government provided a grant for victim assistance to both the PNDHD and the National Orthopedic and Functional Rehabilitation Center (Centre National d’Orthopédie et de Réhabilitation Fonctionnelle, CNORF), where survivors also receive psychological support services.[260] Mauritania reported on few specific activities or services in 2021.

In Sierra Leone, responsibility for rehabilitation services has been gradually handed over from international NGOs, including HI and the Prosthetics Outreach Foundation, to the government. Progress was hampered by an absence of funding, a lack of prioritization for rehabilitation, and limited coordination between providers. Subsidized services and greater outreach are needed to expand access.[261] The Ministry of Health and Sanitation adopted the Assistive Technology Policy and Strategic Plan 2021–2025, which includes an objective to increase national capacity for rehabilitation, covering physiotherapy and prosthetics.[262]

In Somalia, where service provision remained challenging amid ongoing insecurity, physical rehabilitation centers run in 2021 by the Somali Red Crescent Society (SRCS) in Mogadishu and in Galkayo, Puntland, received support from the Norwegian Red Cross and ICRC.[263]

Training of rehabilitation professionals was ongoing in several states in 2021–2022. ICRC organized training for physiotherapists and physiotherapy students in Lebanon for the rehabilitation of amputees.[264] In May 2022, the Okard project, under the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and set to run for five years from 2017 to 2022, opened a development training facility for health professionals in Lao PDR. It is designed to improve the capacity of 150 doctors, nurses, and physiotherapists at the Center for Medical Rehabilitation.[265]

Psychological and psychosocial support

Psychological and psychosocial support includes counselling, individual peer-to-peer support, community-based support groups, and survivor networks. Peer-to-peer support was among the least supported victim assistance activities during 2021, despite being inclusive, targeted, cost-effective, and sustainable. Psychological and psychosocial support remained in need of further resources. Despite an overall lack of progress, some services of this nature were reported.

Afghanistan faced a severe lack of funding for all victim assistance activities, including survivor peer-to-peer support required to address their needs and those of conflict-affected communities.

BiH reported that psychological and psychosocial support were available, with Red Cross and Red Crescent social workers and volunteers trained to support persons with disabilities, including survivors.[266]

World Education Laos provided psychosocial support to 43 survivors in Lao PDR in 2021. Yet psychological support remained limited, with only three psychologists active in the country. HI assisted persons with the greatest need to gain priority access to psychological support.[267]

In Lebanon, ICRC provided mental health support in 2021. It also provided training in psychological counselling and psychosocial support.[268]

In Iraq, HI provided mental health and psychosocial support services.

Socio-economic inclusion and education

Economic inclusion via vocational training, micro-credit, income-generation projects, and employment programs continues to be an area of great need for cluster munition victims. Access to inclusive education, and social inclusion through sport, leisure, and cultural activities are also ongoing needs.

In 2021, survivors in Afghanistan, BiH, Lao PDR, and Lebanon received vocational training and economic support through local organizations, with international assistance.

According to Lao PDR’s National Protection Strategy, adopted in September 2020, services and benefits should be provided to persons with disabilities, “including UXO survivors with a disability,” who are not able to work or are from low-income families.[269]

In Chad, survivors benefited from income-generation activities supported by HI. This included a social fund which provided grants to start businesses to more than 1,000 beneficiaries, and training for teachers to improve the provision of inclusive education and psychosocial support.[270]

In Guinea-Bissau, ICRC promoted the social inclusion of persons with disabilities, by referring them for livelihood support and organizing public awareness-raising events.[271]

In Lao PDR, 14 survivors received vocational training and economic support in 2021 from the Quality of Life Association and from Terra Renaissance, a Japanese NGO. Lao PDR reported that, in 2019, 95% of registered ERW survivors of working age are unable to earn sufficient income slightly (down from 96% in 2015) to 95% in 2019.”[272]

The Disability Empowerment Movement, formed by a landmine survivor, worked to improve access to assistance for persons with disabilities in Sierra Leone in 2021.[273] HI adapted schools in the country to make them accessible for persons with disabilities, including survivors.[274]

 


[1] 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 cluster munitions that have been left behind or dumped, and are no longer under the control of the party that abandoned them. See, Convention on Cluster Munitions, Article 2 (5), (6), (7), and (15).

[2] NRA, “IMSMA Dashboard,” undated, bit.ly/NRADashboardLaoPDR; World Education Laos casualty data provided by email from Sarah Bruinooge, Country Director, World Education Laos, 4 March 2022; response to Monitor questionnaire by Lt.-Col. Ali Makki, Risk Education Section Head, Lebanon Mine Action Center (LMAC), 21 February 2022; and United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA), “Increasing Humanitarian Needs in Lebanon,” 14 April 2022, p. 7, bit.ly/UNOCHALebanon14April2022.

[3] Convention on Cluster Munitions, “Country profiles,” undated, www.clusterconvention.org/country-profiles.

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

[5] Lao PDR Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 deadline Extension Request, Part B, detailed narrative, 26 February 2019, p. 1, bit.ly/LaosCCMArt4ExtRequest2019.

[6] Survey is ongoing is Attepeu, Bolikhamxay, Champassak, Houphanh, Khammouane, Luang Prabang, Salavan, Savannakhet, Sekong, and Xieng Khouang provinces. Lao PDR Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form F, p. 6; Lao PDR Convention on Conventional Weapons (CCW) Protocol V Article 10 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form A; and NRA, “UXO Operational Dashboard,” undated, bit.ly/NRADashboardLaoPDR.

[7] Lao PDR Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 deadline Extension Request, Part B, detailed narrative, 26 February 2019, p. 1, bit.ly/LaosCCMArt4ExtRequest2019.

[8] Iraq Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form F, p. 26; and response to Monitor questionnaire by Haitham F. Lafta, National Focal Point for the Convention on Cluster Munitions and Operations Manager, RMAC South, 24 February 2022.

[9] Ibid.

[10] Iraq Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form F, p. 28.

[11] Chile Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form F, p. 4.

[12] Chile Convention on Cluster Munitions First Article 4 deadline Extension Request (revised), 29 June 2020, pp. 4–5, bit.ly/ChileCCMArt4ExtRequestJune2020.

[13] Chile Convention on Cluster Munitions Third Article 4 deadline Extension Request, April 2022, pp. 8 and 11–15, bit.ly/ChileArt4ExtRequestApril2022.

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

[15] Mauritania Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 deadline Extension Request, 30 June 2021, p. 2, bit.ly/MauritaniaCCMArt4ExtRequest2021.

[16] Presentation of Mauritania by Col. Mohamedou Baham, Coordinator, National Humanitarian Demining Programme for Development (Programme National de Déminage Humanitaire pour le Développement, PNDHD), Mine Action Support Group meeting, 27 April 2022, bit.ly/MauritaniaPresentation27April2022.

[17] Afghanistan reported that due to “the change of government and takeover of new regime, all the area is fortunately secure now and ready for conducting survey and clearance operations.” In the same statement it was also reported that according to Directorate of Mine Action Coordination (DMAC) data, there was 9.7km2 remaining to be cleared in May 2022. Statement of Afghanistan, Convention on Cluster Munitions intersessional meetings, Geneva, 16 May 2022, bit.ly/AfghanistanStatement16May2022.

[18] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Lt.-Col. Fadi Wazen, Operations Section Head, LMAC, 15 February 2022; and Lebanon Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form F, p. 16.

[19] Ibid.

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

[21] Germany Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form F, p. 17; and presentation of Germany, Convention on Cluster Munitions intersessional meetings, Geneva, 16–17 May 2022, bit.ly/GermanyPresentationMay2022. Remaining contamination can be estimated in a margin ranging between 5.85km² and 6.62km². At the convention's intersessional meetings in May 2022, Germany reported that 6.62km² remained to be cleared as of January 2022. Whereas in its most recent Article 7 report for calendar year 2021, Germany reported 5.85km² remaining, based on a total of 5.15km² cleared between 2017 and 2021. In the same report Germany reported clearance of a cumulative total of 5.09km², which would leave 5.91km² left to clear.

