Senegal

Cluster Munition Ban Policy

Last updated: 15 July 2015

Five-Year Review: State Party Senegal ratified the convention on 3 August 2011 and views existing legislation as sufficient to enforce its implementation of the convention. Senegal has participated in all of the convention’s Meetings of States Parties and it has elaborated its views on certain important issues relating to the convention’s interpretation and implementation. Senegal has condemned new use of cluster munitions. In its initial transparency report for the convention provided in 2014, Senegal confirmed it has never used, produced, transferred, or stockpiled cluster munitions and has not retained any for research or training.

Policy

The Republic of Senegalsigned the Convention on Cluster Munitions on 3 December 2008 and ratified on 3 August 2011. The convention entered into force for Senegal on 1 February 2012.

Senegal has reported that “it is not necessary to put in place legislation or regulation because Senegal is not a country affected by cluster munitions.”[1] It lists its 2010 ratification legislation under national implementation measures.[2] Previously, in 2012 and 2013, government officials indicated that Senegal was considering enacting specific legislation to enforce the provisions of the ban convention in domestic law.[3]

Senegal provided its initial Article 7 transparency report for the Convention on Cluster Munitions on 3 October 2012, and submitted an annual updated report on 2 April 2014.[4] As of 8 July 2015, Senegal had not provided the updated report for calendar year 2014, which was due by 30 April 2015.

Senegal actively participated in the Oslo Process that created the convention and sought a total and immediate ban on cluster munitions with no exceptions.[5]

Senegal has continued to actively engage in the work of the Convention on Cluster Munitions. It has participated in every Meeting of States Parties to the convention, including the Fifth Meeting of States Parties in San José, Costa Rica in September 2014. Senegal has attended all of the convention’s intersessional meetings in Geneva, including those held in June 2015. It has participated in regional workshops on the convention, most recently in Lomé, Togo in May 2013.

At the Fifth Meeting of States Parties in September 2014, Senegal called on states that have not yet done so, especially from Africa, to accede to the convention and implement its provisions.[6] At the UN General Assembly (UNGA) First Committee on Disarmament and International Security in October 2014, Senegal encouraged states to join the convention before its First Review Conference in Dubrovnik, Croatia in September 2015.[7] Senegal expressed its support for the convention again at the end of the 2014 UNGA First Committee, describing it as a significant advancement for the protection of civilians and in strengthening international humanitarian law.[8]

In September 2014, Senegal said it “condemns recent use of cluster munitions in certain parts of the world” and called for the weapons’ destruction to create a world free of cluster munitions.[9] Senegal has voted in favor of recent UNGA resolutions condemning the use of cluster munitions in Syria, including Resolution 69/189 on 18 December 2014, which expressed “outrage” at the continued use.[10] 

Senegal is a State Party to the Mine Ban Treaty. It is also party to the Convention on Conventional Weapons.

Interpretive issues

Senegal has elaborated its views on a number of important issues relating to the interpretation and implementation of the convention. In 2012, Senegal stated its view that assistance with acts prohibited under the convention during joint military operations with states not party is prohibited by the convention. Senegal said that its commitment to humanitarian disarmament prevents it from participating in any military operations using cluster munitions.[11]

In 2011, Senegal stated that it considers foreign stockpiling and transfer of cluster munitions a violation of the convention. On the issue of investment in cluster munition production, Senegal expressed its view that investment in cluster munitions would similarly be prohibited by the convention.[12]

In September 2014, Senegal affirmed that it considers the transfer and foreign stockpiling of cluster munitions, as well as the investment in cluster munition production, to constitute violations of the Convention on Cluster Munitions.[13]

Use, production, transfer, and stockpiling

Senegal has reported that it has never used, produced, transferred, or stockpiled cluster munitions.[14] It has not retained any cluster munitions for training or research purposes.[15]



[2] Senegal’s National Assembly unanimously approved Law No. 14/2010 to ratify the convention on 23 June 2010. Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Report, Form A, 3 October 2012.

[3] CMC meeting with Abdoulaye Bathily, First Secretary, Permanent Mission of Senegal to the UN in Geneva, in Lomé, 22 May 2013; response to Monitor questionnaire from Amb. Papa Omar Ndiaye, Director, Senegal National Centre for Mine Action (CNAMS), 17 April 2012; and meeting with Amb. Ndiaye, CNAMS, Convention on Cluster Munitions Intersessional Meetings, Geneva, 18 April 2012.

[4] The initial report covered the period from 26 April 2011 to 26 April 2012, while the 2 April 2014 update is for calendar year 2013.

[5] For details on Senegal’s cluster munition policy and practice through early 2009, see Human Rights Watch and Landmine Action, Banning Cluster Munitions: Government Policy and Practice (Ottawa: Mines Action Canada, May 2009), pp. 149–150.

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

[7] Statement of Senegal, UNGA First Committee on Disarmament and International Security, New York, 8 October 2014.

[8] Ibid., 21 October 2014.

[9] Statement of Senegal, Convention on Cluster Munitions Fifth Meeting of States Parties, San José, 2 September 2014. Monitor translation.

[10] “Situation of human rights in the Syrian Arab Republic,” UNGA Resolution A/RES/69/189, 18 December 2014. Senegal voted in favor of similar resolutions on 15 May and 18 December 2013.

[11] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Amb. Ndiaye, CNAMS, 17 April 2012.

[12] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Col. Meïssa Niang, Director, Control Research and Legislation of the Ministry of Armed Forces of Senegal, 3 February 2011.

[13] Statement of Senegal, Convention on Cluster Munitions Fifth Meeting of States Parties, San José, 2 September 2014.

[14] Statement of Senegal, Lomé Regional Seminar on the Universalization of the Convention on Cluster Munitions, Lomé, Togo, 23 May 2013. Notes by Action on Armed Violence; statement of Senegal, Convention on Cluster Munitions Third Meeting of States Parties, Oslo, 12 September 2012; response to Monitor questionnaire by Col. Niang, Control Research and Legislation of the Ministry of Armed Forces of Senegal, 3 February 2011; and statement of Senegal, Convention on Cluster Munitions First Meeting of States Parties, Vientiane, 10 November 2010. Notes by the CMC.

