Nigeria

Cluster Munition Ban Policy

Last updated: 14 August 2022

UPDATE 01.03.2023: On 28 February, Nigeria deposited the instrument of ratification to the Convention on Cluster Munitions, meaning the convention will enter into force for the country on 1 August 2023.

Summary

Nigeria signed the Convention on Cluster Munitions in June 2009 and a process is underway to ratify it. Nigeria has participated in several meetings of the convention, most recently in May 2022. Nigeria voted in favor of a key United Nations (UN) resolution promoting the convention in December 2021.

Nigeria is not known to have produced or exported cluster munitions, but it has imported them. Nigeria has sought support and technical assistance to destroy its stockpiled cluster munitions.

Policy

The Federal Republic of Nigeria signed the Convention on Cluster Munitions on 12 June 2009.

In June 2021, the Federal Executive Council reportedly approved ratification of the convention, but the current status of this process is not known.[1] Nigerian officials, over the past decade, have expressed the government’s intent to ratify the convention and have held extensive stakeholder consultations on the matter.[2]

Nigeria participated in the Oslo Process that created the Convention on Cluster Munitions, and joined in the consensus adoption of the convention text in Dublin in May 2008. It attended the Oslo Signing Conference in December 2008 as an observer only, and said that it would sign the convention after completing internal processes.[3] Nigeria subsequently signed the convention at the UN in New York in June 2009.

Nigeria has participated as an observer at several of the convention’s formal meetings, most recently the Second Review Conference in September 2021. At the convention’s intersessional meetings in May 2022, Nigeria provided a report on the universalization workshop that it hosted in Abuja in March 2022.[4]

Nigeria voted in favor of a key United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) resolution promoting implementation and universalization of the convention in December 2021.[5] Nigeria has voted in favor of the annual UNGA resolution promoting the convention since it was first introduced in 2015.

Nigeria voted in favor of a 2014 Security Council resolution expressing concern at the use of cluster munitions in South Sudan.[6] Nigeria also voted in favor of a 2015 Security Council resolution on Sudan that expressed concern at evidence of cluster munition use in Darfur.[7]

Nigeria is a State Party to the Mine Ban Treaty. It has signed, but not ratified, the Convention on Conventional Weapons (CCW).

Use, production, and transfer

Nigeria is not known to have produced or exported cluster munitions, but has imported them.

Nigeria has denied allegations that it used cluster munitions in the past. Sierra Leone alleged that Nigerian peacekeepers participating in an Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) monitoring mission used cluster munitions in Sierra Leone in 1997. The mission’s commander, General Victor Malu, denied the accusation at the time.[8] Sierra Leone repeated the allegations in May 2012, and Nigeria repeated its denial again in September 2012, describing the claim as “wrong and incorrect.”[9]

The Nigerian Armed Forces warned in 2015 about the threat from improvised explosive devices (IEDs). It alleged that Boko Haram, a non-state armed group (NSAG), had made IEDs from submunitions that had been removed from cluster munitions.[10]

Stockpiling

Nigeria stockpiles cluster munitions, including United Kingdom (UK)-made BL755 cluster bombs.[11]

In 2012, Nigeria requested technical assistance and support from States Parties to destroy its cluster munition stocks.[12] Nigeria reiterated its need for cooperation and assistance to fulfill its stockpile destruction obligations during the convention’s First Review Conference in 2015.[13]

Nigeria has not indicated whether it will retain any cluster munitions for research or training purposes.



[1] Email from Mimidoo Achakpa, Coordinator, International Action Network on Small Arms (IANSA) Women’s Network Nigeria, 23 June 2021.

[2] Previously, in September 2019, Nigeria said that the convention was “before the National Assembly receiving necessary attention as stipulated by the Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria” and will be “ratified as soon as the legislative processes are completed.” Statement of Nigeria, Convention on Cluster Munitions Ninth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 2 September 2019. See also, statement of Nigeria, Convention on Cluster Munitions Third Meeting of States Parties, Oslo, 11 September 2012; statement of Nigeria, Convention on Cluster Munitions Fourth Meeting of States Parties, Lusaka, September 2013; statement of Nigeria, Convention on Cluster Munitions intersessional meetings, Geneva, 18 April 2012; and statement of Nigeria, Convention on Cluster Munitions First Meeting of States Parties, Vientiane, 10 November 2010. Notes by the Cluster Munition Coalition (CMC).

[3] For details on Nigeria’s policy and practice regarding cluster munitions through early 2009, see Human Rights Watch (HRW) and Landmine Action, Banning Cluster Munitions: Government Policy and Practice (Ottawa: Mines Action Canada, May 2009), pp. 223–224.

[4] Statement of Nigeria, Convention on Cluster Munitions intersessional meetings, Geneva, 16 May 2022.

[5]Implementation of the Convention on Cluster Munitions,” UNGA Resolution 76/47, 6 December 2021.

[7] Security Council, “UNSC Resolution 2228 (2015),” 29 June 2015.

[8] According to sources close to the Sierra Leone military, in 1997, Nigerian forces operating as Economic Community of West African States Monitoring Group (ECOMOG) peacekeepers dropped two cluster bombs on Lokosama, near Port Loko. See, “IRIN-WA Weekly Roundup,” IRIN, 10 March 1997. Additionally, Nigerian ECOMOG peacekeepers were reported to have used French-produced BLG-66 Belouga cluster bombs in an attack on the eastern town of Kenema. See, “10 Killed in Nigerian raid in eastern Sierra Leone,” Agence France-Presse (AFP), 11 December 1997.