[22] BiH CCW Protocol V Article 10 Report (for calendar year 2016), Form A. See, CCW Protocol V Database, bit.ly/Article10DatabaseCCWPV.

[23] BiH Convention on Cluster Munitions Second Article 4 deadline Extension Request, May 2022, p. 10, bit.ly/BihArt4ExtRequestMay2022.

[24] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Brahim Djibrim Brahim, Coordinator, HCND, 18 June 2021; and Chad Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), Form F, p. 5.

[25] Emails from Romain Coupez, Regional Security Manager, MAG, 10 May 2017 and 31 May 2018; and response to Monitor questionnaire by Romain Coupez, Regional Security Manager, MAG, 3 May 2017.

[26] Chad Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 deadline Extension Request, 30 May 2022, p. 6, bit.ly/ChadArt4ExtRequestMay2022.

[27] Somalia draft Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), provided to the Monitor by Dahir Abdirahman Abdulle, National Director General, Somali Explosives Management Authority (SEMA), 17 July 2021; and responses to Monitor questionnaire and follow-up questions by Hussein Ibrahim Ahmed, Project Manager, United Nations Mine Action Service (UNMAS), 27 August and 21 September 2021.

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

[29] 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.

[30] IACHR, “Case of the Santo Domingo Massacre v. Colombia,” 30 November 2012, bit.ly/IACHRJudgment30Nov2012. 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.

[31] 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 Jamie Doward and Chris Bradford, “Fears grow that WW2 wreck could explode on Kent coast,” The Guardian, 17 August 2019, bit.ly/TheGuardian17Aug2019.

[32] “SS Richard Montgomery: Tourists flock to Sheerness wreck,” BBC, 17 February 2022, bbc.in/3OmKdHV.

[33] Email from Vicent Woboya, Director, Uganda Mine Action Center (UMAC), 8 April 2010.

[34] 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.

[35] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Sudi Alimasi Kimputu, National Coordinator, Congolese Mine Action Center (Centre Congolais de Lutte Antimines, CCLAM), 18 August 2020.

[36] DRC Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for 1 January 2013–31 December 2021), Form F, p. 14. DRC reported the contamination as being Mk7, the dispenser component of the MK20 cluster munition, containing Mk118 “Rockeye” submunitions.

[37] DRC Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for 1 January 2013–31 December 2021), Form F, p. 16, and Form G, p. 18; and response to Monitor questionnaire by Sudi Alimasi Kimputu, National Coordinator, CCLAM, 24 March 2022.

[38] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Nguyen Hang Phuc, Deputy Director General, VNMAC, April 2022.

[39] Emails from Prum Sophakmonkol, Secretary General, CMAA, 18 April 2022 and 3 June 2021.

[40] Southeast Asia Air Sortie Database, cited in Dave McCracken, “National Explosive Remnants of War Study, Cambodia,” Norwegian People’s Aid (NPA) in collaboration with CMAA, March 2006, p. 15; Human Rights Watch (HRW), “Cluster Munitions in the Asia-Pacific Region,” 17 October 2008, bit.ly/HRWClusterMunitionsAsia-Pacific2008; and Humanity & Inclusion (HI), Fatal Footprint: The Global Human Impact of Cluster Munitions (Brussels: HI, November 2006), p. 11, bit.ly/HIFatalFootprintNov2006.

[41] See Amnesty International, “Armenia/Azerbaijan: First confirmed use of cluster munitions by Armenia ‘cruel and reckless’,” 29 October 2020, bit.ly/AmnestyInternational29Oct2020; HRW, “Armenia: Cluster Munitions Kill Civilians in Azerbaijan,” 30 October 2020, bit.ly/HRWArmeniaAzerbaijan30Oct2020; and HRW, “Azerbaijan: Cluster Munitions Used in Nagorno-Karabakh,” 23 October 2020, bit.ly/HRWNagorno-Karabakh23Oct2020.

[42] Center for Humanitarian Demining and Expertise (CHDE), “The specialists of the ‘Center for Humanitarian Demining and Expertise’ are in Davit Bek,” 26 February 2021; and CHDE “The ‘Center for Humanitarian Demining and Expertise’ (CHDE) SNCO summarizes the work done in 2021,” 28 December 2021. Hazard areas thought to include cluster munition remnants in Kornidzor village, in the Syunik region, were identified via non-technical survey in 2017, but none were found during clearance in 2020. Response to Monitor questionnaire by Margaret Lazyan, Head of Mine Risk Education and Victim Assistance, CHDE, 22 March 2021.

[43] Liz Cookman, “Nagorno-Karabakh: Land still laced with mines, year after war,” Al Jazeera, 9 November 2021, bit.ly/AlJazeera9Nov2021; HALO Trust, “Making Stepanakert Safe: HALO has cleared all known explosive hazards in Stepanakert,” 18 May 2022, bit.ly/HALOTrust18May2022; and “The HALO Trust clears Stepanakert of unexploded hazards left by 2020 war,” Armenian Weekly, 19 May 2022, bit.ly/ArmenianWeekly19May2022.

[44] HRW, “Armenia: Cluster Munitions Kill Civilians in Azerbaijan,” 30 October 2020, bit.ly/HRWArmeniaAzerbaijan30Oct2020; and HRW, “Azerbaijan: Cluster Munitions Used in Nagorno-Karabakh,” 23 October 2020, bit.ly/HRWNagorno-Karabakh23Oct2020.

[45] “Azerbaijan detects more cluster bombs at scene of explosion in Yevlakh district,” News Az, 3 February 2022, bit.ly/NewsAz3February2022.

[46] HRW, “Cluster Munitions: Ban Treaty is Working,” 29 August 2019, bit.ly/HRWBanTreatyWorking29Aug2019.

[47] See, HRW, “Russia/Syria : Flurry of Prohibited Weapons Attacks,” 3 June 2019, bit.ly/HRWRussiaSyria3June2019; Syrian Network for Human Rights (SNHR), “Nearly 457 attacks by the Syrian and Russian Regimes Using Cluster Munitions were Documented, 24 of them since the Sochi Agreement,” 16 April 2019, sn4hr.org/blog/2019/04/16/53566/; SNHR, “Four Cluster Munition attacks documented since the start of the last offensive in December 2019, two of which were against schools,” 27 February 2020, bit.ly/SNHRSchoolAttacks27Feb2020; Amnesty International, “Syria: ‘Nowhere is safe for us’: Unlawful attacks and mass displacement in north-west Syria,” 11 May 2020, bit.ly/AmnestySyria15May2020; and email from Mary Wareham, Advocacy Director, Arms Division, HRW, 6 July 2022.

[48] HRW, “Russia/Syria: Flurry of Prohibited Weapons Attacks,” 3 June 2019, bit.ly/HRWRussiaSyria3June2019.

[49] Ibid.

[50] National Security and Defense Council (NSDC) and State Emergency Service 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; and UNDP, “Yemen Emergency Mine Action Project: Annual Report 2021,” February 2022, p. 7.

[52] UNDP, “Yemen Emergency Mine Action Project: Annual Report 2020,” February 2021, p. 8.

[53] Email from Stephen Bryant, Chief Technical Mine Action Advisor, UNDP, 11 August 2020.

[54] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Ahmet Sallova, Director, KMAC, 11 May 2022.

[55] Security Council, “Final report of the Panel of Experts on Libya established pursuant to Security Council resolution 1973 (2011),” S/2019/914, Annex 17, 9 December 2019, bit.ly/UNSCLibya9Dec2019; HRW, “Libya: Banned Cluster Munitions Used in Tripoli,” 20 February 2020, bit.ly/HRWLibya13Feb2020; and Sami Zaptia, “Tripoli forces claim successes and accuse Hafter of using cluster bombs and internationally banned phosphorus bombs,” Libya Herald, 20 June 2019, bit.ly/LibyaHerald20June2019.

