Ukraine

Last Updated: 28 November 2013

Mine Ban Policy

Mine Ban Policy Overview

Mine Ban Treaty status

State Party

National implementation measures

None reported

Transparency reporting

1 April 2013

Meetings

Attended the Twelfth Meeting of States Parties to the Mine Ban Treaty in Geneva in December 2012, as well as the intersessional Standing Committee meetings in May 2013

Key Developments

In early 2012, Ukraine’s parliament ratified an agreement with NATO to destroy a portion of its stockpile of PFM-type mines

Ukraine signed the Mine Ban Treaty on 24 February 1999 and ratified on 27 December 2005, becoming a State Party on 1 June 2006. Ukraine has not enacted national legislation, including penal sanctions, to enforce the prohibitions of the Mine Ban Treaty domestically as required in Article 9. Legislation to ratify an agreement with a NATO agency to destroy stockpiles was adopted in 2012.[1]

Ukraine submitted its seventh Article 7 report on 1 April 2013, for the period 1 January 2012 to 1 January 2013.

Ukraine attended the Twelfth Meeting of States Parties to the Mine Ban Treaty in Geneva in December 2012 and the intersessional Standing Committee meetings in May 2013. At both meetings, Ukraine provided updates on its stockpile destruction process.

Ukraine is party to the Convention on Conventional Weapons and its Amended Protocol II on landmines and Protocol V on explosive remnants of war. It submitted national annual reports as required by the protocols, both on 30 March 2012.

Production and Transfer

Ukraine has declared that it “has not made and does not produce antipersonnel mines.”[2] It has not produced antipersonnel mines since its independence.[3] Ukraine is not known to have exported antipersonnel mines. Its 1999 moratorium on the export of antipersonnel mines, formally in place through 2003, in practice stayed in effect until the Mine Ban Treaty entered into force for Ukraine in 2006.

Stockpiling and destruction

Ukraine missed its 1 June 2010 treaty-mandated deadline for the destruction of all stockpiled antipersonnel mines and has therefore been in violation of the Mine Ban Treaty since then.[4] The requirement to destroy almost six million PFM-type antipersonnel mines was a key obstacle that prevented Ukraine from rapidly ratifying the Mine Ban Treaty.[5] For years, Ukraine repeated at nearly every formal and informal Mine Ban Treaty meeting that it would depend on international support for the destruction of its stockpiles.[6]

The types and quantities of antipersonnel mines Ukraine has reported in its stockpile have varied over the years. The highest total of 6,664,342 mines of nine different types was detailed in Landmine Monitor Report 2006.[7] In its Article 7 report for calendar year 2012, Ukraine declared a stockpile of 5,916,696 antipersonnel mines: 5,767,600 PFM-type remotely-delivered mines and 149,096 POM-2 remotely-delivered mines. It did not report on 4,105 OZM-4 hand-emplaced bounding fragmentation mines that were declared as stockpiled in the previous year’s report.[8]

In its 2013 Article 7 report, Ukraine declared the destruction of 22,604 mines in 2012: 19,104 PFM mines and 3,500 ОZM-4 mines.[9] It reported the destruction of 9,890 mines in 2011.[10]

Since 1999, Ukraine has destroyed significant quantities of stockpiled antipersonnel mines using both its own resources and international assistance.[11] In May 2012, Ukraine said that it had destroyed a total of 875,380 antipersonnel mines so far.[12] In its May 2013 presentation, Ukraine stated that it has destroyed 3,659 clusters of KSF-1 mines containing 263,448 PFM-1 mines.