[9] Statement of Sierra Leone, Accra Regional Conference on the Universalization of the Convention on Cluster Munitions, Accra, 28 May 2012; and statement of Nigeria, Convention on Cluster Munitions Third Meeting of States Parties, Oslo, 11 September 2012.

[10]Boko Haram has cluster bombs: Nigeria’s DHQ,” The News Nigeria, 8 October 2015. The Ministry of Defense did not name the type of cluster munitions depicted in photographs that it released of the weapons that it said Nigerian Army engineers in Adamawa state recovered from arms caches found in areas contested by Boko Haram. However, the photographs showed submunitions from French-made BLG-66 cluster munitions, which is the same type of munition that Nigeria is alleged to have used in Sierra Leone in 1997. According to media reports, the cluster munitions could have been stolen from Nigerian military ammunition stocks or received from smugglers who obtained them from Libyan arms depots. See, “‘Boko Haram cluster bombs’ may come from Nigerian military - campaigners,” AFP, 13 October 2015; and Philip Obaji Jr., “Boko Haram’s Cluster-Bomb Girls,” The Daily Beast, 2 October 2016.

[11] Statement of Nigeria, Convention on Cluster Munitions intersessional meetings, Geneva, 18 April 2012. Jane’s Information Group has reported that the Nigerian Air Force possesses BL755 cluster bombs. See, Robert Hewson, ed., Jane’s Air-Launched Weapons, Issue 44 (Surrey: Jane’s Information Group, 2004), p. 843.

[12] Statement of Nigeria, Convention on Cluster Munitions Third Meeting of States Parties, Oslo, 11 September 2012.

[13] See, for example, Croatia Progress Report, Convention on Cluster Munitions First Review Conference, Dubrovnik, 6 October 2015.


Impact

Last updated: 20 April 2021

Jump to a specific section of the profile:

Treaty Status | Management & Coordination | Impact (contamination & casualties) | Addressing the Impact (land release, risk education, victim assistance)

Country summary

At the Mine Ban Treaty Eleventh Meeting of States Parties in November 2011, the Federal Republic of Nigeria declared it had cleared all known antipersonnel mines from its territory. Since 2015, numerous incidents involving both civilian and military casualties from landmines and a range of other explosive devices, locally produced and planted by Boko Haram, have been reported in the northeast of the country.[1]

At the end of 2019, Nigeria reported improvised mine contamination on its territory, and submitted a Mine Ban Treaty Article 5 extension request in November 2020. The extent of contamination from mines and other explosive devices resulting from the armed conflict between Boko Haram, the Nigerian military, and the Multi-National Task Force, is not known. All clearance is conducted by the army and the police with support from paramilitary groups. The army’s priority is to provide demining support for military operations.

The overwhelming majority of casualties in Nigeria were caused by improvised mines. Risk education is coordinated by the Mine Action Sub Working Group, co-chaired by the Ministry of Reconstruction, Rehabilitation and Resettlement, and the UN Mine Action Service (UNMAS). The primary risk education target groups are internally displaced persons (IDPs), host communities, refugees, and returnees.

Nigeria passed a disability rights law for the first time in 2019, but it was yet to be enforced. Less than 60% of health facilities in Borno, Adamawa, and Yobe states were fully functioning. In 2019, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) provided psychosocial support and supported nine hospitals and one orthopedic center.

Treaty status

Treaty status overview

Mine Ban Treaty

State Party

Article 5 clearance deadline: 31 December 2021 (first extension)

Convention on Cluster Munitions

Signatory

Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD)

State Party

 

Under Article 5 of the Mine Ban Treaty, Nigeria was required to destroy all antipersonnel mines in contaminated areas under its jurisdiction or control as soon as possible, but not later than 1 March 2012. At the Eleventh Meeting of States Parties in November 2011, Nigeria declared it had cleared all known antipersonnel mines from its territory.[2]

As a result of the armed conflict between Boko Haram, the Nigerian military, and the Multi-National Task Force, incidents involving landmines and other explosive devices have been reported in Borno, Adamawa, and Yobe states.[3] Clashes between state forces and several armed groups continued in 2019.[4] In November 2019, Nigeria reported improvised mine contamination on its territory and stated that it intended to submit an extension request in order to comply with Article 5 of the Mine Ban Treaty.[5] The request submitted in November 2020 did not contain any details, work plan, or resource mobilization strategy, but requested an interim extension until 31 December 2021 “to present [a] detailed report on contamination, progress made and work plan for implementation.”[6]

Nigeria has not yet reported on the location of all suspected or confirmed mined areas under its jurisdiction or control and on the status of programs for the destruction of all antipersonnel mines.[7] Nigeria has not submitted a Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 transparency report since 2012.