[56] Email from Bob Seddon, Threat Mitigation Advisor, UNMAS, 5 July 2022.

[57] The three municipalities with cluster munition remnants contamination are Bujanovac, Tutin, and Užice. Response to Monitor questionnaire by Slađana Košutić, Senior Advisor for Planning, International Cooperation and European Integrations, Serbian Mine Action Center (SMAC), 1 March 2022; and ITF Enhancing Human Security, “Annual Report 2021,” undated, p. 54, bit.ly/ITFAnnualReport2021.

[58] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Slađana Košutić, Senior Advisor for Planning, International Cooperation and European Integrations, SMAC, 1 March 2022; and Serbia Mine Ban Treaty Third Article 5 deadline Extension Request, 31 March 2022, pp. 7 and 10, bit.ly/SerbiaMBTArt5ExtRequest2022.

[59] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Jurkuch Barach Jurkuch, Chairperson, National Mine Action Authority (NMAA), 27 May 2022.

[60] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Mohamed Abd El Majid, Chief of Operations, Sudan National Mine Action Center (SNMAC), 20 April 2022.

[61] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Muhabbat Ibrohimzoda, Director, Tajikistan National Mine Action Center (TNMAC), 20 April 2022.

[62] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Edwin Faigmane, Acting Chief, Mine Action Program, UNMAS, 12 April 2022.

[63] It is possible that some casualties may have occurred that were not yet reported or recorded.

[64] These reported attacks could be reasonably differentiated by date and location to avoid duplication of data. Monitor media monitoring from 24 February to 10 July 2022; HRW, “Intense and Lasting Harm: Cluster Munition Attacks in Ukraine,” 11 May 2022, bit.ly/HRWUkraine11May2022; HRW, “Ukraine: Cluster Munitions Repeatedly Used on Mykolaiv,” 17 March 2022, bit.ly/HRWUkraine17March2022; HRW, “Ukraine: Cluster Munitions Launched Into Kharkiv Neighborhoods,” 4 March 2022, bit.ly/HRWUkraine4March2022; and Amnesty International, “‘Anyone can die at any time’: Indiscriminate attacks by Russian forces in Kharkiv, Ukraine,” 13 June 2022, bit.ly/AmnestyUkraine13June2022.

[65] Ibid.

[66] “In Ukraine, investigated more than 180 facts of Russia’s use of prohibited cluster munitions – OGP,” Radio Svoboda, 13 June 2022, bit.ly/RadioSvoboda13June2022.

[67] OHCHR did not document all instances of cluster munition use. “Instead OHCHR focused on documenting emblematic cases, where the use of such munitions appeared to be in violation of IHL.” See OHCHR, “Situation of Human Rights in Ukraine in the Context of the Armed Attack by the Russian Federation, 24 February–15 May 2022,” 29 June 2022, pp. 6–7, bit.ly/OHCHRUkraine29June2022.

[68] Neither the Office of the Prosecutor General nor the OHCHR total casualty figures were included in the Monitor’s preliminary findings on cluster munition casualties in Ukraine in 2022 as they were not disaggregated by date and location. Some specific attacks reported by OHCHR were included, where details were available.

[69] Eliot Higgins, “These are the Cluster Munitions Documented by Ukrainian Civilians,” Bellingcat, 11 March 2022, bit.ly/Bellingcat11March2022; HRW, “Intense and Lasting Harm: Cluster Munition Attacks in Ukraine,” 11 May 2022, bit.ly/HRWUkraine11May2022; and Amnesty International, “‘Anyone can die at any time’: Indiscriminate attacks by Russian forces in Kharkiv, Ukraine,” 13 June 2022, bit.ly/AmnestyUkraine13June2022.

[70] Monitor media scanning of Ukrainian language media for the period February–July 2022.

[71] Calculated by the Monitor based on known data and various country estimates recorded in HI data. See HI, Circle of Impact: The Fatal Footprint of Cluster Munitions on People and Communities (Brussels: HI, May 2007), bit.ly/MonitorHICircleofImpact2007.

[72] HI, Circle of Impact: The Fatal Footprint of Cluster Munitions on People and Communities (Brussels: HI, May 2007), p. 104, bit.ly/MonitorHICircleofImpact2007; and UNDP press release, “Cluster Munitions Maim and Kill Iraqis Every Day,” 10 November 2010, bit.ly/UNDPIraq10Nov2010.

[73] Global cluster munition casualty data used by the Monitor includes global casualty data collected by HI in 2006 and 2007. See, HI, Circle of Impact: The Fatal Footprint of Cluster Munitions on People and Communities (Brussels: HI, May 2007), bit.ly/MonitorHICircleofImpact2007.

[74] No precise number, or estimate, of casualties is known for Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, or Mozambique. No cluster munition victims have been reported by Chile. However, media reporting in 2021 on two survivors of a military ERW accident in Chile in 1995 described the item as a cluster munition remnant. These would be the first recorded cluster munition casualties for Chile. 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 State Party Zambia, and non-signatories Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Zimbabwe. Better identification and disaggregation of cluster munition casualties is needed in most cluster munition affected states and areas.

[75] Mauritania Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form H; and Mauritania Mine Ban Treaty Fourth Article 5 deadline Extension Request, 24 March 2021, p. 8, bit.ly/MauritaniaMBT5ExtRequest2021.

[76] Afghanistan, Albania, BiH, Chad, Croatia, Guinea-Bissau, Iraq, Lao PDR, Lebanon, Mauritania, Montenegro, Sierra Leone, and Somalia.

[77] In its initial and annual Article 7 transparency reports for the convention, Colombia noted no reports or records on victims of cluster munitions. In November 2017, the Supreme Court of Colombia upheld the decision of the IACHR case, Santo Domingo Massacre vs. the Republic of Colombia, regarding redress for cluster munition victims of a cluster munition attack in Santo Domingo, Colombia, in 1998. As identified in the case of the Santo Domingo Massacre, 17 civilians were killed and 27 injured. All casualties occurred at the time of the attack and no unexploded submunition casualties have been reported. See, “César Romero Pradilla vs. Johan Jiménez Valencia,” Supreme Court of Colombia, 23 November 2017, bit.ly/CorteSupremaColombia2017; and IACHR, “Case: Massacre of Santo Domingo vs. Colombia: Sentence of 30 November 2012,” 30 November 2012, bit.ly/IACHRColombia30Nov2012.

[78] In 2020, Mozambique reported that “at the moment there is no evidence of victims of cluster munitions,” having previously stated, “Additional surveys are needed to identify victims of cluster munitions.” No such surveys were reported to date.

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

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

[81] This data includes casualties both directly from cluster munition attacks and due to cluster munition remnants.

[82] Felisa Palace, “Sidi, the Saharawi boy who enjoyed the beach of Berria and is now recovering from the explosion of a cluster bomb,” El Faradio, 2 March 2021, bit.ly/ElFaradio2March2021.

[83] “Children” means persons under 18 years old, or casualties that were listed as “child” in existing data or reporting. The 66% figure represents 90 children among 136 casualties where the age group was known. The age of 13 casualties in 2021 was not recorded.

[84] NRA, “IMSMA Dashboard,” undated, bit.ly/NRADashboardLaoPDR.

[85] There were 57 boys and 12 girls. For 21 child casualties recorded in 2021, the sex was not known.

[86] The sex of 33 casualties in 2021 was not recorded.

[87] UNMAS, “Where We Work: Afghanistan,” updated March 2022, unmas.org/en/programmes/afghanistan.

[88] UNMAS, “UNMAS Afghanistan: Enabling humanitarian and development initiatives unimpeded by explosive ordnance,” presentation at Mine Action Support Group meeting, 19 October 2021, bit.ly/UNMASAfghanistan19Oct2021.

[89] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Mohammad Akbar Oriakhil, Head of Planning and Programmes, DMAC, 21 February 2021.

[90] MAPA and UNMAS, “30 Years of Impact: An Evaluation of the Mine Action Programme of Afghanistan,” 15 November 2021, p. 95, bit.ly/MAPAUNMAS15Nov2021.