[15] Convention on Cluster Munitions Article 7 Reports, Forms C, 3 October 2012 and 2 April 2014.


Mine Ban Policy

Last updated: 18 December 2019

Policy

The Republic of Senegal signed the Mine Ban Treaty on 3 December 1997 and ratified it on 24 September 1998, becoming a State Party on 1 March 1999. On 3 August 2005, the president signed a national implementation law.[1] The law makes production, purchase, sale, stockpiling, transfer, and use of antipersonnel mines a criminal offense.[2]

Senegal frequently attends meetings of the treaty, including the Third Review Conference in Maputo in June 2014, and more recently the Seventeenth Meeting of States Parties, where it provided a statement on Article 5 mine clearance activities.[3] Senegal did not attend the intersessional meetings in Geneva in May 2019. Senegal previously served on the Standing Committee on Victim Assistance (2014–2015).

Senegal is party to the Convention on Conventional Weapons (CCW) and its Amended Protocol II on landmines and Protocol V on explosive remnants of war. It is also party to the Convention on Cluster Munitions.

Production, transfer, stockpiling, retention, and use

Government authorities claim that Senegal has never used antipersonnel mines inside or outside the country.[4] Senegal has consistently stated in its Article 7 reports that it has never produced, possessed, or stockpiled mines.

In April 2010, Senegal reported that 28 mines were consumed in training during 2009. These mines had been collected from demining operations or taken from rebel stockpiles discovered in the field. Twenty-four mines were destroyed during training activities by the armed forces and four mines were defuzed and stored by the NGO Humanity & Inclusion (HI, formerly Handicap International) for training purposes.[5] Previously Senegal had only reported the use of mines for training in one year, 2006.[6]

Sporadic armed conflict in the Casamance region of Senegal continued between government forces and the Movement of Democratic Forces of Casamance (Mouvement des Forces Démocratiques de Casamance, MFDC).[7] There have not been any allegations of new use of antipersonnel mines by the MFDC in this reporting period (from May 2010 to May 2011), but use of antivehicle mines by armed groups resulted in civilian and military deaths and injuries.[8]

In March 2009, an MFDC representative who claimed to speak on behalf of all factions told the Monitor, “For the time being we don’t need mines, but [possible future use] will entirely depend on the government. Mines are a defensive tool for us. The state has obliged us to use mines and to go to war.”[9]

Previously, in March and April 2006, the Salif Sadio faction of the MFDC fled Senegal and laid both antipersonnel and antivehicle mines in northern Guinea-Bissau.[10] There were also credible allegations of use of antipersonnel mines by MFDC rebels in Senegal in 1999 and 2000.[11] In 2010, the Sadio faction stated to the Swiss NGO Geneva Call that they did not use antipersonnel mines but would not rule out use of the weapon in the future. The faction admitted to using antivehicle mines. Geneva Call also held a meeting with the Kassolol faction of the MFDC at which the leaders of the faction confirmed their agreement in principle to enable the “gradual implementation” of humanitarian demining.[12]



[1] Law on the Prohibition on Antipersonnel Mines, adopted on 14 July 2005. Previously, Senegal reported that violations of the Mine Ban Treaty were punishable under national constitutional law and the 2001 penal code.

[2] Articles 5 and 6 of the law include penal sanctions of a prison term of five to 10 years, a fine of XAF1 million to 3 million (US$2,170 to $6,510) for individuals, and a fine of XAF30 million to 50 million ($65,100 to $108,500) for legal entities.

[3] Statement of Senegal, Mine Ban Treaty Seventeenth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 29 November 2018.

[4] However, it appears certain that Senegalese forces used antipersonnel mines in Guinea-Bissau in 1998, to support government troops against a self-proclaimed military junta. Such use would have occurred after Senegal signed the Mine Ban Treaty, but before its entry into force for the government. See, Landmine Monitor Report 1999, pp. 76–79.

[5] Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report, Form D, 30 April 2010. Senegal reported that the armed forces used the following types and quantities: 10 MI AP DV; 10 MI AP ID; one PRB M35, one M 969, and two PMN. HI used two MAPS and two PRB M35.

[6] In April 2007, Senegal reported that 24 antipersonnel mines were used for training purposes before their destruction in August and September 2006. It stated that the mines were either taken from demining operations or discovered among rebel stockpiles, and that the defuzed mines were used to instruct deminers. The mines were 10 MI AP DV; 10 MI AP ID; two PMN; one M 969; and one PRB M35. Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report, Form D, 30 April 2007.

[7] The MFDC has had at least three military factions, with shifting leaders and some infighting. Some MFDC leaders signed a peace accord with the government in December 2004, but further negotiations on its implementation have not taken place. The agreement acknowledged the scourge of antipersonnel mines and called for humanitarian demining in Casamance. See, Landmine Monitor Report 2005, p. 505.

[8] In November 2010, a civilian bus struck an antivehicle mine in Sindian district of Bignona killing the driver and a passenger and another eight persons were injured. In March 2011, an antivehicle mine injured five Senegalese soldiers in Tendine, in an area under the control of the MFDC. “Veille de Tabaski meurtrière dans la région de Ziguinchor: 3 morts, des dizaines de blessés” (“Eve of Tabaski deadly in Ziguinchor region: 3 dead, dozens injured”), Ziguinchor News, 19 November 2010; and “Casamance – Un Vehicule Militaire Saute Sur Une Mine: 5 soldats grièvement blesses” (“Casamance – A military vehicle detonates a mine: five soldiers seriously injured”), Le Quotidien (Senegal), 7 March 2011.

[9] Interview with Daniel Diatta, Representative of the Secretary-General, MDFC, Ziguinchor, 20 March 2009. See, Landmine Monitor Report 2008, p. 607.

[10] For details, see, Landmine Monitor Report 2006, pp. 463–464.

[12] Geneva Call, “Annual Report 2010,” p. 18.


Impact

Last updated: 07 February 2022

Jump to a specific section of the chapter:

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

Country Summary

Landmine contamination in the Republic of Senegal is the result of 40 years of fighting between government forces and a non-state armed group (NSAG), the Movement of Democratic Forces of Casamance (Mouvement des Forces Démocratiques de Casamance, MFDC). Despite a ceasefire being in place since 2004, sporadic fighting with some factions of MFDC has continued.