A solid waste incinerator capable of destroying PFM mines is located at the Pavlograd Chemical Plant. Ukraine received US$1 million from Norway to purchase new equipment (dry ceramic filters and a cooling system) to improve the facility and bring it up to European safety and environmental standards.[13] In December 2011, Ukraine announced that the equipment was installed and the facility was in operation with the capacity to destroy 1.1 million PFM mines per year.[14]

On 21 September 2011, Ukraine and the NATO Maintenance and Supply Agency (NAMSA) signed an agreement to implement a project to destroy 2.7 million PFM mines in cassettes and blocks using €2.35 million (US$1.27 million) in funding coming from the European Union (EU) through a NATO/Partnership for Peace (PfP) Trust Fund over a period of three years.[15]

In May 2012, Ukraine reported that its parliament had passed the necessary legislative measures to ratify the agreement with NAMSA, and also planned to contribute national funds to the cost of the project.[16] At the Twelfth Meeting of States Parties in December 2012, Ukraine stated that the “large-scale” destruction of the landmine stockpile would begin in January 2013 and said that one million mines will be destroyed each year.[17]

At the intersessional Standing Committee meetings in May 2013, Ukraine described the signing of a contract on 1 February 2013 by NATO and the Ministry of Defence for the Pavlograd plant as a “key milestone” and said that a ceremony with the Ministry of Defence and local government was held at the plant on 21 March 2013. Ukraine said that it is taking steps to complete the construction of facilities where the mines will be dismantled. It stated that the “capabilities we are putting in place demonstrate we are doing everything in our power to get there.” [18]

In the May 2013 presentation, Ukraine stated that the deadline for destroying the stockpile will depend on funding from the EU and noted that “since 2010” Ukraine has been waiting for the EU funds to be dispersed.[19] It also reported that funding from Germany allowed it to begin destruction through September 2013, but not at full capacity. In May 2013, the ICBL expressed disappointment that the EU funds had still not been transferred and urged the EU “to do everything in is power to end the administrative blockages and enable Ukraine to fulfill its treaty obligations.” The ICBL noted that a plan for acquisition of a second kiln was proceeding, but said it is not clear if funding was in place for this destruction.[20]

However, the incinerator and destruction process currently in place at Pavlograd can only be used to destroy PFM-1 and PFM-1S self-destructing mines contained in “cassettes” and “blocks” for the KMG-U aerial dispenser. A significant amount of Ukraine’s remaining stockpile consists of PFM-1S self-destructing mines contained in 220mm rocket warheads, approximately 3.19 million mines, and the destruction of theses mines will require different disassembly procedures.[21]

Ukraine has not provided clear information on plans to destroy the PFM mines contained in 220mm rocket warheads not covered by its agreement with NAMSA. In its May 2013 presentation, it reported that a second kiln financed by the United States government will be available to destroy additional PFM mines after completion of a project to destroy ICBM SS-24 Solid Propellant.[22] But it did not explain when that would be, nor how it would obtain financing for the destruction. It was also unclear whether either kiln would be involved in destroying the mines that need special disassembly processes. Nor has Ukraine publicly announced plans to destroy its stockpile of 149,096 POM-2 mines. At the May 2013 intersessional meetings, the ICBL urged Ukraine to explain the status of destruction plans for the stockpiled POM-2 mines.[23]

Mines Retained

While it had previously declared the destruction of all of the mines retained for training and research purposes, in Ukraine’s Article 7 report for calendar year 2012 it listed a total of 605 OZM-4 mines retained for training.[24]

Ukraine originally indicated that it would retain 1,950 mines (950 PMN and 1,000 PMN-2) for training and research purposes.[25] This number was reduced to 223 mines in 2007, and was further reduced to 211 in 2008, 187 in 2009, and 170 mines in 2010.[26] Ukraine reported that the destruction of the remaining 170 mines (50 PMN and 120 PMN-2) took place in 2011.[27] In June 2011, Ukraine stated that it had destroyed the “rest of 211 PMN mines”.[28]

 



[1] Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report, Form A, 1 April 2012.

[2] Ibid., Form E, 1 April 2013.

[3] For example, in May 2009, Ukraine said it “did not produce APL [antipersonnel landmines] in the past, doesn’t produce at present, and will not produce them in the future.” Presentation by Ukraine, Mine Ban Treaty Standing Committee on Stockpile Destruction, Geneva, 25 May 2009.