[91] Iraq Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form J, p. 40; and GICHD, “Iraq: Strategic Planning Collaboration Mission,” 6 July 2021, bit.ly/GICHDIraq6July2021.

[92] Responses to Monitor questionnaire by Khatab Omer Ahmed, Planning Manager, IKMAA, 3 April 2022; and by Ahmed Al-Jasim, Director of Planning and Information, DMA, 10 March 2022; and GICHD, “Iraq: Strategic Planning Collaboration Mission,” 6 July 2021, bit.ly/GICHDIraq6July2021.

[93] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Ahmed Al-Jasim, Director of Planning and Information and Focal Point for the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention (APMBC), DMA, 13 April 2021; and Iraq Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), Form C, p. 26. See, Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Database, bit.ly/Article7DatabaseMBT.

[94] UNDP, “Background paper for UXO donor and media field visit,” 31 March–2 April 2021; and statement of Lao PDR, Agenda Item: National Implementation Measures, Convention on Cluster Munitions intersessional meetings, Geneva, 16 June 2022, bit.ly/LaoPDRStatement16June2022.

[95] Ibid.

[96] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Lt.-Col. Moustapha Ould Cheikhna, Head of Operations, PNDHD and the Ministry of Interior and Decentralization (MIDEC), 21 March 2022; and email from Lt.-Col. Moustapha Ould Cheikhna, Head of Operations, PNDHD and MIDEC, 16 June 2022.

[97] Email from Lt.-Col. Moustapha Ould Cheikhna, Head of Operations, PNDHD and MIDEC, 16 June 2022.

[98] BiH Convention on Cluster Munitions Second Article 4 deadline Extension Request, May 2022, bit.ly/BihArt4ExtRequestMay2022.

[99] Chad Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 deadline Extension Request, 22 April 2022, bit.ly/ChileCCMArt4ExtRequestApril2022.

[100] Chile Convention on Cluster Munitions Third Article 4 deadline Extension Request (revised), 9 May 2022, bit.ly/ChileRevisedArt4RequestMay2022.

[101] Chile Convention on Cluster Munitions Second Article 4 deadline Extension Request, 22 June 2021, pp. 3 and 5, bit.ly/ChileCCMArt4ExtRequestJune2021.

[102] Chile Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form J, p. 23; and responses to Monitor questionnaire by Tamsin Haigh, Programme Officer, HALO Trust, 30 April 2020; by Shajeevdhar Mahalingam, Community Liaison Manager, MAG, 11 May 2020; and by Julien Kempeneers, Mine Action Coordinator, HI, 20 May 2020.

[103] Responses to Monitor questionnaire by Ahmed Al-Jasim, Director of Planning and Information, DMA, 10 March 2022; and by Lt.-Col. Moustapha Ould Cheikhna, Head of Operations, PNDHD and MIDEC, 21 March 2022; UNDP, “Background paper for UXO donor and media field visit,” 31 March–2 April 2021; and statement of Lao PDR, Agenda Item: National Implementation Measures, Convention on Cluster Munitions intersessional meetings, Geneva, 16 June 2022, bit.ly/LaoPDRStatement16June2022.

[104] Afghanistan Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 deadline Extension Request (revised), 10 August 2021, pp. 11 and 13, bit.ly/AfghanistanRevisedArt4ExtRequest2021.

[105] Mauritania response to the Observations and Comments of the Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 Analysis Group, 27 July 2021, bit.ly/MauritaniaResponse27July2021.

[106] Lao PDR Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form H, p. 20.

[107] Ibid.; and response to Monitor questionnaire by Reinier Carabain, Operations Manager, HI Lao PDR, 14 June 2021.

[108] NRA, National UXO/Mine Action Standards of Lao PDR, “Chapter 0: Introduction and Glossary,” undated, p. xi, bit.ly/NRAStandardsIntroduction.

[109] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Ahmed Al-Jasim, Director of Planning and Information and Focal Point for APMBC, DMA, 13 April 2021; Iraq Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), Form C, p. 27; and Iraq Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), Form A, p. 10.

[110] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Lt.-Col. Fadi Wazen, Operations Section Head, LMAC, 15 February 2021.

[111] Mauritania response to Observations and Comments of the Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 Analysis Group, 28 July 2021, bit.ly/MauritaniaResponse27July2021; and response to Monitor questionnaire by Lt.-Col. Moustapha Ould Cheikhna, Head of Operations, PNDHD and MIDEC, 21 March 2022.

[112] Iraq Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), Form A, p. 10; and responses to Monitor questionnaire by Haitham F. Lafta, National Focal Point for the Convention on Cluster Munitions and Operations Manager, RMAC South, 5 March 2021; and by Mohammed Akbar Oriakhil, Head of Planning and Programmess, DMAC, 21 February 2021.

[113] Iraq Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), Form A, p. 10; and response to Monitor questionnaire by Haitham F. Lafta, National Focal Point for the Convention on Cluster Munitions and Operations Manager, RMAC South, 5 March 2021.

[114] Bosnia and Herzegovina Mine Action Center (BHMAC), “Accreditation Guide for Mine Risk Education Organizations,” undated, bit.ly/BHMACAccreditationGuide.

[115] Responses to Monitor questionnaire by Mudhafar Aziz Hamad, Director of Risk Education and Victim Assistance, IKMAA, 1 April 2022; by Ahmed Al-Jasim, Director of Planning and Information, DMA, 10 March 2022; by Eliana Lucia Herrera Aguirre, EORE Technical Advisor, Danish Refugee Council, 8 April 2022; by Alexandra Letcher, Community Liaison Manager and Team Leader, MAG, 6 April 2022; and by Sofia Cogollos, Armed Violence Reduction Specialist, HI, 8 April 2022.

[116] Responses to Monitor questionnaire by Lt.-Col. Ali Makki, Risk Education Section Head, LMAC, 21 February 2022; and by Lt.-Col. Moustapha Ould Cheikhna, Head of Operations, PNDHD and MIDEC, 21 March 2022.

[117] Responses to Monitor questionnaire by Jonty Taylor, Operations Officer, HALO Trust, 9 March 2021; and by Julien Kempeneers, Regional Armed Violence Reduction and Mine Action Specialist, HI, 6 April 2022.

[118] Global Protection Cluster, “Chad Protection Cluster Strategy, 2019,” undated, p. 3, bit.ly/ChadProtectionCluster2019; and responses to Monitor questionnaire by Brahim Djibrim Brahim, Coordinator, HCND, 18 June 2021; by Jason Lufuluabo Mudingay, Chief of Operations, HI, 13 March 2021; and by Ludovic Kouassi, Community Liaison Manager, MAG, 8 May 2020.

[119] The February 2020 edition of IMAS 13.10, as reported on in Landmine Monitor 2021, was taken offline in a review process to address concerns raised by international stakeholders.

[120] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Reinier Carabain, Operations Manager, HI Lao PDR, 14 June 2021.

[121] Responses to Monitor questionnaire by Lt.-Col. Fadi Wazen, Operations Section Head, LMAC, 15 February 2022; and by Col. Mansour Shtay, Victim Assistance Section Head, LMAC, 21 February 2022.

[122] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Ahmed Al-Jasim, Director of Planning and Information, DMA, 10 March 2022.

[123] Reporting on “measures taken to provide risk reduction education and, in particular, an immediate and effective warning to civilians living in cluster munition contaminated areas under its jurisdiction or control” has been allocated to Form H of the Article 7 transparency report.