Senegal’s contaminated areas are in the Casamance region, between the border with The Gambia to the north and Guinea-Bissau to the south. Senegal has not yet established an accurate assessment of the extent of contamination. Reduced capacity and funds, and ongoing insecurity, have resulted in limited land release over the last five years. No clearance took place in 2018–2020. Humanity & Inclusion (HI) is the only remaining international clearance operator in Senegal. In June 2020, Senegal submitted a third request to extend its Mine Ben Treaty Article 5 clearance deadline, until 1 March 2026.

Risk education is coordinated by the Senegalese National Mine Action Center (Centre National d’Action Antimines, CNAMS). Risk education activities are implemented by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and the Solidarity Initiative for Development Actions (Initiative Solidaire des Actions de Développement, ISAD), when funding is available.

Casualties due to landmines and explosive remnants of war (ERW) increased in 2019 and 2020 compared with the previous four years. In 2020, a total of fifteen mine casualties were recorded. These incidents occurred while the Senegalese Armed Forces were conducting security operations to facilitate the return of displaced populations to areas that still required clearance.[1]

No major progress was made on victim assistance in 2020. The National Victim Assistance Action Plan expired in 2014. Since 1999, with the exception providing healthcare, the government has relied on national and international non-governmental organizations (NGOs) to assist survivors.

Senegal has not provided funding for survivor assistance since 2015. Senegalese mine survivors receive prosthetic devices and repairs from the ICRC-supported Center for Motor Rehabilitation (Centro de Reabilitação Motora, CRM), in neighboring Guinea-Bissau. ICRC is scheduled to end its support to CRM in December 2022.

Treaty Status

Treaty status overview

Mine Ban Treaty

State Party (Entry into force: 1 March 1999)

Article 5 clearance deadline: 1 March 2026 (third extension)

Convention on Cluster Munitions

State Party (Entry into force: 1 February 2012)

Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD)

State Party (Ratification: 7 September 2010)

 

Senegal’s first Mine Ban Treaty Article 5 extension request was for seven years, to 1 March 2016. Despite intending to complete clearance by this deadline, Senegal submitted a second extension request in June 2015, and was granted a new deadline of 1 March 2021. In June 2020, Senegal submitted a third request, extending its clearance deadline by a further five years to 1 March 2026.

Senegal stated that it did not meet its previous Article 5 deadlines due to insecurity; the reluctance of MFDC to agree to demining operations; concerns over deminer safety; declining technical and financial resources; and an inability to mobilize state funding for clearance operations.[2]

In June 2020, CNAMS reported that it required over US$7.3 million to complete technical survey and clearance.[3] Senegal previously stated that it contributes €460,000 (US$545,000) annually to cover the operating costs of CNAMS,[4] and noted difficulties in mobilizing national resources for the conduct of mine action activities.[5] Senegal stated that fulfillment of its clearance obligations by 1 March 2026 will depend on resource mobilization and security conditions.[6]

Management and Coordination

Mine action management and coordination

Mine action management and coordination overview[7]

National mine action management actors

National Commission for the Implementation of the Ottawa Convention

Senegalese National Mine Action Center (Centre National d’Action Antimines, CNAMS)

Mine action legislation

Law No. 2005-12 (3 August 2005) on the prohibition of antipersonnel mines

Mine action strategic and operational plans

National Mine Action Strategy 2016–2021

Workplan for 2021–2026

Mine action standards

Senegalese Mine Action Standards, last updated in 2013

 

The National Commission for the Implementation of the Ottawa Convention serves as the national mine action authority in Senegal. Demining operations in Casamance are coordinated by CNAMS, while regional coordination committees operate in Kolda, Sédhiou, and Ziguinchor departments.

Strategies and policies

The National Mine Action Strategy for 2016–2021 was adopted in January 2018 by the National Commission for the Implementation of the Ottawa Convention. The objective of the strategy was to clear all contaminated areas by 31 December 2020. Senegal failed to meet this target.[8]

Senegal provided a clearance workplan for 2021–2026 within its 2020 Mine Ban Treaty Article 5 deadline extension request.[9] Priority-setting for clearance is based on security considerations, the return of displaced populations, social cohesion, and planned economic activities in the area.[10]

Legislation and standards

Senegal’s national mine action standards were expected to be revised in 2018, but no progress was reported.[11] The standards were last updated in 2013.[12]

Information management

CNAMS is responsible for the collection and management of mine action data in Senegal.[13] Since 2008, CNAMS has used Information Management System for Mine Action (IMSMA) reporting forms.[14]

Risk education management and coordination

Risk education management and coordination overview[15]

Government focal points

Senegalese National Mine Action Center (Centre National d’Action Antimines, CNAMS)

Coordination mechanisms

CNAMS hold regular meetings to discuss risk education with the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)

Risk education strategy

National Action Plan for Mine/ERW Risk Education (2010). The plan has not been revised due to funding shortages

Risk education standards

Included within the Senegalese Mine Action Standards

 

Coordination

The Risk Education and Victim Assistance Unit within CNAMS coordinates and supervises risk education activities in Senegal.[16] Risk education coordination was hampered in 2020 as most risk education operators were inactive.[17]

The National Mine Action Strategy 2016–2021 states that risk education and awareness-raising in Senegal are the responsibility of civil society organizations.[18]

National standards and guidelines

Risk education standards are included within the Senegalese Mine Action Standards. The standards were last updated in 2013.