Management and coordination

Mine action management and coordination

Mine action management and coordination overview[8]

National mine action management actors

Inter-Ministerial Committee to develop a national mine action strategy and a work plan for survey and clearance

United Nations Agencies

UN Mine Action Service (UNMAS)

Other actors

Mine Action Sub Working Group, co-chaired by the Ministry of Reconstruction, Rehabilitation and Resettlement and UNMAS

Mine Action Technical Working Group

Mine action legislation

None

Mine action strategic and operational plans

UNMAS advised and supported Nigeria in developing a mine action strategy and national mine action standards

 

Coordination

In 2019, Nigeria formed an Inter-Ministerial Committee tasked with developing a national mine action strategy and a work plan for survey and clearance. The Committee is comprised of the Ministry of Defence, the Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs and Disaster Management, the North-East Development Commission, the National Emergency Management Agency, and the National Commission for Refugees, Migrants and IDPs.[9] Nigeria had planned to establish a mine action authority, but in 2020 progress was delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[10]

There is no structured mine action program in Nigeria. Both Nigeria’s armed forces and its police carry out explosive ordnance disposal (EOD) activities and explosive remnants of war (ERW) clearance. The state police have EOD units that support the army in clearing unexploded ordnance (UXO) and explosive devices. The army’s ERW clearance is primarily focused on facilitating military operations and clearing roads and areas to facilitate access for troops to carry out attacks on Boko Haram and to keep military supply routes open.[11]

Strategies and policies

The Mine Action Sub Working Group co-chaired by the Ministry of Reconstruction, Rehabilitation and Resettlement and UNMAS provides planning, coordination, and technical advice to support plans for the resettlement of IDPs and for the delivery of risk education, survey, and clearance.[12]

Information management

Mine action data is recorded on the Information Management System for Mine Action (IMSMA) database and informs the humanitarian response.[13]

Risk education management and coordination

Risk education management and coordination overview

Government focal points

Ministry of Reconstruction, Rehabilitation and Resettlement

Coordination mechanisms

Mine Action Sub Working Group

 

Coordination

The Mine Action Sub Working Group coordinates risk education activities, co-chaired by the Ministry of Reconstruction, Rehabilitation and Resettlement and UNMAS.[14] The Working Group provides planning, coordination, and technical advice to support risk education activities.[15]

Victim assistance management and coordination

Laws and policies

No specific victim assistance coordination was reported. Ministry of Women’s Affairs and Social Development is responsible for persons with disabilities.[16]

Nigeria passed a disability rights law for the first time in 2019. The law prohibits discrimination against persons with disabilities. There were however no reports the law had been enforced.[17]

The 2016 National Health Policy provides for access to healthcare for persons with disabilities. However, it was reported that persons with disabilities faced discrimination and social stigma in Nigeria.[18]

Impact

Contamination

The extent of landmine or ERW contamination in Nigeria is unknown.

Landmine contamination

As of November 2019, Nigeria had not been able to conduct a comprehensive survey to determine the extent of the contamination from mines and other explosive devices.[19] As part of a preliminary investigation, the Inter-Ministerial Committee found that victim-activated improvised mines had been recently used in Nigeria.[20] (See Nigeria’s mine ban profile for more information).

Incidents involving landmines and other explosive devices have been reported in Borno, Adamawa, and Yobe states; with Borno state being the most heavily affected. According to the Nigerian military, the Sambisa forest in Borno state, Boko Haram’s stronghold, has been heavily mined, along with “extensive” mine use by Boko Haram around military positions.[21]

A November 2015 assessment in Adamawa and Borno states by the international demining organization Danish Demining Group (DDG) had noted local community reports of a number of local government areas in Borno state they thought needed clearance, including Bama, Dikwa, Gwoza, Kala-Balge, Kukawa, Marte, and Ngala.[22] Interviewees identified contamination including antipersonnel and antivehicle mines, a variety of body-borne, vehicle-borne, and remotely controlled devices, as well as cluster munition remnants, mortars, rockets, and rocket-propelled grenades, hand grenades, and Man-Portable Air Defense Systems (MANPADS).[23]

In 2015, the Nigerian army warned civilians of the threat of improvised devices using adapted submunitions.[24]

UNMAS carried out a scoping mission to the three northeastern states in April 2017 to assess the extent of the threat from munitions, ERW, and landmines. It received reports of the use of both antipersonnel and antivehicle mines of an improvised nature around defensive positions.[25] It reported that Boko Haram had made significant use of pressure-plate-activated mines on main supply routes, primarily to attack military convoys.[26] UNMAS reported in 2020 that non-state armed groups’ use of improvised mines increasingly targeted civilians.[27]

Contamination from mines and other explosive devices has had a serious humanitarian impact, impeding the return of IDPs and exacerbating the crisis in the region.[28] In October 2016, the governor of Adamawa state confirmed that many IDPs continued to be unable to return to their farms due to a fear of landmines.[29] Roads were closed to civilian traffic by the military due to the presence of mines or other explosive devices and there were numerous reports of civilian casualties and farmers who feared returning to work their fields, contributing to worsening food shortages.[30] Humanitarian access and recovery efforts were also impeded by the presence of mines.[31]

Casualties

Casualties overview[32]

Casualties

All known mine/ERW casualties (for all time through 2019)

1,281 (325 killed; 954 injured; and 2 with the survival outcome unknown)

 

Casualties in 2019

Annual total

239 (increase from 147 in 2018)

 

Survival outcome

110 killed; 127 injured; 2 unknown

Device type causing casualties

192 improvised mine; 38 ERW; 9 mine/ERW

Civilian status

87 civilians; 121 military; 31 unknown

Age and gender

133 adults (130 men; 3 women)

7 children (all boys)

99 age and gender unknown

Note: ERW=explosive remnants of war.