[124] Afghanistan data: statement of Afghanistan, Convention on Cluster Munitions intersessional meetings, Geneva, 16 May 2022, bit.ly/AfghanistanStatementMay2022; BiH data: BiH Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form F; and BiH Convention on Cluster Munitions Second Article 4 deadline Extension Request, May 2022, p. 6, bit.ly/BihArt4ExtRequestMay2022; Chad data: response to Monitor questionnaire by Brahim Djibrim Brahim, Coordinator, HCND, 10 May 2022; and Chad Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 deadline Extension Request, 30 May 2022, p. 3, bit.ly/ChadArt4ExtRequestMay2022; Chile data: Chile Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form F; and Chile Convention on Cluster Munitions Third Article 4 deadline Extension Request (revised), 9 May 2022, p. 8, bit.ly/ChileRevisedArt4RequestMay2022; Germany data: Germany Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form F; Iraq data: response to Monitor questionnaire by Haitham F. Lafta, National Focal Point for the Convention on Cluster Munitions and Operations Manager, RMAC South, 24 February 2022; and Iraq Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), Form F; Lao PDR data: Lao PDR Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form F; NRA, “Operations Dashboard,” undated, bit.ly/NRALaosOperationsDashboard; and Lao PDR CCW Protocol V Article 10 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form A; Lebanon data: response to Monitor questionnaire by Lt.-Col. Fadi Wazen, Operations Section Head, LMAC, 15 February 2022; and Lebanon Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form F; Mauritania data: response to Monitor questionnaire by Lt.-Col. Moustapha Ould Cheikhna, Head of Operations, PNDHD and MIDEC, 21 March 2022; and presentation of Mauritania at Mine Action Support Group meeting, 27 April 2022, bit.ly/MauritaniaPresentationApril2022. For all data obtained in Article 7 reports, see Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Database, bit.ly/Article7DatabaseCCM.

[125] Statement of Afghanistan, Convention on Cluster Munitions intersessional meetings, Geneva, 16 May 2022, bit.ly/AfghanistanStatementMay2022.

[126] BiH Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form F; and BiH Convention on Cluster Munitions Second Article 4 deadline Extension Request, May 2022, p. 6, bit.ly/BihArt4ExtRequestMay2022. BHMAC reported different figures to the Monitor with a total of 0.98km² of cluster munition contaminated land released and 1,261 cluster munition remnants destroyed in 2021. Response to Monitor questionnaire by Miodrag Gajic, Analysis and Reporting Officer, BHMAC, 19 April 2022. In its annual progress report, BHMAC also reported a total of 0.98km2 released through clearance and technical survey in 2021, but with 3,178 submunitions cleared. BHMAC, “Report on Mine Action in Bosnia and Herzegovina for 2021,” (draft), undated, p. 11.

[127] In 2019, BiH reported that 3.6km² was “separated” from the total cluster munition remnants contaminated area during non-technical survey as it was considered “non-conventionally contaminated.” It was not reported to what extent previous clearance occurred in these areas. Statement of BiH, Convention on Cluster Munitions Ninth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 2–4 September 2019.

[128] Chad Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), Form F, pp. 4–5; and Chad Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 deadline Extension Request, 30 May 2022, p. 4, bit.ly/ChadArt4ExtRequestMay2022. Nine submunitions were reported destroyed in 2020, leaving two submunitions presumed destroyed in 2021.

[129] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Brahim Djibrim Brahim, Coordinator, HCND, 18 June 2021; and Chad Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 deadline Extension Request, 30 May 2022, p. 4, bit.ly/ChadArt4ExtRequestMay2022.

[130] Pampa Chaca Este (17.11km²) in Arica province; Delta (11.32km²) and Barrancas (0.91km²) in Iquique province; and Punta Zenteno (1.43km²) in Punta Arenas province.

[131] Chile Convention on Cluster Munitions Third Article 4 deadline Extension Request, April 2022, p. 5, bit.ly/ChileArt4ExtRequestApril2022. Chile had planned to undertake technical survey in 2020, but claimed that COVID-19 had delayed implementation.

[132] Germany Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form F, p. 17. In its Article 7 report, Germany reported clearance of 4.38km² within SHA and 0.71km² outside of these areas between 2017 and 2021 (a cumulative total of 5.09km²). In the same report, Germany also provided a different total of 5.15km² cleared in 2017–2021.

[133] Iraq Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form F, p. 28; and response to Monitor questionnaire by Haitham F. Lafta, National Focal Point for the Convention on Cluster Munitions and Operations Manager, RMAC South, 24 February 2022.

[134] Iraq Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), Form F, p. 28.

[135] Iraq Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form F, p. 29; and response to Monitor questionnaire by Haitham F. Lafta, National Focal Point for the Convention on Cluster Munitions and Operations Manager, RMAC South, 24 February 2022.

[136] NRA, “IMSMA dashboard,” undated, bit.ly/NRADashboardLaoPDR; and Lao PDR Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form F, p. 13. In its Article 7 report, Lao PDR reported a total of 45.57km² cleared (43.01km² for agriculture and 2.56km² for development). The IMSMA dashboard is regularly updated and provides the updated total of 47.84km² cleared in 2021 (as accessed in July 2022).

[137] Lao PDR Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form F, p. 7; and Lao PDR Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), Form F, p. 10.

[138] Lao PDR Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form F, pp. 9–13; and NRA, “IMSMA dashboard,” undated, bit.ly/NRADashboardLaoPDR. The nine provinces are Attapeu, Champasak, Houaphanh, Khammouane, Luang Prabang, Salavan, Savannakhet, Xekong, and Xieng Khouang.

[139] Monitor analysis of data from NRA, “IMSMA dashboard,” undated, bit.ly/NRADashboardLaoPDR.

[140] Lebanon Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form F, p. 15.

[141] Mauritania Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 deadline Extension Request, 30 June 2021, p. 2, bit.ly/MauritaniaCCMArt4ExtRequest2021.

[142] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Lt.-Col. Moustapha Ould Cheikhna, Head of Operations, PNDHD and MIDEC, 21 March 2022; and Mauritania Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form F, p. 15.

[143] Convention on Cluster Munitions, “Lausanne Action Plan,” September 2021, bit.ly/LausanneActionPlan.

[144] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Mohammad Akbar Oriakhil, Head of Planning and Programmes, DMAC, 21 February 2021.

[145] Afghanistan Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 deadline Extension Request, 3 August 2021, bit.ly/AfghanistanCCMArt4ExtRequest2021; and email from Mohammad Akbar Oriakhail, Head of Planning and Programmes, DMAC, 17 July 2021.

[146] Statement of Afghanistan, Convention on Cluster Munitions intersessional meetings, Geneva, 16 May 2022, bit.ly/AfghanistanStatement16May2022.

[147] Germany Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 deadline Extension Request, 15 January 2019, bit.ly/GermanyCCMArt4ExtRequest2019; and statement of Germany, Convention on Cluster Munitions Second Review Conference, held virtually, 26 November 2020, bit.ly/GermanyStatement26Nov2020.

[148] Presentation of Germany, “German experience on clearance and destruction of cluster munitions remnants,” Convention on Cluster Munitions intersessional meetings, Geneva, 16 May 2022, bit.ly/GermanyPresentation16May2022.

[149] In its presentation at the Convention on Cluster Munitions intersessional meetings, Germany reported 6.62km² left to clear. See, Presentation of Germany, “German experience on clearance and destruction of cluster munitions remnants,” Convention on Cluster Munitions intersessional meetings, Geneva, 16 May 2022, bit.ly/GermanyPresentation16May2022.

[150] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Haitham F. Lafta, National Focal Point for the Convention on Cluster Munitions and Operations Manager, RMAC South, 24 February 2022; and Iraq Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form F, p. 32.

[151] Iraq states that obtaining accurate information about the strike locations of US forces would help speed up the survey, planning, and clearance process. Responses to Monitor questionnaire by Haitham F. Lafta, National Focal Point for the Convention on Cluster Munitions and Operations Manager, RMAC South, 24 February 2022 and 5 March 2021; and Iraq Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), Form J, p. 47.

[152] Lao PDR Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 deadline Extension Request, executive summary, 26 February 2019, bit.ly/LaosExecutiveSummary2019.

[153] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Lt.-Col. Fadi Wazen, Head of Operations, LMAC, 15 February 2021.

[154] Lebanon Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form F, p. 18.