Victim assistance management and coordination

Victim assistance management and coordination overview[19]

Government focal points

National Center for Mine Action (Centre National d’Action Antimines au Sénégal,CNAMS); for civilian victims

Foundation for the Military Disabled and Mutilated (Fondation des invalides et mutilés militaire, FIMM); for military victims

Coordination mechanisms

CNAMS’ Regional Coordination Committee for Casamance coordinates with the Solidarity Initiative for Development Actions (Initiative Solidaire des Actions de Développement, ISAD) and victim assistance service providers

Coordination regularity and outcomes

Meetings were held in 2020 on the physical rehabilitation of Senegalese mine/ERW victims in Guinea-Bissau

Plans/strategies

National Victim Assistance Action Plan 2010–2014 (expired)

Disability sector integration

 

The Ministry for Health and Social Action is responsible for protecting the rights of persons with disabilities

ISAD collaborates with other DPOs

Mine/ERW survivors and other persons with disabilities are supported within the framework of the CNAMS, ISAD, and International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) prosthesis-fitting agreement in Guinea-Bissau

Survivor inclusion and participation

Survivors are included in the provision of victim assistance, through ISAD

Note: DPO=disabled persons’ organization; ERW=explosive remnant of war.

CNAMS is the focal point for assisting civilian mine/ERW survivors.[20] CNAMS reported in 2019 that the National Victim Assistance Action Plan 2010–2014, which had long expired, was pending final evaluation before it could be revised.[21]

Laws and policies

Legislation prohibits discrimination against persons with disabilities, and mandates accessibility, but Senegal did not enforce provisions adequately in 2020. A quota of 15% of new civil service positions are reserved for persons with disabilities, yet in regions outside Dakar, persons with disabilities could not access these jobs.[22] An “Equal Opportunity Card” initiative was launched in 2015, but was inactive in 2020.[23] A national policy on inclusive education was being developed.[24]

Impact

Contamination

Contamination overview (as of December 2020)[25]

Landmines

0.49km² CHA

Extent of contamination: Small

Other ERW contamination

N/R

Note: CHA=confirmed hazardous area; ERW=explosive remnant of war; N/R=not reported.

 

Mine contamination in Senegal is the result of 40 years of fighting between the Senegalese Armed Forces and MFDC. Sporadic fighting with some MFDC factions has continued, despite a ceasefire being in place since 2004.

Senegal’s landmine contamination is located in the Casamance region, between the borders of The Gambia to the north and Guinea-Bissau to the south. Four of Senegal’s 45 departments—Bignona, Goudomp, Oussouye, and Ziguinchor—contain confirmed or suspected mined areas. Senegal has yet to establish an accurate assessment of the extent of its mine contamination.

As of 31 December 2020, 37 mined areas, totaling 491,086m², remained to be addressed. Another nine suspected hazardous areas (SHAs) of unknown size were reported.[26] Senegal reported that as of the end of 2020, a total of 118 localities remained to be surveyed—including 101 in Bignona, four in Oussouye, and 13 in Ziguinchor.[27]

The mine/ERW contamination in Senegal poses a threat to local residents, hinders socio-economic development, prevents the return of displaced populations, and restricts access to agricultural land and livelihood activities.[28] Contaminated areas along the border with Guinea-Bissau hinder access to essential services and facilities.[29]

Casualties

Casualties overview[30]

Casualties

All known casualties (between 1988 and 2020)

877 (191 killed, 673 injured, 13 unknown survival outcome)

Casualties in 2020

Annual total

15 (increase from 9 in 2019)

Survival outcome

2 killed, 13 injured

Device type causing casualties

3 antipersonnel mines, 12 antivehicle mines

Civilian/military status

All casualties in 2020 were military personnel

Age and gender

All casualties in 2020 were men

 

In 2020, 15 casualties were recorded in Senegal, all of whom were military personnel, representing a sharp increase on previous annual casualty totals.[31] All incidents occurred while the Senegalese Armed Forces were conducting security operations to facilitate the return of displaced persons.[32]

Changes in the security situation in the Casamance region have resulted in variable annual casualty rates in Senegal.[33] While violence intensified in 2011, it decreased in 2013, explaining the decline in casualties among combatants from 2013–2019.[34] In the first half of 2021, the Senegalese Armed Forces conducted military operations against MFDC in southern Casamance, near the border with Guinea-Bissau.[35]

There is no casualty incident surveillance system in Senegal.[36] The Monitor has identified at least 877 mine/ERW casualties (191 killed, 673 injured, 13 unknown survival outcome) between 1988 and the end of 2020. Over the same period, CNAMS registered 847 mine casualties (190 killed, 657 injured).[37] CNAMS is responsible for collecting casualty data, with support from government authorities, local associations, NGOs, and the Senegalese Armed Forces.[38] CNAMS reported that there were 443 civilian and around 200 military mine/ERW survivors in Senegal, as of 2020.[39]

Addressing the Impact

Mine action

Operators and service providers

The withdrawal of Norwegian People’s Aid (NPA) and Denel Mechem, and the loss of financial support from key donors, has reduced clearance capacities. HI is the only international clearance operator working in Senegal.

Clearance

Land release overview[40]

Landmine clearance in 2016–2020

2016: 0.06km²

2017: 0.10km²

2018: 0km2

2019: 0km2

2020: 0km2

Five-year clearance total: 0.16km²

Progress

Behind target

 

Despite a National Stakeholder Dialogue on mine clearance in 2018, and the granting of Senegal’s extension request in 2020, no clearance has taken place since 2017. Technical survey in Goudomp department was suspended following the kidnap of five HI deminers in May 2019.[41] The COVID-19 pandemic and limited funding caused the suspension of non-technical survey, which had begun in February 2020.[42] Non-technical survey activities carried out in February and March 2020 led to the release of 26 areas in the Bignona department.[43] The amount of land released was not specified, though it was reported that no contamination was found.