Casualties in 2019: details

In 2019, 239 mine/ERW casualties were recorded in Nigeria. Most casualties were caused by improvised mines. This is similar to the 235 improvised mine casualties recorded in 2017 from data collected by the Mines Advisory Group (MAG). The information on casualties in Nigeria recorded by MAG from January 2016 through March 2018 resulted in an improved understanding of the extent of casualties and the impact of improvised mines in Nigeria.[33] Prior to MAG’s data being made available, the Monitor recorded two mine casualties in Nigeria in 2002 and 18 casualties in 2015.

The Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) reported that in 2019, “some 230 people were killed by [improvised explosive devices] IEDs and more than 300 injured.”[34] UNMAS also reported that “hundreds of civilians to include women and children have been killed and injured” by landmines of an improvised nature in 2019.[35]

There is no injury surveillance system in Nigeria. UNMAS manages a mine/ERW casualty database which contains disaggregated data for northeast Nigeria and Lake Chad Basin from 2016 to present. The data collected by UNMAS is however partial given the absence of a nation-wide injury surveillance system.[36]

At least 1,281 mine/ERW casualties have been reported in Nigeria (325 killed; 954 injured; and two for whom the survival outcome is unknown). In a compensation claim of 2012, 493 survivors “pre-enumerated by the Ministry of Defence” were included as confirmed victims of mines/ERW for entitlements by the Economic Community of West African States community court.[37] The Monitor database includes an additional 788 mine/ERW casualties for Nigeria, recorded between 2012 and 2019, with 325 people killed, 461 injured, and the survival outcome of two persons was unknown.[38]

Addressing the impact

Mine action

Operators and service providers

Clearance operators

National

Armed forces

Police

National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA)

International

Danish Demining Group (DDG), since 2015

Mines Advisory Group (MAG), since 2016 (non-technical survey)

 

All clearance in Nigeria is conducted by the army and the police with support from paramilitary groups. UNMAS reported in 2019 that the army remained in charge of clearance.[39] The United States (US) continued to provide equipment and training to Nigeria’s EOD teams in 2019.[40] In April 2017, a senior Nigerian military commander informed UNMAS that due to limited resources, the army’s priority was to provide demining support for military operations, and that additional equipment, ongoing support and refresher training was needed for humanitarian demining.[41]

As part of its efforts to strengthen national capacity, UNMAS was planning to train Nigeria’s Police Force and the Security and Civil Defence Corps to protect civilians from mines/ERW in Borno, Adamawa, and Yobe states.[42]

Clearance

No landmine clearance was reported in Nigeria for 2019.

In 2017 the army’s priority was to provide demining support for military operations. The army lacked the capacity to undertake humanitarian demining. It called for additional equipment, ongoing support, and training. The army and police received some equipment and training in 2019.

At the end of 2019, Nigeria reported improvised mine contamination on its territory, and submitted a Mine Ban Treaty Article 5 extension request in November 2020.[43] The request did not contain any details, work plan, or resource mobilization strategy, but requested an interim extension until 31 December 2021.[44]

Land release: landmines

In 2018–2019, MAG conducted “light-touch” non-technical survey (NTS) in Bama, Gubio, Gwoza, and Konduga in Borno state. This was based on collecting information from individuals during mine risk education sessions, confirming the information and handing it over to the security forces.[45]

Since August 2018, UNMAS conducted eight NTS in Bama, Monguno, Ngala, and Nganzai, following which it identified and marked five confirmed hazardous areas (CHAs).[46] UNMAS was planning to conduct NTS in temporary accessible areas and in areas frequented by IDPs and host communities for livelihood activities.[47]

Deminer safety

Military casualties have been reported among soldiers clearing mines. In 2015, two soldiers were killed, and two others seriously wounded during clearance operations in Gudumbali town.[48] UNMAS reported in April 2017 that manual render-safe procedures were the primary method used by the Nigerian military EOD teams, which could be contributing to a high number of casualties among EOD personnel.[49]

Risk education

Operators and service providers

Risk education operators[50]

Type of organization

Name of organization

Type of activity

National

Youth Awaken Foundation

Mentored by the Mine Action Sub Working Group to deliver risk education in northeast Nigeria

International

UNMAS

Risk education sessions for affected communities, humanitarian workers, UN staff members, government officials, and health care workers

UNICEF

Limited risk education

DDG

Emergency EORE in Borno and Yobe states

MAG

Risk education sessions for IDPs and host communities in Borno state

Note: EORE=explosive ordnance risk education; IDP=internally displaced person.

Beneficiary numbers

Beneficiaries of risk education in 2019[51]

Risk education operator

Men

Boys

Women

Girls

MAG

18,865

37,704

40,825

36,086

 

UNICEF reported a total of 10,339 beneficiaries comprising 4,610 children and 5,729 adults in 2019. Between January 2019 and April 2020, UNMAS reported a total of 36,422 beneficiaries.

The Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) reported that risk education activities in northeast Nigeria reached 386,589 people in 2019.[52]

Implementation

Target groups

As part of their risk education efforts, MAG and UNMAS targeted aid workers, IDPs, host communities, refugees, and returnees.[53] Risk education material developed by UNMAS covered improvised mines and other types of IEDs.[54]

Delivery methods

Through the setup of the Humanitarian Hub Campaign, UNMAS sensitizes and trains aid workers on how to prevent incidents and safely remove explosive remnants.[55] UNMAS also conducted a training of trainers for 14 volunteers of a civil society organization,[56] and conducted a “train-the-trainer” pilot project targeting 100 vulnerable young men and women from Maiduguri, in Borno state, and who were employed to transmit knowledge to vulnerable populations.[57]

In addition to traditional risk education activities, in 2019, UNMAS was developing billboards and short movies. It was also exploring the use of a Risk Education Talking Device in order to reach inaccessible at-risk population.[58]

In 2019, UNICEF mainstreamed risk education in family center activities, and also trained 17 NGO staff and 45 social workers in risk education.[59] MAG risk education sessions were specifically tailored to children, using puppets for these sessions.[60] DDG risk education activities included the development of risk education capacity for community focal points, local authorities and networks.[61]

Major developments in 2020

Mine action actors adapted to the new constraints imposed by the COVID-19 pandemic by decreasing the number of participants in risk education sessions and working on radio messaging in order to mitigate the decrease of direct beneficiaries.[62]

In 2020, the Mine Action Sub Working Group was planning to conduct risk education, mapping and marking of hazardous areas, and the identification of survivors and affected communities in Borno, Adamawa, and Yobe states.[63]

The National Environment Management Agency and the State Emergency Management Agency was expected to be accredited for risk education activities in 2020.[64]

Victim assistance

Victim assistance providers and activities

Victim assistance operators[65]

Type of organization

Name of organization

Type of activity

Governmental

National Orthopaedic Hospital Dala-Kano (NOHD)

Rehabilitation, including prosthetics

State Specialist Hospital in Maiduguri (SSH-M)

Emergency medical care

International

UNMAS

Emergency medical care and psychosocial support

Mine Action Sub Working Group

Referral of survivors to relevant services

ICRC

  • Support to health facilities, mobile surgical team to treat wounded people in the northeast, training of medical personnel in weapon-wound surgery and emergency-room trauma care, first-aid training sessions
  • Support to the rehabilitation sector including providing free prosthetics, orthotics, and other mobility aids transport and accommodation and training
  • Mental health and psychosocial support

 

Major Developments in 2019

Medical care and rehabilitation

There was a serious shortage of skilled health care workers, in particular in areas where the armed conflict is ongoing. Less than 60% of health facilities in Borno, Adamawa, and Yobe states were fully functioning.[66] The State Specialist Hospital in Maiduguri (SSH-M) treated patients injured in the conflict in the northeast, with donations of supplies, equipment, incentives for staff, and coaching from the ICRC.[67] UNMAS supported the provision of first-aid and emergency trauma bag training to police force personnel.[68]

The ICRC provided support to nine hospitals, as well as the National Orthopaedic Hospital Dala-Kano (NOHD).[69] In 2019, the ICRC supported the NOHD with prostheses, orthoses and mobility aids.[70] The ICRC also supported the construction of a physical rehabilitation center at the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital and gave scholarships for prosthetics students.[71]

Socio-economic and psychosocial inclusion

There were state-operated vocational training centers to train persons with disabilities living in extreme poverty.[72]

UNMAS provided psychosocial support in northeast Nigeria.[73] The ICRC provided training and cash grants for income-generating activities.[74]

 


[2] Statement of Nigeria, Mine Ban Treaty Eleventh Meeting of States Parties, Phnom Penh, 29 November 2011. In January 2017, a civil war-era landmine was found in Ebonyi state, which villagers thought was an improvised explosive device (IED). Police forensics concluded it was a landmine left over from the conflict that ended 47 years ago, which had washed up in a river. A bomb squad destroyed the device, and according to the police, the area was searched, and no evidence of other contamination was found. James Eze, “Nigeria: Civil War Explosive Found in Ebonyi Community – Police,” AllAfrica, 17 January 2017.

[4] ICRC, “Annual Report 2019,” June 2020, p. 212.

[5] Statement of Nigeria, Mine Ban Treaty Fourth Review Conference, Oslo, 27 November 2019.

[6] Nigeria Mine Ban Treaty Article 5 deadline Extension Request, 10 November 2020.

[7] Final Report of the Mine Ban Treaty Twelfth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 21 January 2013, p. 10.

[8] Statement of Nigeria, Mine Ban Treaty Fourth Review Conference, Oslo, 27 November 2019; Protection Cluster, “Protection: monthly update,” 11 September 2020; and UNMAS, “Annual Report 2019,” April 2020, pp. 20 and 24.

[9] Statement of Nigeria, Mine Ban Treaty Fourth Review Conference, Oslo, 27 November 2019.

[10] Lionel Pechera, “Northeast Nigeria Mine Action Update,” Briefing to the Mine Action Support Group, 15 October 2020.

[11] Danish Deming Group, “Mine Action Assessment: Northeastern Nigeria (Adamawa and Borno States) 1–15 November 2015,” undated.

[12] UNMAS, “Programmes: Nigeria,” 30 April 2020.

[13] Ibid.

[14] Ibid.

[15] Protection Cluster, “Protection: monthly update,” 11 September 2020.