[4] On 18 May 2010, Ukraine officially informed States Parties in a note verbale that “it will be unable to comply with its Article 4 obligation to destroy stockpiled anti-personnel mines by 1 June 2010 deadline.” At the intersessional Standing Committee meetings in June 2010, after Ukraine missed its deadline, Ukraine’s representative noted that this is not “unexpected information to States Parties” and that “Ukraine remains open for the fruitful cooperation with States Parties and potential donors and hopes for the practical assistance to make Ukraine territory free from [antipersonnel mine] stockpiles of PFM-type as soon as possible.” See statement by Amb. Oleksandr Nykonenko, Mine Ban Treaty Standing Committee on Stockpile Destruction, Geneva, 21 June 2010.

[5] PFM mines contain a liquid explosive filling (VS6-D) that makes them dangerous and difficult to destroy, and requires sophisticated pollution control measures. In mid-2003, a European Commission (EC) technical study determined that the condition of Ukraine’s PFM stockpiles was good. The mines were consolidated into two sites, from a previous total of 13 storage locations. See Landmine Monitor Report 2006, p. 765.

[6] In 2002, the EC launched a project to finance the destruction of Ukraine’s PFM mines, but a contract awarded in December 2005 was cancelled in April 2007. In 2008, Ukraine said it had decided to make a national financial contribution toward destruction of about 1.6 million of the PFM mines, and also requested a renewal of European Union assistance. In 2009 and 2010, Ukraine said on multiple occasions that it was unlikely to meet its stockpile destruction deadline. It appealed to States Parties in May 2009 to find a “joint solution” to the problem and to come up with an option that would “prevent Ukraine from violating the Article 4 deadline” including international financial assistance to modernize destruction facilities and to acquire additional equipment. In a statement at the Mine Ban Treaty Second Review Conference in Cartagena on 2 December 2009, Amb. Nykonenko of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs stated that Ukraine could destroy one million mines per year if the destruction facility was upgraded, and that with additional assistance, the timeframe might be reduced to three years.

[7] For a chart showing the changes on the quantities and types of stockpiled antipersonnel mines from 2006–2009, see Landmine Monitor Report 2009, p. 774.

[8] Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report, Form B, 1 April 2012.

[9] The Pavlograd Chemical Plant destroyed 5,184 PFM mines, while the engineer force units destroyed 13,920 PFM mines. The 3,500 ОZM-4 mines were dismantled and destroyed at the Donetsk Chemical Plant. Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report, Form G, 1 April 2013.

[10] Fifty PMN and 120 PMN-2 mines previously retained for training and research purposes and 9,720 stockpiled PFM mines. Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report, Form G, 1 April 2012.

[11] In a November 2008 presentation, Ukraine indicated it had destroyed its entire stock of 238,010 POMZ-2 and POMZ-2M mines, as well as all 8,060 PMD-6 mines. It also destroyed more than 400,000 PMN mines in 2002 and 2003. Ukraine also destroyed 101,088 PFM-1 mines in 1999. In June 2008, Ukraine reported that between 2005 and 2007, an experimental program to partially dismantle and destroy 8,000 POM-2 mines was carried out at the Donetsk Chemical Plant, and a further 48 POM-2 mines were destroyed at the Pavlograd Chemical Plant. In its Article 7 reports submitted in 2007, 2008, and 2009, Ukraine also noted that while its MON-type and OZM-type antipersonnel mines can be used in command-detonated mode in compliance with the Mine Ban Treaty, these stockpiled mines are excessive and not suitable for use, and it has plans to destroy them.

[12] Presentation by Ukraine, Mine Ban Treaty Standing Committee on Stockpile Destruction, Geneva, 21 May 2012.

[13] Statement of Ukraine, Mine Ban Treaty Tenth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 2 December 2010.

[14] Statement of Ukraine, Mine Ban Treaty Eleventh Meeting of the States Parties, Phnom Penh, 1 December 2011.

[15] The agreement is Phase II of a broader €25 million ($35 million) demilitarization project being conducted under the auspices of NATO/PfP and numerous NATO member states. Interview with NAMSA Representative, Kiev, 8 November 2011; and statement of Ukraine, Mine Ban Treaty Eleventh Meeting of the States Parties, Phnom Penh, 1 December 2011. Average exchange rate for 2011: €1=US$1.3931. US Federal Reserve, “List of Exchange Rates (Annual),” 3 January 2012.