[155] Ibid., pp. 18–19; email from Southern Craib, Operations Manager, NPA Lebanon, 29 March 2022; and LMAC, “LMAC Annual Report 2021,” undated, pp. 32–33, bit.ly/LMACAnnualReport2021.

[156] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Southern Craib, Operations Manager, NPA Lebanon, 13 March 2022.

[157] Mauritania Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 deadline Extension Request, 30 June 2021, p. 2, bit.ly/MauritaniaCCMArt4ExtRequest2021.

[158] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Lt.-Col. Moustapha Ould Cheikhna, Head of Operations, PNDHD and MIDEC, 21 March 2022.

[159] In 2021, BiH indicated to the Monitor that it expected to meet its Article 4 clearance deadline. Response to Monitor questionnaire by Želiko Ɖogo, Officer for Analysis and Reporting, BHMAC, 2 April 2021.

[160] BiH Convention on Cluster Munitions Second Article 4 deadline Extension Request (revised), May 2022, p. 10, bit.ly/BiHRevisedExtRequestMay2022.

[161] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Brahim Djibrim Brahim, Coordinator, HCND, 18 June 2021; and email from Olivier Shu, Senior Technical Advisor, Swiss Foundation for Demining (Fondation Suisse de Déminage, FSD), 19 June 2021.

[162] Chad Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 4 deadline Extension Request, 30 May 2022, pp. 1–4, bit.ly/ChadArt4ExtRequestMay2022; emails from Romain Coupez, Regional Security Manager, MAG, 10 May 2017 and 31 May 2018; and response to Monitor questionnaire by Romain Coupez, Regional Security Manager, MAG, 3 May 2017.

[163] Chile Convention on Cluster Munitions First Article 4 deadline Extension Request, January 2020, bit.ly/ChileCCMArt4ExtRequestJan2020.

[164] Chile Convention on Cluster Munitions First Article 4 deadline Extension Request (revised), 29 June 2020, pp. 5 and 7; bit.ly/ChileCCMArt4ExtRequestJune2020.

[165] Chile Convention on Cluster Munitions Second Article 4 deadline Extension Request, 22 June 2021, bit.ly/ChileCCMArt4ExtRequest2021.

[166] Chile Convention on Cluster Munitions Third Article 4 deadline Extension Request (revised), 9 May 2022, pp. 15–18, bit.ly/ChileRevisedArt4RequestMay2022.

[167] Responses to Monitor questionnaire by Mohammed Daud Raufi, Head of the Survey and Information Department, HALO Trust Afghanistan, 7 April 2022; and by Mahboob Rahman, Risk Education Specialist, Danish Refugee Council Afghanistan, 6 April 2022.

[168] Responses to Monitor questionnaire by Sudip Thapa, Operations Officer, UNMAS Somalia, 19 March 2021; by Alice Mougin, Programme Officer, HALO Trust, March 2021; by Robert Iga Afedra, Country Director, NPA Somalia, 5 April 2022; and by Katie Nelson, Community Liaison Manager, MAG Somalia, 27 April 2022.

[169] Risk education beneficiary data was collected from States Parties and international operators, and represents six cluster munition contaminated States Parties: Afghanistan, Chad, Iraq, Lao PDR, Lebanon, and Somalia. Beneficiary data for BiH and Mauritania was not disaggregated by age and sex, and therefore was not included in these totals. International operators collected data according to the Standard Beneficiary Definition guidelines. See, DanChurchAid (DCA), Danish Refugee Council, FSD, HALO Trust, HI, MAG, and NPA, “Standardising Beneficiary Definitions in Humanitarian Mine Action: Second Edition,” p. 9, October 2020, bit.ly/StandardisingBeneficiaryDef. Direct beneficiaries are defined as those who receive safety messages via interpersonal risk education, mass and digital media, and training of trainers programs. However, beneficiary data for digital media was often not disaggregated and therefore was not included in these totals.

[170] BiH Convention on Cluster Munitions Second Article 4 deadline Extension Request, May 2022, p. 8, bit.ly/BihArt4ExtRequestMay2022.

[171] Iraq Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form I, p. 56; and responses to Monitor questionnaire by Haitham F. Lafta, Head of Operations, RMAC South, 13 August 2020; and by Ahmed Al-Jasim, Director of Planning and Information and Focal Point for APMBC, DMA, 13 April 2021.

[172] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Ahmed Al-Jasim, Director of Planning and Information and Focal Point for APMBC, DMA, 13 April 2021; and Iraq Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), Form I, p. 39.

[173] Iraq Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form G, pp. 34–35.

[174] Responses to Monitor questionnaire by Abdul Hamid Ibrahimi, Acting Head of EORE Department, DMAC, 20 February 2021; and by Zareen Khan Mayar, Armed Violence Reduction Technical Advisor, HI, 17 March 2021.

[175] Responses to Monitor questionnaire by Ludovic Kouassi, Community Liaison Manager, MAG, 8 May 2020; and by Jason Lufuluabo Mudingay, Chief of Operations, HI, 13 March 2021.

[176] Mauritania Mine Ban Treaty Fourth Article 5 deadline Extension Request, 24 March 2021, p. 8, bit.ly/MauritaniaMBT5ExtRequest2021.

[177] NRA, “IMSMA Dashboard,” undated, bit.ly/NRADashboardLaoPDR; and World Education Laos casualty data provided by email from Sarah Bruinooge, Country Director, World Education Laos, 4 March 2022. See also, “UXO kills three, injures two during mines clearance operation in southern Laos,” The Star, 6 December 2021, bit.ly/TheStarLaos6Dec2021; and Phomphong Laoin, “Three killed, two injured in UXO explosion,” Vientiane Times, 7 December 2021, bit.ly/VientianeTimes7Dec2021.

[178] NRA, “IMSMA Dashboard,” undated, bit.ly/NRADashboardLaoPDR; World Education Laos casualty data provided by email from Sarah Bruinooge, Country Director, World Education Laos, 4 March 2022; response to Monitor questionnaire by Lt.-Col. Ali Makki, Risk Education Section Head, LMAC, 21 February 2022; and UNOCHA, “Increasing Humanitarian Needs in Lebanon,” 14 April 2022, p. 7, bit.ly/UNOCHALebanon14April2022.

[179] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Megan MacMillan, Operations Officer, HALO Trust, 23 March 2022.

[180] UNOCHA, “Emergency Response Plan: Lebanon 2021–2022,” August 2021, pp. 5–6, bit.ly/UNOCHALebanonAug2021; and UNOCHA, “Increasing Humanitarian Needs in Lebanon,” 14 April 2022, p. 7, bit.ly/UNOCHALebanon14April2022.

[181] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Maj. Ali Makki, Risk Education Section Head, LMAC, 9 April 2020.

[182] Lebanon Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form G, p. 22.

[183] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Alexandra Letcher, Community Liaison Manager and Team Leader, MAG, 6 April 2022.

[184] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Eliana Lucia Herrera Aguirre, EORE Technical Advisor, Danish Refugee Council, 8 April 2022.

[185] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Julien Kempeneers, Regional Armed Violence Reduction and Mine Action Specialist, HI, 6 April 2022.

[186] Responses to Monitor questionnaire by Mohammed Daud Raufi, Head of Survey and Information Department, HALO Trust, 7 April 2022; by Eliana Lucia Herrera Aguirre, EORE Technical Advisor, Danish Refugee Council, 8 April 2022; and by Ismaeel Ahmad Saeed, National Operations Manager, FSD, 23 March 2022.

[187] BiH Convention on Cluster Munitions Second Article 4 deadline Extension Request, May 2022, p. 9, bit.ly/BihArt4ExtRequestMay2022.

[188] HI, “Country Card: Chad 2021,” September 2021, p. 9, bit.ly/HIChadCountryCard2021.

[189] World Education Laos, “Comprehensive Mine Risk Education,” undated, bit.ly/RiskEducationWEL; and Lao PDR Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form G, p. 12.

[190] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Habbouba Aoun, Coordinator, Landmine Resource Center, University of Balamand, 9 June 2020.