[16] United States (US) Department of States, “2019 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices: Nigeria,” 11 March 2020, p. 37.

[17] Ibid., p. 36.

[18] Ibid. p. 37.

[19] Statement of Nigeria, Mine Ban Treaty Fourth Review Conference, Oslo, 27 November 2019.

[20] Ibid.

[23] Ibid.

[24]Boko Haram has cluster bombs: Nigeria’s DHQ,” The News Nigeria, 8 October 2015; “Nigeria: Boko Haram Cluster Bomb May Come from Nigerian Military,” AllAfrica, 14 October 2015; and Phil Hazlewood, “‘Boko Haram cluster bombs’ may come from Nigerian military,” AFP, 13 October 2015.

[25] Bruno Bouchardy, Field Coordinator, UNMAS Mali, and Michael Hands, Mine Action Officer, UN Office to the African Union, “Mission Report: UNMAS Explosive Threat Scoping Mission to Nigeria 3 to 14 April 2017,” April 2017, p. 3.

[26] Ibid.

[27] Lionel Pechera, “Northeast Nigeria Mine Action Update,” Briefing to the Mine Action Support Group, 15 October 2020.

[28] Hamza Idris and Ibrahim Sawab, “Nigeria: Liberated Areas – Why IDPs Can’t Return Home,” AllAfrica, 7 March 2015; Ibrahim Sawab and Hamisu Kabiru Matazu, “Nigeria: Boko Haram – Plying Borno Roads Still a Nightmare,” AllAfrica, 9 May 2015; and Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre, “Nigeria IDP Figures Analysis,” 31 December 2015.

[29] Kabiru R. Anwar and Romoke W. Ahmad, “Nigeria: Fear of Landmines Scares Adamawa Farmers, Jibrilla says,” AllAfrica, 24 October 2016.

[30] Ibrahim Sawab and Hamisu Kabiru Matazu, “Nigeria: Boko Haram – Plying Borno Roads Still a Nightmare,” AllAfrica, 9 May 2015; Hamza Idris and Ibrahim Sawab, “Nigeria: Liberated Areas – Why IDPs Can’t Return Home,” AllAfrica, 7 March 2015; Kevin Sieff, “A famine unlike we have ever seen,” The Washington Post, 13 October 2016; OCHA, “Humanitarian Needs OverviewNigeria,” December 2020, p. 18.

[31] UNMAS, “Programmes: Nigeria,” 30 October 2020.

[32] Unless otherwise indicated, casualty data for 2019 is based on: email from Lionel Pechera, Programme Coordinator, UNMAS, 29 September 2020; and Monitor analysis of Armed Conflict Location and Event Data project (ACLED) data for calendar year 2019. Approved citation: Clionadh Raleigh, Andrew Linke, Håvard Hegre, and Joakim Karlsen, “Introducing ACLED-Armed Conflict Location and Event Data,” Journal of Peace Research, Issue 47(5), 2010, pp. 651–660.

[33] MAG, “Landmines and the Crisis in Northeast Nigeria,” September 2018; and “Boko Haram landmines in Nigeria killed at least 162 in two years – study,” The Guardian, 23 September 2018.

[34] UNHCR, “Landmines, improvised explosive devices pose deadly risks for displaced in Sahel and Lake Chad,” 28 July 2020.

[36] Email from Lionel Pechera, Programme Coordinator, UNMAS, 29 September 2020.

[37] Ikechukwu Nnochiri and Dennis Agbo, “N88bn compensation to victims of Biafra war: Anambra, Rivers, Akwa Ibom, Delta, Ebonyi, Cross River, Abia, Enugu, Benue to benefit,” Vanguard, 31 October 2017; and Ikechukwu Nnochiri, “N88bn compensation: FG yet to pay us — Biafra war victims,” Vanguard, 8 January 2018.

[38] These casualties were recorded from 2015 through the end of 2019. Another two casualties were recorded in the Monitor database as injured in 2002. These may have been included in the pre-2012 figure and have not been added to the country total.

[39] UNMAS presentation, “IED in Northeast Nigeria,” undated but July 2019.

[40] US Air Force, “US EOD, air advisors train Nigerian Armed Forces,” 17 October 2019; US Embassy and Consulate in Nigeria, “IED Defeat training with Nigerian soldiers strengthens partnerships,” 6 June 2019.

[41] UNMAS, “Mission Report: UNMAS Explosive Threat Scoping Mission to Nigeria 3 to 14 April 2017,” April 2017, p. 5.

[42] UNMAS, “Northeast Nigeria,” October 2020; and UNMAS, “Programmes: Nigeria,” 30 April 2020.

[43] Statement of Nigeria, Mine Ban Treaty Fourth Review Conference, Oslo, 27 November 2019.

[44] Nigeria Mine Ban Treaty Article 5 deadline Extension Request, 10 November 2020.

[45] Email from Nina Seecharan, MAG, 2 October 2018; and MAG, “Annual Report 2018-2019,” 7 February 2020, p. 20.

[46] UNMAS, “Programmes: Nigeria,” 30 April 2020.

[47] Ibid.

[48] Their unit had been clearing mines along the Gwoza-Yamteke road and seized a bomb-making facility in what formerly was a chemistry laboratory at the Dikwa School of Agriculture. Ibrahim Sawab and Hamisu Kabiru Matazu, “Nigeria: Boko Haram – Plying Borno Roads Still a Nightmare,” AllAfrica, 9 May 2015; and Peter Clottey, “Nigerian Army Disables Boko Haram Explosives,” Voice of America News, 5 August 2015.