[16] The Information Department of the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine adopted the Law “On ratification of the implementation agreement between the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine and NATO Maintenance and Supply Organisation (NAMSO) on utilization of infantry weapon, light weapon, conventional ammunition, and antipersonnel mines PFM-1,” 13 January 2012, rada.gov.ua/?art_id=296821&cat_id=105995. See also, statement of Ukraine, Mine Ban Treaty Standing Committee on Stockpile Destruction, Geneva, 21 May 2012.

[17] Statement of Ukraine, Mine Ban Treaty Twelfth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 6 December 2012. Notes by the ICBL.

[18] Presentation of Ukraine, Mine Ban Treaty Standing Committee on Stockpile Destruction, Geneva, 27 May 2013. Notes by the ICBL.

[19] Ibid.

[20] Statement of the ICBL, Mine Ban Treaty Standing Committee on Stockpile Destruction, Geneva, 27 May 2013.

[21] The technical challenge with the destruction of PFM-1S mines occurs when they are removed from the rocket warhead; the mines must get into the incinerator within 30 minutes because it is not possible to scientifically predict whether handling the mines during disassembly of the warhead section will activate the mine’s self-destruct system. ICBL interviews with management and technical staff at Pavlograd Chemical Plant, Ukraine, 9 November 2011. See also briefing materials from State Enterprise Research-Industrial Complex Pavlograd Chemical Plant, “Execution of Works on Disposal of Antipersonnel PFM Mines,” 9 November 2011.

[22] Presentation of Ukraine, Mine Ban Treaty Standing Committee on Stockpile Destruction, Geneva, 27 May 2013.

[23] Statement of the ICBL, Mine Ban Treaty Standing Committee on Stockpile Destruction, Geneva, 27 May 2013.

[24] Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report, Form D, 1 April 2013.

[25] Ibid., 11 April 2007. It is unclear what stockpiles these mines came from because Ukraine had reported the destruction of all its PMN-type mines in 2002 and 2003.

[26] The new quantity retained was 103 PMN and 120 PMN-2. The remaining 847 PMN and 880 PMN-2 mines were apparently not consumed during training activities, but simply destroyed as unnecessary for retention. Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report, Form D and Form G, 20 April 2008. See subsequent Article 7 reports for successive annual totals.

[27] Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report, Form G, 1 April 2012.

[28] Statement of Ukraine, Mine Ban Treaty Standing Committee on Stockpile Destruction, Geneva, 20 June 2011.


Last Updated: 02 September 2013

Cluster Munition Ban Policy

Ukraine has not acceded to the Convention on Cluster Munitions.

In an April 2012 letter to the Monitor, Ukraine restated its longstanding position that it “considers cluster munitions to be legal weapons which remain an important component of Ukraine’s defense capabilities.”[1] It also acknowledged that cluster munitions have long-term and deadly consequences for humanity and has said they should be dealt with effectively and urgently.[2] Ukraine has called for a moratorium on the use of “inaccurate and unreliable cluster munitions.”[3]

In the letter Ukraine reaffirmed its preference for cluster munitions to be tackled through the framework of the Convention on Conventional Weapons (CCW) in order to achieve “balance” between “military and humanitarian aspects of the use of cluster munitions.”[4] It is not known if Ukraine will reevaluate its position on joining the ban convention after the November 2011 failure of the CCW’s Fourth Review Conference to agree on a draft protocol on cluster munitions.

Ukraine has also stated that, if using its own resources alone, it would not be able to destroy the large stockpile of cluster munitions that it inherited from the Soviet Union within the eight-year stockpile destruction deadline required by the Convention on Cluster Munitions (see the Stockpiling and destruction section below).[5]

Ukraine is a State Party to the Mine Ban Treaty but missed its 1 June 2010 treaty-mandated deadline for the destruction of all stockpiled antipersonnel landmines and does not expect to complete destruction of its stockpile for several more years; it therefore remains in violation of the treaty (see Ukraine Country Profile on mine ban policy).

Ukraine participated in several meetings of the Oslo Process that created the Convention on Cluster Munitions, including the formal negotiations in Dublin in May 2008 as an observer.[6]

Since 2008, Ukraine has shown limited interest in the convention. It participated as an observer in the first two Meetings of States Parties of the convention held in 2010 and 2011, but did not attend the Third Meeting of States Parties in Oslo, Norway in September 2012.