[191] Iraq Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), Form I, p. 51; and response to Monitor questionnaire by Ahmed Al-Jasim, Director of Planning and Information and Focal Point for APMBC, DMA, 10 March 2022.

[192] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Julien Kempeneers, Regional Armed Violence Reduction and Mine Action Specialist, HI, 6 April 2022.

[193] Email from Sarah Bruinooge, Country Director, World Education Laos, 4 March 2022.

[194] Responses to Monitor questionnaire by Brahim Djibrim Brahim, Coordinator, HCND, 18 June 2021 and 10 May 2022; and Chad Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), Form G, p. 6.

[195] Lao PDR Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), Form G, p. 13; and Lao PDR Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form G, p. 17.

[196] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Ali Shuaib, Community Liaison Manager, MAG, 4 March 2021; Lebanon Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form G, p. 21; EORE Advisory Group, “EORE Hour: Lessons Learned from MAG’s Digital EORE Project,” YouTube.com, 7 December 2021, bit.ly/EOREAdvisoryGroup7Dec2021; and University of Balamand, “EORE Digital Application,” EORE Hour, 26 January 2022.

[197] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Alexandra Letcher, Community Liaison Manager and Team Leader, MAG, 6 April 2022.

[198] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Lt.-Col. Moustapha Ould Cheikhna, Head of Operations, PNDHD and MIDEC, 21 March 2022.

[199] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Sofia Cogollos, Armed Violence Reduction Specialist, HI, 8 April 2022.

[200] Responses to Monitor questionnaire by Eliana Lucia Herrera Aguirre, EORE Technical Advisor, Danish Refugee Council, 8 April 2022; and by Tim Marsella and Andrea Lazaro, Programme Officers, HALO Trust, 7 April 2022.

[201] Lebanon Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form G, p. 21.

[202] UNMAS, “Factsheet: Afghanistan,” February 2022, bit.ly/UNMASAfghanistanFeb2022; and response to Monitor questionnaire by Mohammed Dud Raufi, Head of Survey and Information Department, HALO Trust Afghanistan, 7 April 2022.

[203] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Eliana Lucia Herrera Aguirre, EORE Technical Advisor, Danish Refugee Council, 8 April 2022.

[204] US Department of State, Bureau of Political-Military Affairs, Office of Weapons Removal and Abatement (PM/WRA), “To Walk the Earth in Safety: January–December 2021,” 4 April 2022, p. 23, bit.ly/ToWalkTheEarthInSafety2022.

[205] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Zita Andrassy, Programme Officer, HALO Trust, 6 April 2022.

[206] UNOCHA, “Humanitarian Needs Overview: Libya 2021,” December 2020, p. 37, bit.ly/UNOCHALibya2021.

[207] Global Protection Cluster, Libyan Mine Action Center (LibMAC), and Protection Sector Libya, “Libya Mine Action Update,” presentation at Mine Action Support Group meeting, 15 October 2020, bit.ly/LibyaPresentation15Oct2020.

[208] Email from HALO Trust Nagorno-Karabakh, 6 April 2022.

[209] UNDP, “Yemen Emergency Mine Action Project: Annual Report 2020,” February 2021, p. 11; UNMAS, “Annual Report 2020,” undated, p. 18, bit.ly/UNMASAnnualReport2020; and ICRC, “Annual Report 2020,” 1 July 2021, p. 500, bit.ly/ICRCAnnualReport2020.

[210] Responses to Monitor questionnaire by Sultan Alshoubaki, Risk Education Specialist, Najwa Al Janda, Atif Iqbal, and Nermin Lieli, Risk Education Project Managers, HI, 5 April 2022; by Damien O’Brien, Programme Manager, HALO Trust, 6 March 2022; and by Leila Susic, Community Liaison Manager and Team Leader, MAG, 21 March 2022.

[211] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Mario Quiñones, Humanitarian Disarmament and Peacebuilding Manager, Danish Refugee Council, 4 April 2022.

[212] UNDP, “Yemen Emergency Mine Action Project: Annual Report 2021,” 15 February 2022.

[213] EORE Advisory Group, “Questions and Answers on Explosive Ordnance Risk Education for Ukraine,” 21 March 2022, bit.ly/EOREUkraine-QA.

[214] Ukraine Mine Action Sub-Cluster, “Ukraine: Mine Action - 5W Situation Report as of 01 July 2022,” 1 July 2022, bit.ly/UkraineMineAction1July2022.

[215] UNOCHA, “Mine Action Sub-Cluster: Ukraine: 5W Dashboard,” undated, bit.ly/UNOCHAUkraineDashboard.

[216] See, BezMin (Without Mines) Facebook page, bit.ly/BezMinFacebook.

[217] See, SESU Mine Action Service website, bit.ly/SESUMineActionService.

[218] See, EORE Advisory Group, “Questions & Answers on Explosive Ordnance Risk Education (EORE) for Ukraine,” 21 March 2022, bit.ly/EOREUkraine-QA. The EORE Advisory Group was launched in 2019 and provides overall guidance to the sector, drawing on the expertise of United Nations (UN) agencies, international organizations, and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) serving as members or observers to the group. It is co-chaired by the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and a rotating NGO. GICHD serves as secretariat. See, GICHD, “Our Response: Explosive Ordnance Risk Education: Advisory Group,” undated, bit.ly/EOREAdvisoryGroupGICHD.

[219] GICHD, “Explosive Ordnance Guide for Ukraine,” May 2022, bit.ly/GICHDUkraineGuideMay2022.

[220] These activities are to be implemented in accordance with applicable international humanitarian and human rights law.

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

[222] UNMAS, “UNMAS Afghanistan,” presentation at Mine Action Support Group meeting, 28 May 2021, bit.ly/AfghanistanUNMAS2021.

[223] Ibid.

[224] The Sehatmandi Project was supported by the Afghanistan Reconstruction Trust Fund (ARTF), managed by the World Bank (on behalf of 34 donors), and the International Development Association (IDA), supported by the Global Financing Facility. See, World Bank, “Ensuring Accessible Health Care for Rural Afghans,” 9 April 2020, bit.ly/WorldBankRuralAfghansApril2020.

[225] ICRC, “Annual Report 2021,” 27 July 2022, p. 298, www.icrc.org/en/document/annual-report-2021.

[226] EMERGENCY, “First Aid Posts and Primary Health Clinics: Afghanistan – Over 40 Villages,” undated, bit.ly/AfghanistanFirstAidPosts.

[227] Swedish Committee for Afghanistan (SCA), “Annual Report 2020,” March 2021, pp. 22–23, bit.ly/SCAAnnualReport2020.

[228] Lao PDR Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form H.

[229] Email from Sarah Bruinooge, Country Director, World Education Laos, 4 March 2022.

[230] HI, “Country Card: Lao PDR,” updated September 2021, pp. 9–10, bit.ly/HILaosCountryCard2021; and response to Monitor questionnaire by Benoit Couturier, Mekong Regional Director, HI, 15 May 2020.

[231] HI, “Country Card: Lao PDR,” updated September 2021, pp. 9–10, bit.ly/HILaosCountryCard2021.

[232] Doctors Without Borders (Médecins Sans Frontières, MSF), “Healthcare system in Lebanon disintegrates as political vacuum persists,” 1 September 2021, bit.ly/MSFLebanon1Sept2021; and Mohamad Fleifel and Khaled Abi Farraj, “The Lebanese Healthcare Crisis: An Infinite Calamity,” Cureus, Vol. 14, Issue 5, 26 May 2022, bit.ly/LebanonHealthcareMay2022.

[233] ICRC, “Annual Report 2021,” 27 July 2022, p. 464, www.icrc.org/en/document/annual-report-2021.

[234] Ibid., p. 465.

[235] Iraq Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), p. 67; and response to Monitor questionnaire by Alaa Fadhil, Head of Victim Assistance Department, DMA, 12 April 2021.