[49] UNMAS, “Mission Report: UNMAS Explosive Threat Scoping Mission to Nigeria 3 to 14 April 2017,” April 2017, p. 5.

[50] OCHA, “North-east Nigeria: humanitarian situation update,” 14 February 2020, p. 8; “Nigeria Sector Status: Mine Action Sub-Sector,” 2 August 2020; and Risk Education Strategic Monitoring Questions data for 2019, provided by Hugues Laurenge, Child Protection, Specialist, UNICEF, 2 June 2020.

[51] UNMAS, “Programmes: Nigeria,” 30 April 2020.

[53] UNMAS, “Programmes: Nigeria,” 30 April 2020; and UNMAS, “Northeast Nigeria,” October 2020; and MAG, “Annual Report 2018–2019,” 7 February 2020, p. 20.

[54] UN General Assembly, “Countering the threat posed by improvised explosive devices: Report of the Secretary-General,” 17 July 2020, p. 9.

[56] UNMAS, “Where we work: Nigeria,” 30 April 2020.

[57] UNMAS, “Annual Report 2019,” April 2020, p. 10.

[58] UNMAS, “Programmes: Nigeria,” 30 April 2020.

[59] Risk Education Strategic Monitoring Questions data for 2019, provided by Hugues Laurenge, Child Protection Specialist, UNICEF, 2 June 2020.

[60] MAG, “Annual Report 2018–2019,” 7 February 2020, p. 20.

[61] DDG, “Where we work: Nigeria,” undated.

[62] UNMAS, “Programmes: Nigeria,” 30 April 2020; and Protection Sector Working Group, “Nigeria national protection sector working group: COVID-19 impact on humanitarian response,” April 2020.

[63] UNMAS, “Programmes: Nigeria,” 30 April 2020; and OCHA, “Humanitarian Response Plan: Nigeria,” March 2020, p. 88.

[64] OCHA, “Humanitarian Response Plan: Nigeria,” March 2020, p. 88.

[65] ICRC, “Physical Rehabilitation Programme: 2019 Annual Report,” June 2020, p. 24; ICRC, “Annual Report 2019,” June 2020, pp. 212 and 215; UNMAS, “UNMAS welcomes Japan’s USD 236kcontribution for life-saving humanitarian assistance in Northeast Nigeria,” 4 April 2020; and UNMAS, “Programmes: Nigeria,” 30 April 2020; and OCHA, “Humanitarian Response Plan: Nigeria,” March 2020, p. 89.

[66] Health Sector Nigeria, “Health Sector Bulletin December 2019,” 13 January 2020.

[67] ICRC, “Annual Report 2019,” June 2020, p. 215.

[68] UNMAS, “Where we work: Nigeria,” 30 April 2020.

[69] ICRC, “Annual Report 2019,” June 2020, p. 115.

[70] ICRC, “Physical Rehabilitation Programme: 2019 Annual Report,” June 2020, p. 24.

[71] Ibid.; and ICRC, “Annual Report 2019,” June 2020, p. 215.

[72] US Department of States, “2019 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices: Nigeria,” 11 March 2020, p. 37.

[74] ICRC, “Physical Rehabilitation Programme: 2019 Annual Report,” Geneva, June 2020, p. 24; and ICRC, “Annual Report 2019,” June 2020, p. 215.


Mine Ban Policy

Last updated: 28 September 2022

Policy

The Federal Republic of Nigeria acceded to the Mine Ban Treaty on 27 September 2001, and the treaty entered into force for the country on 1 March 2002.

Nigeria has not enacted national implementing legislation for the Mine Ban Treaty, but has considered doing so in the past.[1] In 2006, Nigeria reported that an implementation bill was undergoing its first reading in the National Assembly.[2]

Nigeria has provided seven annual Article 7 transparency reports, but none since 2012. Nigeria has not heeded requests from States Parties to provide an updated annual report.[3]

Nigeria attended the Nineteenth Meeting of States Parties, held virtually in November 2021, but did not make any statement. During the meeting, States Parties granted Nigeria an extension to its Article 5 clearance deadline, which Nigeria said was necessary due to new contamination from improvised antipersonnel mines laid by non-state armed groups (NSAGs).

Nigeria has signed, but not ratified, both the Convention on Cluster Munitions and the Convention on Conventional Weapons (CCW).

Production, transfer, stockpiling, and use

According to Nigeria, antipersonnel landmines were produced in the country the past, long before the adoption of the Mine Ban Treaty.[4]

Nigeria imported or otherwise acquired antipersonnel landmines in the past. In its initial Article 7 transparency report, submitted in 2004, it declared a stockpile of 3,364 Dimbat mines for research and training.[5] However, in 2005, Nigeria reported that all the mines retained for training had been destroyed.[6] In 2009, Nigeria reported that it had destroyed 9,786 stockpiled “British made AP [antipersonnel] landmines” in 2005 and retained another 3,364 mines for research and training.[7] In 2010, and again in 2012, Nigeria reported the retention of 3,364 “British and Czechoslovakian made AP Landmine[s],” but did not specify the types.[8]

There is no evidence to indicate that Nigerian government forces have used antipersonnel landmines since Nigeria signed the Mine Ban Treaty. In the past, antipersonnel mines were laid during the 1967–1970 Biafran Civil War. Nigeria has denied allegations that its Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) troops used antipersonnel mines in Liberia and Sierra Leone the 1990s.[9]

Production and use by non-state armed groups

Boko Haram and related NSAGs have made and emplaced victim-activated landmines and other improvised explosive devices (IEDs) in northeast Nigeria in recent years.

