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South Sudan

Last Updated: 05 August 2011

Mine Action

Contamination and Impact

On 9 January 2011, 99% of those polled in South Sudan voted in favor of independence.[1] As a result of this referendum, South Sudan formally declared its independence on 9 July 2011 becoming the world’s 196th State. Based on data from December 2010, the 11 states that comprise South Sudan contain 830 hazardous areas (HAs), of which 567 are dangerous areas (DAs),[2] 68 are confirmed mined areas, and 195 are suspected hazardous areas (SHAs).

Contamination in the 10 states that comprise South Sudan as of December 2010[3]

State

No. of HAs

No. of DAs

No. of mined areas

No. of SHAs

Central Equatoria

380

255

10

115

East Equatoria

120

85

28

7

Upper Nile

106

56

23

27

Jonglei

89

62

6

21

West Equatoria

63

46

0

17

West Bahr El Ghazal

31

27

0

4

Northern Bahr El Ghazal

14

12

1

1

Warrab

11

11

0

0

Lakes

11

10

0

1

Unity

5

3

0

2

Total

830

567

68

195

Percentage of total

 

68

8

24

Mines

Contamination across mined areas in South Sudan includes both antipersonnel and antivehicle mines. Since the referendum, armed violence has increased in South Sudan and new use of mines has been reported, including 16 incidents of explosions of antipersonnel and antivehicle mines from mid-November 2010 to mid-May 2011 in Jonglei, Unity, and Upper Nile states. According to Tim Horner, the director of the UN Mine Action Office (UNMAO) in South Sudan, the evidence indicates that rebel militia groups are laying mines.[4]

Sudan’s Mine Action Sector Multi Year Plan 2010–2014, based on data in 2010, assumes that 750 new DAs will be identified over the five-year period and that from these new DAs approximately 106 will be confirmed as mined areas. During the Landmine Impact Survey, large parts of Jonglei, Unity, and Upper Nile states were inaccessible because of security, marshlands, or inclement weather.[5]

Cluster munition remnants

Since 2006, 519 sites containing cluster munition remnants have been identified in six states in South Sudan. As of June 2011, 34 sites were still open, of which 28 (more than 80%) are in Central and Eastern Equatoria states.[6]Cluster munition remnants have been found in residential areas, farmland, pasture, rivers and streams, on hillsides, in desert areas, in and around former military barracks, on roads, in minefields, and in ammunition storage areas.[7]

No. of cluster munition contaminated areas in South Sudan as of June 2011[8]

State

Open

Closed

Total

Central Equatoria

16

82

98

East Equatoria

12

278

290

West Equatoria

2

27

29

Warrab

2

1

3

Jonglei

2

1

3

Lakes

0

12

12

Blue Nile

0

9

9

West Bahr El Ghazal

0

4

4

North Bahr El Ghazal

0

1

1

Totals

34

415

449

 

Mine Action Program

Key institutions and operators

Body

Situation on 1 January 2011

National Mine Action Authority

None

Mine action center

Southern Sudan Demining Authority

International demining operators

Four NGOs: DanChurchAid (DCA), Danish Demining Group (DDG), Mines Advisory Group (MAG), and Norwegian People’s Aid

Six commercial companies: ArmorGroup, MECHEM, MineTech International, Minewolf, RONCO Consulting Corporation, and The Development Initiative

National demining operators

Sudan Integrated Mine Action Service (SIMAS)

International risk education (RE) operators

Association for Aid and Relief (Japan), The Association of Volunteers in International Service, DCA, DDG, Handicap International, and MAG

National RE operators

SIMAS, Nasir Community Development Agency, Malakal Mobile Theatre Team, Christian Recovery and Development Agency, Child Hope Restoration Mission, JASMAR Human Security Organization, Friends of Peace and Development Organization, Sibro Organization for Development, and Operation Save Innocent Lives

The mine action structure in Sudan was to undergo major changes on 9 July 2011, especially in the north. The Government of South Sudan has requested that the UN Mine Action Service continue providing support after independence.[9]

 



[1] BBC, “South Sudan referendum: 99% vote for independence,” 30 January 2011, www.bbc.co.uk.

[2] A DA is defined by the mine action program as a SHA that has not yet been verified by UNMAO as a mined or battle area or an unexploded ordnance spot clearance task, including of cluster munition remnants.

[3] Sudan, Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report, Form C, April 2011.

[4] Josh Kron, “Instability Is Worsening in Southern Sudan,” New York Times, 25 April 2011, www.nytimes.com; and Maggie Fick, “Landmines Return to Southern Sudan,” 6 June 2011, MediaWorks NZ, www.3news.co.nz.

[5] UNMAO, “Sudan Mine Action Sector, Multi Year Plan 2010–2014,” February 2011, pp. 40–41.

[6] Email from Mohamed Kabir, Chief Information Officer, UNMAO, 2 February 2011.

[7] The locations are based on a review of cluster munition sites in the UNMAO database by the Monitor.

[8] Email from Mohamed Kabir, UNMAO, 27 June 2011.

[9] Xinhua news agency, “UN ‘stands ready’ for technical rollover of UNMIS for south Sudan: peacekeeping chief,” People’s Daily Online, 1 June 2011, english.peopledaily.com.cn; and email from Tim Horner, UNMAO, Juba, 8 July 2011.