Ukraine has not participated in the convention’s intersessional meetings in Geneva, including those held in April 2013.

Use, production, and transfer

Ukraine is not known to have used, produced, or exported cluster munitions. In November 2010, a Ministry of Foreign Affairs official said that Ukraine would not use cluster munitions except to defend itself from outside aggression. The official also said that Ukraine was not producing new cluster munitions, and would not export or import the weapons from any other country.[7]

Stockpiling and destruction

Ukraine inherited a large stockpile of cluster munitions from the Soviet Union. During a CCW meeting on cluster munitions in April 2011, Ukraine provided information on the types of its stockpiled cluster munitions.

Cluster Munitions of the Armed Forces of Ukraine[8]

 

Cluster Munition Name

Surface-to-surface rocket

220mm Uragan 9M27K

300mm Smerch 9M55K

Tochka-U (SS-21)

Aircraft dispenser

KMGU containing BFK-AO2.5, BFK-ODC, BFK-PTAB, BFK-AP blocks of submunitions

Air-dropped bomb

RBK-500-375

RBK-500-AO

RBK-500-255

RBK-500-SP-B7

RBK-500-ZAB

RBK-250-275

RBK-250-ZAB

Ukraine stated that cluster munitions constitute 35% of its stockpile of conventional weapons totaling two million tons of ammunition. Of these cluster munitions, 34% were produced before 1980. Another 36.18% were produced between 1981 and 1992 and “are planned to be stockpiled and might be used.” The remaining 29.82% contain antivehicle landmines.[9]

Ukraine also reported a yearly average destruction of 10,000–20,000 tons of cluster munitions, and concluded that under present conditions, it would take 60 years to destroy the stockpiles that are currently slated for destruction.[10]

 



[1] Letter No. 4132/36-196-771 from Amb. Yuriy A. Sergeyev, Permanent Mission of Ukraine to the UN in Geneva, 23 April 2012; and letter No. 181/017 from the Permanent Mission of Ukraine to the UN in Geneva, 29 April 2010.

[2] Statement of Ukraine, Convention on Conventional Weapons (CCW) Group of Governmental Experts on Cluster Munitions, 8 April 2008. Notes by Landmine Action.

[3] Letter No. 181/017 from the Permanent Mission of Ukraine to the UN in Geneva, 29 April 2010. It first called for such a moratorium in April 2008; and statement of Ukraine, CCW GGE on Cluster Munitions, 8 April 2008. Notes by Landmine Action.

[4] Letter No. 4132/36-196-771 from Amb.. Sergeyev, Permanent Mission of Ukraine to the UN in Geneva, 23 April 2012.

[5] In 2010, a Ministry of Foreign Affairs official said that Ukraine’s “negative experience” with respect to securing international funding for the destruction of its antipersonnel mine stockpiles under the Mine Ban Treaty influences how it views the Convention on Cluster Munitions. According to the official, once Ukraine has fulfilled its Mine Ban Treaty obligations, it will consider accession to the Convention on Cluster Munitions. CMC meeting with Ruslan Nimchynskyi, Deputy Director-General, Directorate General for Armaments Control and Military Technical Cooperation, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in Vientiane, 11 November 2010. Notes by the CMC.

[6] For details on Ukraine’s cluster munition policy and practice up to early 2009, see Human Rights Watch and Landmine Action, Banning Cluster Munitions: Government Policy and Practice (Ottawa: Mines Action Canada, May 2009), pp. 249–250.

[7] CMC meeting with Ruslan Nimchynskyi, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in Vientiane, 11 November 2010. Notes by the CMC.

[8] Presentation of Ukraine, “Impact of the CCW Draft Protocol VI (current version) on Ukraine’s Defense Capability,” Geneva, 1 April 2011, Slides 3–4.

[9] Ibid., Slide 2.

[10] Ibid.


