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Table of Contents
Country Reports
EUROPEAN COMMUNITY , Landmine Monitor Report 2002

EUROPEAN COMMUNITY

NO FATIGUE IN THE FIGHT AGAINST APL.

The EU continues to reinforce its commitment against Antipersonnel Landmines. In rapid pace a series of steps have been taken:

  • In March 2000 the European Commission issued a Communication and put forward a draft Regulation on the reinforcement of the EU contribution to the fight against Landmines.
  • In that year, the overall EU (Member States and European Community) contributions to the APL issues already reached the record amount of € 125 million.
  • In July 2001 the Council and the European Parliament adopted two Regulations on the Reinforcement of the EU response against Antipersonnel Landmines – the first one covering developing countries (1724/2001) and the second one covering other countries (1725/2001); the regulations, (referred to as the APL Regulation -in the singular-) lay the foundations for a European integrated and focused policy.
  • In parallel, the EU Member States and the European Community together, increased their joint contribution to a new record figure of € 145 million.
  • In 2002, the adoption of a multi-annual 2002-2004 Strategy and Programming paper for this APL instrument is underway

2001: The objectives pursued by the EC instruments in 2001 were:

Making de-mining more efficient by

  • helping mine affected countries to acquire the appropriate capacity (e.g. data, skills, equipment, software etc.) to prioritise demining
  • increasing the efficiency of operations on the ground through measurement of performance and progress, by comparisons between different operations and measurement of longer term impact.

Reinforcing Mine Clearance interventions

  • in interaction and complementarity between geographic and thematic instruments
  • and according to humanitarian, socio-economic and political priorities.

In co-operation with UNMAS the EU has supported Landmine Impact Surveys in 6 countries, among which Afghanistan. The Union has furthermore produced a Study on the Performance and Evaluation of EC contracts, aiming at improving the procedures in order to strengthen the overall effectiveness of EC funded mine action programmes.

Mine clearance/awareness activities have been pursued in 10 countries.

EC assistance in 2001

  • amounted to € 30, 885 million,
  • supported 13 mine affected countries
  • and contributed to the world-wide efforts made in Science and Technology related activities such as Test and Evaluation
  • and provided follow-up to multi-sensors programmes launched in 2000.

2002: This year the new legal instrument will be used for the first time through the abovementioned multi-annual Strategy for the years 2002-2004. This document contains

  • an overall approach, The Strategy, for 2002-2004,
  • and a detailed multi-annual Indicative Programming, which will make the EC assistance predictable and coherent.
  • It integrates and complements the annual and multi-annual commitments to be undertaken under geographic strategies and instruments by the European Community. Its financial framework amounts to approximately 110 million.

Its underlying principle is that the EC efforts in this field should be directly related to the goals set by the international community.

The EC Strategy, is thus

  • closely related to the UN Strategy for Mine Action 2001-2005,
  • and pursues in a mutually reinforcing way focused objectives which are either common with or complementary to the UN Strategy.

Finally:

  • EC mine action is not geared to be a technical measure;
  • it is the response to humanitarian, developmental and political concerns.
  • Mine Action aims at stabilising post or frozen conflict regions, recreating an environment in which people can live safely and in which economic, health and social development can occur free from constraints imposed by the hidden threat of mines, and ensuring victims needs are addressed.
  • Therefore, this Landmine Policy is geared to address the problems faced by the populations in context, and reduce the mine threat to affected populations (mine clearance / area reduction).

The Commission has taken upon itself the double mission

  • of facilitating donors’ co-ordination in beneficiary countries in order to rapidly equip them with the appropriate capacity to manage efficiently their mine issues
  • and to promote measurement of mine action on the ground with the aim of improving efficiency, openness in funds dispersal and therefore better use of the financial resources available.

The Convention on the Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling, Production and Transfer of Anti-Personnel Mines and on their Destruction (MBT) set the political scene for the elaboration and adoption of the APL Regulation. It remains for the EC the leading light of the APL Strategy 2002-2004.