In 2021, HI secured funding from the European Union (EU) to resume clearance and risk education activities, and to support the return of internally displaced persons (IDPs). The project was expected to start in October 2021.[44]

Senegal has indicated that demining operations should be conducted within the framework of the ongoing peace talks, and approved by MFDC in meetings with Senegalese officials.[45] CNAMS is not a member of the negotiation group, the Reflection Group on Peace in Casamance (Groupe de Réflexion sur la Paix en Casamance, GRPC), making it unclear how mine action is included in the the peace talks.[46] CNAMS reported in 2020 that it relies on local leaders to secure access to contaminated areas.[47]

In its 2020 mine clearance extension request in 2020, to 1 March 2026, Senegal identified the following clearance targets: 12 CHAs (covering 113,975m²) in 2021, 16 CHAs (299,871m²) in 2022, 9 CHAs (77,240m²) in 2023, and nine SHAs and any further contaminated areas identified after non-technical survey in 2024–2025.[48]

Deminer safety

As of the end of 2020, HI was the only international operator in Senegal. HI reported that its task orders from CNAMS first took into account security conditions, before focusing on community requests.[49]

In May 2019, five deminers from HI were kidnapped by MFDC in Bafata-Brame, and released on the same day.[50] The incident led to the suspension of survey operations.[51]

While Senegal recorded a significant increase in clearance from 2012–2013, the kidnapping of 12 Denel Mechem deminers in May 2013 by MFDC led to the suspension of clearance operations.[52] CNAMS task allocation after this incident was criticized for directing resources to areas without a credible risk of mine contamination, while requests from operators to conduct survey prior to deploying clearance assets were denied.[53]

Risk education

Operators and service providers

Risk education operators[54]

Type of organization

Name of organization

Type of activity

International

International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)

Broadcasts on commercial and community radio, and risk education integrated with COVID-19 prevention activities

 

ISAD’s last risk education project in Senegal was carried out in 2019.[55] ISAD has since suffered from a lack of funding to implement risk education activities.[56]

Beneficiary numbers

In 2020, CNMAS did not provide disaggregated data on risk education beneficiaries. The majority of beneficiaries were reached via ICRC broadcasts on commercial and community radio stations.

Target groups

In Casamance, men, especially farmers and hunters, are targeted for risk education sessions due to their activities in the forest and the high level of contamination in these areas. Women participating in these activities are also targeted. Children living in contaminated villages are also a target group, as they are generally unaware of the danger posed by mines and unexploded ordnance (UXO).[57]

Risk education messaging in Senegal addresses antipersonnel mines, antivehicle mines, and other ERW.[58] ICRC conducts quality assurance and quality control of risk education carried out by the Senegalese Red Cross, according to its Standard Operating Procedures. ICRC has also conducted Knowledge, Attitudes, and Practices (KAP) surveys in Senegal.[59]

Delivery methods

ICRC provides risk education in rural areas. Young volunteers in target areas are trained to ensure the continuity of risk education programs after ICRC staff leave.[60]

Risk education is not included within the school curriculum in Senegal.[61]

Victim assistance

Victim assistance providers and activities

Victim assistance operators[62]

Type of organization

Name of organization

Type of activity

Governmental

National Mine Action Center (Centre National d’Action Antimines, CNAMS)

Supports the transfer of mine/ERW survivors to Guinea-Bissau for treatment; advocacy; mobility devices; school kits for student survivors

Kenya Psychiatric Center, Kenya Hospital

Psychological support

 

Academic Center for Educational and Professional Orientation (Centre académique de l’orientation scolaire et professionnelle, CAOSP)

Psychological support and educational counseling

Ziguinchor Regional Orthopedic Center

Quality monitoring and repairs to prosthetic devices

Kolda Regional Orthopedic Center

Physical rehabilitation and repairs to prosthetic devices

Foundation for the Military Disabled and Mutilated (Fondation des invalides et mutilés militaire, FIMM)

Physical rehabilitation and psychological support for military survivors

National

Solidarity Initiative for Development Actions (Initiative Solidaire des Actions de Développement, ISAD)

Referrals for medical care and physical rehabilitation; coordinates treatment and the transfer of survivors to the rehabilitation center in Guinea-Bissau; economic inclusion; advocacy; peer-to-peer support; civic inclusion of persons with disabilities

National Association of Disabled Veterans of Senegal (Association nationale des anciens militaires invalides du Sénégal, ANAMIS)

Referrals for medical care; economic inclusion and peer-to-peer support for disabled veterans; advocacy on economic inclusion and housing

International

International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)

Support for prosthetics and rehabilitation services in Guinea-Bissau for survivors from Senegal; livelihood support

Note: ERW=explosive remnant of war.

 

Major developments in 2020

CNAMS reported that victim assistance is not adequately funded in Senegal.[63]

In 2020, the availability of socio-economic inclusion services decreased, as funding was no longer available.[64] HI ended its support to physical rehabilitation, socio-economic inclusion, and inclusive education.[65]

Health and psychological support services were not accessible to mine/ERW victims living outside the regional capital of Ziguinchor.[66]

The COVID-19 pandemic further hampered the access of mine/ERW survivors, and other persons with disabilities, to services in 2020. Transport to access services which stayed open was limited, while accessible information regarding services was lacking. Persons with disabilities, including mine/ERW survivors, received financial support or foodstuffs during the pandemic.[67]

Needs assessment

No structured assessment on the needs of mine/ERW victims was carried out during 2020. Senegal however reported ongoing collection of data on the needs of survivors.[68]

Medical care and rehabilitation

Survivors generally have to pay to receive healthcare, as government funding to regional hospitals and departmental health centers to cover care for survivors has not been provided since 2015.[69]

Senegal did not fund physical rehabilitation services. The Ziguinchor Regional Orthopedic Center faced deteriorating equipment, a shortage of raw materials and parts for prosthetics,[70] and a lack of trained personnel.[71] As a result, it was unable to operate in 2020 or the first half of 2021.[72] The orthopedic center in Kolda had received support from HI, but this support ended in June 2019.[73]

Enabled through a 2016 agreement between CNAMS, ICRC, and ISAD, 12 Senegalese mine/ERW survivors received new prosthetic devices or repairs free of charge at the ICRC-supported CRM in Guinea-Bissau in 2020. This was down from 65 in 2019, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[74] The agreement will end when ICRC closes its program in Guinea-Bissau in December 2022.[75] HI indicated that it did not have the resources to take over supporting CRM from the ICRC.[76]

Support provided by the Academic Center for Educational and Professional Orientation (Centre académique de l’orientation scolaire et professionnelle, CAOSP), which included transportation and accommodation to access CAOSP services, was no longer free of charge for mine survivors in Senegal. However, the center lacks financial resources and was not operational in 2020.[77]

Socio-economic and psychosocial inclusion

Family security grants were provided to families in need in 2020, including mine/ERW survivors.[78] A number of training centers admitted persons with disabilities, while some organizations working on access to employment or micro-credit were in the process of developing inclusive measures for persons with disabilities.[79]