Last Updated: 17 December 2012

Mine Action

Contamination and Impact

Mines

Ukraine is affected by mines and other ordnance, mostly as a result of heavy fighting between German and Soviet forces in World War II, but also from World War I. Ministry of Defense engineering forces completed partial clearance of affected areas in the mid-1970s, but demining operations continue to this day. The precise scope of any residual mine problem is not known. In its Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 reports, Ukraine has declared no known or suspected areas containing antipersonnel mines under its jurisdiction or control.[1]

Cluster munition remnants and other explosive remnants of war

Ukraine is primarily affected by explosive remnants of war (ERW), both unexploded ordnance and abandoned explosive ordnance, resulting from World War I, World War II, and Soviet military training. Ukraine is not believed to be affected by cluster munition remnants. Casualties continue to occur from ERW. From 1 January to 30 November 2009, 40 people were reportedly killed or injured by ERW, including 19 children.[2]

The ERW problem includes World War II ammunition storage areas, particularly around the towns of Kerch and Sevastopol, where munitions were stored in “adits,” horizontal passageway tunnels in hills or mountainsides. These tunnels were used as munitions depots by the Soviet Army during World War II and were blown up in 1942 before the Soviet Army left the area. Clearance of the adit tunnels is expected to take between 10 and 20 years to complete.[3] Jankoy, Krasnoperekopsk, and Leninsky districts are also said to be highly affected.[4]

Underwater munitions have been found in the Black Sea near Kerch, Odessa, and Sevastopol, including naval mines from World War II.[5]

Mine Action Program

 Key institutions and operators

Body

Situation on 1 January 2012

National Mine Action Authority

None, although an interministerial working group continues to operate

Mine action center

None, although the Ministry of Defense has a training center

International operators

None

National operators

Ministry of Defense

Ministry of Emergency Situations

Border Guard Service

Ukroboronservice (commercial company)

As of July 2012, there was no formal national mine action authority in Ukraine, although an interministerial working group was set up by the Cabinet of Ministers in February 2006. On 25 December 2009, the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine issued an order that tasked the Ministry of Defense, Ministry of Emergency Situations, and Ukroboron service to put forward proposals by mid-April 2010 regarding the establishment of a national body for demining.[6]

The Ministry of Emergency Situations is generally responsible for clearance of affected territories, with the exception of those allocated to the other ministries and bodies. The Ministry of Defense is responsible for all areas where military units, educational institutions, companies, or organizations belonging to the armed forces are permanently located. Ukroboronservice acts as a subcontractor for both ministries in survey and disposal of ERW as well as conducting survey and clearance of construction sites. The national Border Guard Service conducts demining in areas under its control on land and in the sea.

In 2001, the armed forces set up a demining center for the training of deminers at the Military Engineering Institute of Podolsk Agrar Technical University in Kamenez-Podolskiy. Since 2007, the center has been collecting and analyzing data on explosive hazards and demining and functioning as a separate military entity.[7]

Cabinet of Ministers Decree No. 131 of 18 February 2009 adopted the State Program for Demining by the Ministry of Emergency Situations for 2009–2014.[8] The program foresees clearance of 15km2 over five years with the destruction of 500,000 ERW.

 



[1] See, for example, Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Reports, Form C, 20 April 2008, 20 April 2009, 1 April 2010, 1 April 2011, and for calendar year 2011.

[2] Reports accessed at www.mns.gov.ua.

[3] “During a Year in Kerch and Sevastopol neutralized 33 thousands of munitions,” forUm, 4 December 2009, www.for-ua.com.

[4] Ministry of Emergency Situations (Crimea), “Explosive Snowdrops,” 12 March 2009, www.crimea.mns.gov.ua.

[5] See, for example, UN, “United Nations Mine Action Inter-Agency Assessment Mission to Ukraine, 12–17 December 2005,” Draft report, June 2006, p. 3.

[6] Cabinet of Ministers Order No. 73471/1/1-09, 25 December 2009.

[7] Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons Amended Protocol II Article 13 Report (for the period 15 May 2008 to 15 May 2009), Form B.

[8] Email from Lt.-Col. Vitaliy Baranov, Ministry of Defense, 20 January 2010.