At the Fourth Review Conference in November 2019, Nigeria stated that the northeastern states of Adamawa, Borno, and Yobe were most affected by new use of antipersonnel mines.[10] A report by Mines Advisory Group (MAG) recorded 697 incidents involving improvised mines laid by Boko Haram, which resulted in 1,052 casualties across the three states between January 2016 and August 2020.[11] In 2017, the United Nations (UN) reported extensive use of simple pressure plate activated IEDs on main supply routes, and significant use of IEDs around Boko Haram-held areas.[12]

Multiple casualties were recorded in Nigeria in 2022 due to mines and IEDs laid by NSAGs, in particular Boko Haram and Islamic State-affiliated groups. Action on Armed Violence (AOAV) recorded 14 IED explosions in Nigeria from January–May 2022.[13]

On 21 February 2022, four security personnel were killed and one was injured when their vehicle hit a landmine in Niger state, in central Nigeria, according to local police, who attributed the attack to cattle thieves.[14] In April 2022, four hunters were killed and seven injured when an IED laid by insurgents exploded along the Borno highway.[15] On 7 May 2022, an IED laid by Boko Haram killed six of the group’s own fighters as they traveled through Borno state.[16]



[1] In 2012, Nigeria reported that, “Domestication of MBT [Mine Ban Treaty] is in progress.” Nigeria Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for the period 1 April 2010–31 March 2011), Form A, April 2012. See, Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Database.

[2]Nigeria Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report, Form A, 22 August 2006.

[4] Nigeria Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for the period 1 July 2009–31 December 2009), Forms H and J, April 2010.

[5] Nigeria Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report, Form D, 22 June 2004. The origins of the mines were not given, but the Monitor has reported that in the past, Nigeria imported antipersonnel mines from the former Yugoslavia, the former Soviet Union, the former Czechoslovakia, France, and the United Kingdom (UK). See, ICBL, Landmine Monitor Report 1999: Toward a Mine-Free World (New York: Human Rights Watch, October 2009) pp. 202–203.

[6] Nigeria Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report, Forms D and G, 15 April 2005. In November 2004, 200 antipersonnel mines were destroyed. The remaining 3,164 mines were destroyed in February 2005, in a ceremony witnessed by Nigeria’s president, Ministry of Defense officials, and foreign observers. At the same time, Nigeria reported destroying 1,836 pieces of unexploded ordnance (UXO) recovered from the site of the Lagos Ammunition Transit Depot explosion. It did not specify how many of these items were antipersonnel mines.

[7] Nigeria Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for the period 2006–2009), Forms D and G.

[8] Nigeria Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for the period 1 April 2010–31 March 2011), Form B; and Nigeria Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for the period 1 July 2009–31 December 2009), Form B.

[9] See ICBL, Landmine Monitor Report 2001: Toward a Mine-Free World (New York: Human Rights Watch, August 2001), pp. 256–257; and ICBL, Landmine Monitor Report 1999: Toward a Mine-Free World (New York: Human Rights Watch, October 2009), pp. 201–203.

[10] Nigeria has formed an interministerial committee to develop a national mine action strategy, and to prepare a workplan for survey and clearance. Nigeria has stated that it “wishes to comply with the obligations of the APMBC [Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention], namely preparing an updated Article 7 transparency report and by developing an Article 5 extension request to work audaciously towards the clearance of all mined areas in order to meet the 2025 Convention deadline. The Committee’s preliminary investigation has discovered the use of victim-activated Improvised Explosive Devices which fall under the definition of AP [antipersonnel] mines according to the Convention. It is expected that the Committee’s Article 7 report will provide details on all suspected and confirmed improvised landmine contamination areas.” Statement of Nigeria, Mine Ban Treaty Fourth Review Conference, Oslo, 27 November 2019.

[11] MAG, “Hidden Scars: The Landmine Crisis in north-east Nigeria,” December 2020; and MAG, “Nigeria: 2016 – June 30th 2019 Explosive Ordnance Incident Map – Accessible/Inaccessible Areas in Adamawa, Borno, and Yobe as of August 2019,” 22 August 2019.

[12] Bruno Bouchardy, Field Coordinator, United Nations Mine Action Service (UNMAS) Mali, and Michael Hands, Mine Action Officer, United Nations Office to the African Union (UNOAU), “Mission Report: UNMAS Explosive Threat Scoping Mission to Nigeria 3 to 14 April 2017,” April 2017, p. 3.

[14]Landmine Kills Four Security Personnel in Central Nigeria,” The Defense Post, 21 February 2022.

[15] Olatunji Omirin, “Landmine Kills 4 Hunters, Injures 7 In Borno,” Daily Trust, 4 April 2022.

[16] Kingsley Omonobi, “Explosive planted by Boko Haram kill 6 terrorists in Borno,” Vanguard, 7 May 2022.


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