The development of a national policy on inclusive education was reported in 2020.[80] HI completed its support to inclusive education in Senegal during 2021.[81]

In 2020, treatment at the Kenya Psychiatric Center, as well as transport and accommodation which enabled patients to access the center, were no longer free of charge for mine/ERW survivors.[82]

Cross-cutting

The National Disability Action Plan 2017–2021 takes into account women with disabilities, and a committee of women with disabilities was set up under the Senegalese Federation of Associations of Persons with Disabilities. The committee aims to promote the rights of women with disabilities and ensure their participation in the design and implementation of public policies.[83]

Only 40% of children with disabilities were enrolled in primary school in Senegal, as teachers had not received adequate training in special education.[84]



[1] Email from Sarani Diatta, Coordinator, ISAD, 17 June 2020; “Accident par mine en Casamance : Le CNAMS rompt le silence sur le retour précipité des populations déplacées” (“Mine accident in Casamance: CNAMS breaks the silence on the hasty return of displaced populations”), Groupe Medias du Sud, 9 June 2020; and Lassaad Ben Ahmed, “Sénégal: deux militaires tués dans l’explosion d’une mine antichar” (“Senegal: two soldiers killed in an anti-tank mine explosion”), Anadolu Agency, 15 June 2020.

[3] Ibid., p. 60.

[4] Statement of Senegal, Mine Ban Treaty intersessional meetings, Geneva, 8 June 2018. Average exchange rate for 2018: €1=US$1.1817. US Federal Reserve, “List of Exchange Rates (Annual),” 6 January 2011.

[6] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Ibrahima Seck, Head of Operations and Information Management Division, CNAMS, 30 March 2021.

[7] Senegal Mine Ban Treaty Third Article 5 deadline Extension Request, 15 June 2020, pp. 55–59 and Annex 13; and Republic of Senegal, “Law No. 2005-12 of 3 August 2005,” 24 September 2005.

[9] Ibid., pp. 55–59.

[10] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Ibrahima Seck, Head of Operations and Information Management Division, CNAMS, 30 March 2021.

[12] Senegal Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), pp. 4–5. See, Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Database; and Senegal Mine Ban Treaty Third Article 5 deadline Extension Request, 15 June 2020.

[14] Ibid., p. 87; and response to Monitor questionnaire by Ibrahima Seck, Head of Operations and Information Management Division, CNAMS, 30 March 2021.

[15] Responses to Monitor questionnaire by Mamady Gassama, Monitor country researcher, 16 June 2021; and by Khady Badji Cissé, Head of Risk Education and Victim Assistance Unit, CNAMS, 30 March 2021.

[16] Republic of Senegal, “National Action Plan for Mine/ERW Risk Education,” April 2010, p. 13.

[17] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Mamady Gassama, Mine Risk Education Program Manager, ICRC, 30 April 2020.

[18] Republic of Senegal, “National Mine Action Strategy 2016–2021,” p. 70.

[19] Interviews with Barham Thiam, Director, and Khady Badji Cissé, Head of Risk Education and Victim Assistance Unit, CNAMS, Ziguinchor, 23 April 2019; and with Sarani Diatta, Coordinator, ISAD, Ziguinchor, 23 April 2019; and responses to Monitor questionnaire by Khady Badji Cissé, Head of Risk Education and Victim Assistance Unit, CNAMS, 30 March 2021; and by Mamady Gassama, Monitor country researcher, 16 June 2021. See also, United States (US) Department of State, Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor, “2020 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices: Senegal,” 30 March 2021.

[20] Interviews with Barham Thiam, Director, and Khady Badji Cissé, Head of Risk Education and Victim Assistance Unit, CNAMS, Ziguinchor, 23 April 2019.

[21] Interview with Khady Badji Cissé, Head of Risk Education and Victims Assistance Unit, CNAMS, Ziguinchor, 23 April 2019.

[22] US Department of State, Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor, “2020 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices: Senegal,” 30 March 2021.

[23] Email from Sarani Diatta, Coordinator, ISAD, 14 December 2020; “Effectivité des avantages de la loi d’orientation sociale : La FSAPH et IBP/Sénegal font l’état des lieux” (“Effectiveness of the benefits of the social orientation law: FSAPH and IBP/Senegal take stock of the situation”), Dakaractu, 18 September 2019; interviews with Barham Thiam, Director, and Khady Badji Cissé, Head of Risk Education and Victim Assistance Unit, CNAMS, Ziguinchor, 23 April 2019; and “Les personnes handicapées ont encore la vie dure au Sénégal” (“Persons with disabilities still live a hard life in Senegal”), Emedia.sn, 3 December 2018.

[24] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Catherine Gillet, Program Director, HI, 6 May 2020.

[25] Senegal Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), Form D, p. 3.

[26] Senegal Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), Form D, p. 3. CNAMS reported in 2021 that 1.77km², including 0.49km² CHA, remained to be cleared. In its third Mine Ban Treaty Article 5 extension request, Senegal stated that 1.59km² remained to be dealt with, including 0.49km² CHA to be cleared, and nine SHAs and 118 localities to be surveyed. Senegal reported that the exact size of the nine SHAs was not known.

[27] Senegal Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), Form D, p. 3.

[28] Emails from Faly Keita, Site Coordinator, HI, 8 August 2018; from Ibrahima Seck, Head of Operations and Information Management Division, CNAMS, 18 August 2017; and from Julien Kempeneers, HI, 19 April 2017.

[29] ICRC, “Annual Report 2020,” 1 July 2021, p. 166.

[30] Casualty data for 2020 obtained via Monitor media scanning; email from Sarani Diatta, Coordinator, ISAD, 17 June 2020; and analysis of Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project (ACLED) data for calendar year 2020. See, Clionadh Raleigh, Andrew Linke, Håvard Hegre, and Joakim Karlsen, “Introducing ACLED: An Armed Conflict Location and Event Dataset,” Journal of Peace Research, Vol. 47, Issue 5, 28 September 2010, pp. 651–660.

[31] Nine casualties were recorded in 2019, one in 2018, three in 2017, none in 2016, and one in 2015.