Last Updated: 28 November 2013

Casualties and Victim Assistance

Casualties

Casualties Overview

All known casualties by end 2012

At least 1,987 (1,778 killed; 209 injured)

Casualties in 2012

22 (2011: 24)

2012 casualties by outcome

6 killed; 16 injured (2011: 10 killed; 14 injured)

2012 casualties by device type

22 ERW

In 2012, 22 explosive remnants of war (ERW) casualties were identified in Ukraine. All casualties were civilians; 16 were adults (six killed; 10 injured) and six were children (all injured).[1] The 2012 total represented a decrease from 2011.[2]

The Monitor has recorded at least 1,987 mine/ERW casualties (1,778 killed; 209 injured) in the Ukraine.[3] The UN has reported that more than 1,500 civilians were killed in Ukraine between 1945 and 1995 in mine/ERW incidents. Another 130 people were killed during clearance operations in the same period.[4] The Ministry of Emergency Situations (MES) reported that between 1996 and 2008 there were 229 ERW casualties (100 killed; 129 injured), including 59 children, due to “handling of devices.”[5]

Victim Assistance

The total number of mine/ERW survivors in Ukraine is not known. There were at least 170 ERW survivors between 1996 and the end of 2010. Media reports indicated that tampering with ERW was a significant cause of casualties.[6] Many mine survivors are thought to be veterans of the Soviet Army, injured during the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan (1979–1989).

There is no specific victim assistance strategy, and mine/ERW survivors receive the same services as other persons with disabilities or other disabled veterans. The State Committee on Veterans of Ukraine coordinates policy on war veterans.[7]

Disability issues are the responsibility of the Ministry of Labor and Social Policy; the Ministry of Family, Youth, and Sports; the Ministry of Health; and the Ministry of Education and Science.[8]

On 13 January 2012, several laws on the rights of persons with disabilities were revised to ensure access to public venues and provide support for inclusion in public, educational, cultural, and sporting activities, including a provision for workplace safety. Social inclusion was difficult, and inadequate resources were allocated to assist persons with disabilities.[9]

Ukraine ratified the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) on 4 February 2010.

 



[1] Convention on Conventional Weapons (CCW), Protocol V Article 10 Report, Form C, 27 March 2013.

[2] Ibid., 30 March 2011.

[3] The cumulative casualties are calculated using UN data for 1945–1995 (1,500 civilians; 130 deminers killed), Ministry of Emergency Situations (MES) data for 1996–2008 (100 killed; 129 injured), and CCW Protocol V Article 10 report data for 2009–2011 (42 killed; 64 injured). See also previous Ukraine Country profiles for 2010 and 2011 at the Monitor, www.the-monitor.org.

[4] ICBL, Landmine Monitor Report 1999: Toward a Mine-Free World (New York: Human Rights Watch, April 1999), www.the-monitor.org, accessed 18 September 2013.

[5] Monitor analysis of MES, “Daily Reports,” for calendar year 2008, mns.gov.ua/, accessed 26 September 2013.

[6] The total includes 2009–2010 casualty data and Monitor analysis of MES, “Daily Reports,” from 1 January 2008 to 31 December 2008, mns.gov.ua/, accessed 26 September 2013.

[7] Ukraine Government Portal, “State Committee on Veterans of Ukraine,” www.kmu.gov.ua, accessed 26 September 2013.

[8] United States (US) Department of State, “2009 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices: Ukraine,” Washington, DC, 11 March 2010.

[9] US Department of State, “2012 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices: Ukraine,” Washington, DC, 19 April 2013.


Last Updated: 19 September 2012

Support for Mine Action

Support for Mine Action

In 2011, Norway contributed NOK5,841,787 (US$1,042,767) to Ukraine to destroy its stockpile of landmines.[1] In May 2012, Ukraine estimated it had more than five million landmines to destroy.[2]

 



[1] Response to Monitor questionnaire by Ingunn Vatne, Senior Advisor, Department for Human Rights, Democracy and Humanitarian Assistance, Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 15 March 2012; and Norway Average exchange rate for 2011: NOK5.6022 = US$1. US Federal Reserve, “List of Exchange Rates (Annual),” 3 January 2012.