[236] ICRC, “Annual Report 2019,” 29 June 2020, p. 451, bit.ly/ICRCAnnualReport2019; and ICRC, “Annual Report 2020,” 1 July 2021, pp. 467 and 469, bit.ly/ICRCAnnualReport2020.

[237] Responses to Monitor questionnaire by Marie-Cécile Tournier, Country Director, HI Chad, 11 June 2021; and by Brahim Djibrim Brahim, Coordinator, HCND, 18 June 2021.

[238] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Jean-Michel Mathiam, North Area Coordinator, HI, 22 April 2020.

[239] Mauritania Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019).

[240] Marta Caviglia, Marcelo Dell’Aringa, Giovanni Putoto, Riccardo Buson, Sara Pini, Daniel Youkee, Amara Jambai, Matthew Jusu Vandy, Paolo Rosi, Ives Hubloue, Francesco Della Corte, Luca Ragazzoni, and Francesco Barone-Adesi, “Improving Access to Healthcare in Sierra Leone: The Role of the Newly Developed National Emergency Medical Service,” International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, Vol. 18, Issue 18, September 2021, bit.ly/SierraLeoneHealthSept2021.

[241] ICRC supported rehabilitation centers in Faizabad, Gulbar, Herat, Jalalabad, Kabul, Lashkar Gah, and Mazar‑i‑Sharif provinces. It provided assistance to workshops in Assadabad, Ghazni, Kandahar, Maimana, Pulikumri, and Taloqan. See, ICRC, “Physical Rehabilitation Programme in Afghanistan,” 9 May 2022, bit.ly/ICRCAfghanistanPRP9May2022.

[242] HI, “Afghanistan,” undated, www.hi-us.org/afghanistan; HI, “Afghanistan: Humanity & Inclusion resumes humanitarian activities,” undated, bit.ly/HIAfghanistanActivitiesResume; and HI, “HI continues activities in Afghanistan,” 7 September 2021, bit.ly/HIAfghanistan7Sept2021.

[243] “Rehabilitation programme for disabled persons launched in Bamyan,” Pajhwok Afghan News, 16 June 2022, bit.ly/PajhwokAfghanNews16June2022.

[244] Albania Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form H; email from Izet Ademaj, Monitor Country Researcher, 9 June 2022; and Bashkim Shala, “Landmine Blasts on Albania-Kosovo Border Blight Survivors’ Lives,” Balkan Insight, 11 May 2021, bit.ly/BalkanInsight11May2021.

[245] HI, “Chad 4-year economic development project nears end,” undated, bit.ly/ChadHIProject2021.

[246] Croatian Ombudsman for Persons with Disabilities, “Report on the work of the Ombudsman for Persons with Disabilities 2020,” undated, bit.ly/CroatiaDisabilityReport2020.

[247] ICRC, “Annual Report 2020,” 1 July 2021, p. 168, bit.ly/ICRCAnnualReport2020.

[248] ICRC, “Annual Report 2021,” 27 July 2022, pp. 137–138, www.icrc.org/en/document/annual-report-2021.

[249] “Guinée-Bissau/Dialogue National sur l’assistance des victimes de mines et des personnes en situation d’handicap : Acteurs, partenaires et autorités se mettent à niveau” (“Guinea-Bissau/National Dialogue on assistance for mine victims and persons with disabilities: Actors, partners and authorities are getting up to speed”), Scoops de Ziguinchor, 25 January 2022, bit.ly/Guinea-Bissau25Jan2022.

[250] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Ahmed Al-Jasim, Director of Planning and Information Department, DMA, 10 March 2022; and Iraq Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), Form J, p. 45.

[251] ICRC press release, “Erbil: A new glimpse of hope, ICRC opens the largest Physical Rehabilitation Centre in Iraq,” 15 March 2022, bit.ly/ICRCErbil15March2022.

[252] ICRC, “Annual Report 2021,” 27 July 2022, p. 442, www.icrc.org/en/document/annual-report-2021.

[253] COPE, “Community Outreach,” undated, bit.ly/COPELaosCommunityOutreach.

[254] HI, “Country Card: Lao PDR,” updated September 2021, p. 7, bit.ly/HILaosCountryCard2021.

[255] Lao PDR Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2021), Form H, p. 21; and Lao PDR Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), Form H, p. 17.

[256] NRA, “On May 26, 2022, the signing ceremony between the office of the National Management Committee to solve the problem of unexploded ordnance remaining in the Lao PDR and the cooperation project on artificial intelligence and rescue equipment,” 26 May 2022, bit.ly/NRALaos26May2022.

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

[258] ICRC, “Annual Report 2020,” 1 July 2021, p. 493, bit.ly/ICRCAnnualReport2020.

[259] ICRC, “Annual Report 2021,” 27 July 2022, p. 465, www.icrc.org/en/document/annual-report-2021.

[260] Mauritania Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), pp. 10–11.

[261] Victoria Jerwanska, Ismaila Kebbie, and Lina Magnusson, “Coordination of health and rehabilitation services for person with disabilities in Sierra Leone – a stakeholders’ perspective,” Disability and Rehabilitation, 22 May 2022, bit.ly/SierraLeone22May2022; and Archie P. T. Allen, William S. Bolton, Mohamed B. Jalloh, Stephen J. Halpin, David G. Jayne, and Julian D. A. Scott, “Barriers to accessing and providing rehabilitation after a lower limb amputation in Sierra Leone – a multidisciplinary patient and service provider perspective,” Disability and Rehabilitation, Vol. 44, Issue 11, 1 December 2020, bit.ly/SierraLeoneRehab2020.

[262] Sierra Leone Ministry of Health and Sanitation, “Assistive Technology (AT): Policy and Strategic Plan 2021–2025,” 23 November 2021, bit.ly/SierraLeonePlan2021-2025.

[263] ICRC, “Annual Report 2021,” 27 July 2022, p. 212, www.icrc.org/en/document/annual-report-2021; ICRC “Somalia: Oldest physical rehabilitation centre continues to offer hope,” 3 December 2021, bit.ly/ICRCSomalia3Dec2021; and ICRC, “Mogadishu rehabilitation centre supports people with disabilities 38 years on,” 3 December 2020, bit.ly/ICRCMogadishu2020.

[264] ICRC, “Annual Report 2021,” 27 July 2021, p. 465, www.icrc.org/en/document/annual-report-2021.

[265] World Education Laos, “Strengthening Rehabilitation Services in Laos,” 5 May 2022, bit.ly/LaosRehabilitation5May2022.

[266] Committee on Victim Assistance, “Preliminary Mid‐Term Assessment: Bosnia and Herzegovina Status of Implementation – Victim Assistance,” Mine Ban Treaty intersessional meetings, Geneva, 20–22 June 2022, bit.ly/MBTObservationsVABiHJun2022.

[267] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Reinier Carabain, Operations Manager, HI Lao PDR, 14 June 2021.

[268] ICRC, “Annual Report 2021,” 27 July 2022, p. 464, www.icrc.org/en/document/annual-report-2021.

[269] Lao PDR, “National Social Protection Strategy: Vision 2030, Goal 2025,” September 2020, p. 14, bit.ly/LaosNationalSocialProtection.

[270] Elizabeth Johnson Sellers, “Chad: ‘I had never been to school’,” HI, 8 June 2022, bit.ly/HIChad8June2022; and responses to Monitor questionnaire by Marie-Cécile Tournier, Country Director, HI, 11 June 2021; and by Brahim Djibrim Brahim, Coordinator, HCND, 18 June 2021.

[271] ICRC, “Annual Report 2021,” 27 July 2022, pp. 137–138, www.icrc.org/en/document/annual-report-2021.

[272] Lao PDR, “Implementation of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development (Voluntary National Review),” July 2021, p. 12, bit.ly/LaosSDGJuly2021.

[273] Disability Empowerment Movement, “About Us,” undated, bit.ly/SierraLeoneDEM.

[274] HI, “Sierra Leone: HI makes schools accessible to children with disabilities,” 22 November 2021, bit.ly/HISierraLeone22Nov2021.