[32] Email from Sarani Diatta, Coordinator, ISAD, 17 June 2020; “Accident par mine en Casamance: Le CNAMS rompt le silence sur le retour précipité des populations déplacées” (“Mine accident in Casamance: CNAMS breaks the silence on the hasty return of displaced populations”), Groupe Medias du Sud, 9 June 2020; and Lassaad Ben Ahmed, “Sénégal: deux militaires tués dans l’explosion d’une mine antichar” (“Senegal: two soldiers killed in an anti-tank mine explosion”), Anadolu Agency, 15 June 2020.

[33] There were 18 casualties recorded in 2006, one in 2007, 24 in 2008, two in 2009, four in 2010, 32 in 2011, 24 in 2012, eight in 2013, 15 in 2014, two in 2015, none in 2016, three in 2017, one in 2018, and nine in 2019. For more information, see previous Monitor country profiles for Senegal.

[34] The election of a new president in 2012 and increased international pressure, especially from the US, who launched a Casamance peace initiative in October 2012 and appointed a Casamance advisor in February 2013, contributed to the intensification of peace talks between the government and MFDC under the mediation of the Sant’Egidio Christian community. Peace talks between the Senegalese government and MFDC factions continued in 2020. See, “Gambia: U.S. Casamance Advisor Ends Visit,” All Africa, 19 September 2013; email from Mamady Gassama, Senegalese Association of Mine Victims (Association sénégalaise des victimes de mines, ASVM), 5 May 2014; “Casamance: Salif Sadio dit observer un ‘cessez-le-feu unilateral’” (“Casamance: Salif Sadio says he observes a ‘unilateral ceasefire’”), Agence France Presse (AFP), 30 April 2014; and ICRC, “Annual Report 2020,” 1 July 2021, p. 166.

[35] Matthieu Vendrely, “Au Sénégal, quelle issue en Casamance après quarante ans de conflit?” (“In Senegal, what outcome in Casamance after forty years of conflict?”), TV5 Monde, 8 February 2021; and “Sénégal: comment va évoluer le conflit larvé en Casamance?” (“Senegal: how will the latent conflict in Casamance evolve?”), RFI, 16 June 2021.

[36] Senegal Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for 1 January 2018–31 December 2019).

[37] Senegal Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), pp. 15–16.

[38] Senegal Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for 1 January 2018–31 December 2019).

[39] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Khady Badji Cissé, Head of Risk Education and Victim Assistance Unit, CNAMS, 30 March 2021.

[40] Email from Catherine Gillet, Program Director, HI, 1 June 2021; Senegal Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), Form D, p. 3; Senegal Mine Ban Treaty Third Article 5 deadline Extension Request, 15 June 2020, pp. 55–59; data for 2016 from statement of Senegal, Mine Ban Treaty intersessional meetings, Geneva, 8–9 June 2017; data for 2017 from Senegal Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2018), Form D, p. 3. HI reported the release of 0.06 km² through technical survey and clearance in 2017. CNAMS reported that 18 mined areas were addressed, with 0.10 km² released in 2017; data for 2018 from Senegal Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2018), Form D, p. 3; and data for 2019 from Senegal Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), p. 3.

[41] Senegal Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2019), p. 3.

[42] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Ibrahima Seck, Head of Operations and Information Management Division, CNAMS, 30 March 2021; and email from Catherine Gillet, Program Director, HI, 1 June 2021.

[43] Senegal Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), Form D, pp. 4–6; and response to Monitor questionnaire by Ibrahima Seck, Head of Operations and Information Management Division, CNAMS, 30 March 2021.

[44] Email from Catherine Gillet, Program Director, HI, 1 June 2021.

[45] Hubert Sagna, “Déminage humanitaire en Casamance: les négociations et les opérations toujours au point mort” (“Humanitarian demining in Casamance: negotiations and operations still deadlocked”), Enquête+, 17 June 2015; and Senegal Mine Ban Treaty Third Article 5 deadline Extension Request, 15 June 2020, p. 12.

[46] Statement of ICBL, Mine Ban Treaty Fourteenth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 2 December 2015; and email from Ibrahima Seck, Head of Operations and Information Management Division, CNAMS, 22 August 2016.

[48] Ibid., pp. 55–59

[49] Email from Faly Keita, Site Coordinator, HI, 8 August 2018.

[50] Senegal Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for 1 January 2018–31 December 2019); and William de Lesseux, “Sénégal: le déminage en Casamance ne fait pas l’unanimité” (“Senegal: demining in Casamance fails to win unanimous support”), RFI, 24 May 2019.

[51] Senegal Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2018), p. 7; and “Sénégal: les opérations de déminage suspendues en Casamance” (“Senegal: demining operations suspended in Casamance”), RFI, 19 May 2019.

[52] In March 2013, clearance operations were progressing rapidly as a consequence of Denel Mechem and NPA capacity. As deminers approached MFDC-controlled areas, a faction of the rebel group called publicly for a halt to humanitarian demining on the grounds that clearance teams had reached a “red line beyond which operators’ safety could not be guaranteed.” See, Joint Press Release from MFDC, CNAMS, Geneva Call, the Sao Domingos Prefect, and APRAN-SDP, 20 March 2013.

[53] Kathryn Millett, “Clearance and Compliance in Casamance: is Senegal doing all it should?,” Landmine and Cluster Munition Blog, 7 April 2014.

[54] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Khady Badji Cissé, Head of Risk Education and Victim Assistance Unit, CNAMS, 30 March 2021; and Senegal Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), Form D, p. 3.

[55] Tapha Badji, “Oussouye/ISAD/IA: About thirty teachers trained on the issue of mines,” Scoops de Ziguinchor, 25 January 2019.

[56] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Mamady Gassama, Monitor country researcher, 16 June 2021.

[57] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Mamady Gassama, Mine Risk Education Program Manager, ICRC, 30 April 2020.

[58] Ibid.; and CRC, “Annual Report 2020,” 1 July 2021, p. 166.

[59] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Mamady Gassama, Mine Risk Education Program Manager, ICRC, 30 April 2020.

[60] Ibid.

[61] Ibid.

[62] Interviews with Barham Thiam, Director, and Khady Badji Cissé, Head of Risk Education and Victim Assistance Unit, CNAMS, Ziguinchor, 23 April 2019; with Adama Koundoul, Head Doctor, Kenya Psychiatric Center, Ziguinchor, 23 April 2019; with Yahya Diop, Director, CAOSP, Ziguinchor, 22 April 2019; with Denneba Ndiaye, Director, Ziguinchor Regional Orthopedic Center, Ziguinchor, 23 April 2019; with Alassane Mballo, Manager, Kolda Regional Orthopedic Center, Kolda, 25 April 2019; responses to Monitor questionnaire by Mamady Gassama, Monitor country researcher, 16 June 2021; and by Khady Badji Cissé, Head of Risk Education and Victim Assistance Unit, CNAMS, 30 March 2021; emails from Catherine Gillet, Program Director, HI, 1 June 2021; and from Sarani Diatta, Coordinator, ISAD, 15 and 18 June 2021. See also, Tapha Badji, “ISAD/ASVM and AJWS partner to provide relief to mine victims affected by the pandemic,” Scoops de Ziguinchor, 7 October 2020; and ICRC, “Annual Report 2020,” 1 July 2021, p. 167.

[63] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Khady Badji Cissé, Head of Risk Education and Victim Assistance Unit, CNAMS, 30 March 2021.

[64] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Mamady Gassama, Monitor country researcher, 16 June 2021.

[65] Email from Catherine Gillet, Program Director, HI, 1 June 2021.

[66] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Mamady Gassama, Monitor country researcher, 16 June 2021.

[67] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Khady Badji Cissé, Head of Risk Education and Victim Assistance Unit, CNAMS, 30 March 2021; and Tapha Badji, “ISAD/ASVM and AJWS partner to provide relief to mine victims affected by the pandemic,” Scoops de Ziguinchor, 7 October 2020.

[68] Senegal Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), p. 17.

[69] Interview with Sarani Diatta, Coordinator, ISAD, Ziguinchor, 23 April 2019.

[70] Interview with Denneba Ndiaye, Director, Ziguinchor Regional Orthopedic Center, Ziguinchor, 23 April 2019.

[71] Interview with Faly Keita, Site Coordinator, HI, Ziguinchor, 22 April 2019; and statement of Senegal, Mine Ban Treaty Victim Assistance Experts Meeting, Geneva, 28 November 2019.

[72] Email from Catherine Gillet, Program Director, HI, 1 June 2021.

[73] Interview with Alassane Mballo, Manager, Kolda Regional Orthopedic Center, Kolda, 25 April 2019; and email from Catherine Gillet, Program Director, HI, 6 May 2020.

[74] ICRC, “Annual Report 2020,” 1 July 2021, p. 168.

[75] Emails from Sarani Diatta, Coordinator, ISAD, 15 and 18 June 2021.

[76] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Israel Santos, Country Manager, HI, 15 April 2021.

[77] Responses to Monitor questionnaire by Mamady Gassama, Monitor country researcher, 16 June 2021; and by Khady Badji Cissé, Head of Risk Education and Victim Assistance Unit, CNAMS, 30 March 2021; and interview with Yahya Diop, Director, CAOSP, Ziguinchor, 22 April 2019.

[78] Senegal Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for calendar year 2020), p. 17; response to Monitor questionnaire by Mamady Gassama, Monitor country researcher, 16 June 2021; Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD), “List of issues in relation to the initial report of Senegal,” 5 March 2019; and interview with Sarani Diatta, Coordinator, ISAD, Ziguinchor, 23 April 2019.

[79] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Catherine Gillet, Program Director, HI, 6 May 2020.

[80] Ibid.

[81] Email from Catherine Gillet, Program Director, HI, 1 June 2021.

[82] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Mamady Gassama, Monitor country researcher, 16 June 2021; and interview with Adama Koundoul, Head Doctor, Kenya Psychiatric Center, Ziguinchor, 23 April 2019.

[84] US Department of State, Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor, “2020 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices: Senegal,” 30 March 2021.


Support for Mine Action

Last updated: 05 October 2015

The government of the Republic of Senegal has identified some 480,000m2 (0.48km2) of confirmed mined areas and 12 suspected mined areas, and has also reported that survey was still required in 216 localities.[1] In June 2015, Senegal submitted a request to extend its mine clearance deadline until 2021.

Senegal’s mine action program did not receive international funding in 2014. In 2013, Senegal received US$2.4 million in international assistance from five donors. More than 80% ($2 million) of international contributions were earmarked for clearance.

The decline of international support can be explained by the stagnation of land release results in recent years despite the significant amount of support provided ($7.7million was allocated to clearance work in 2012–2013), as well as Senegal’s apparent reluctance to conduct clearance in areas readily accessible, following the abduction of deminers in March 2013. This situation has led to the departure of one operator and a number of major donors (the European Union, Germany, and Norway) in 2014.[2]

Senegal reported contributing about US$3.9 million to its mine action program between 2007–2014, although all funding was allocated to salary and operations expenses.[3]

In its most recent extension request, Senegal estimated that a budget of $11.5 million would be needed to support its mine action program until 2021, of which $6.5 million would be allocated to land release operations (57%), almost $700,000 to victim assistance (6%), and some $400,000 to risk education (4%). Senegal has planned to provide approximately $3.3 million, about 30% of the total, to cover the running costs of its program.[4] Senegal also noted that lack of funding could affect its ability to complete clearance in a timely manner.[5]

Summary of contributions: 2010–2014[6]

Year

National contributions ($)

International contributions ($)

Total contributions ($)

2014

N/R

0

0

2013

650,000

2,430,466

3,080,466

2012

230,000

5,717,886

5,947,886

2011

230,000

0

230,000

2010

230,000

897,830

1,127,830

Total

1,340,000

9,046,182

10,386,182

Note: N/R = not reported



[2] For more details see, Landmine and Cluster Munition Monitor,  “Country profile: Senegal: Mine Action”; and Norwegian People’s Aid, “Countries we work in: Senegal,” undated, last accessed September 2015.

[4] Ibid., p. 28.

[5] Ibid.

[6] See previous Monitor reports.