+   *    +     +     
About Us 
The Issues 
Our Research Products 
Order Publications 
Multimedia 
Press Room 
Resources for Monitor Researchers 
ARCHIVES HOME PAGE 
    >
Email Notification Receive notifications when this Country Profile is updated.

Sections



Send us your feedback on this profile

Send the Monitor your feedback by filling out this form. Responses will be channeled to editors, but will not be available online. Click if you would like to send an attachment. If you are using webmail, send attachments to .

Guinea Bissau

Last Updated: 11 September 2014

Casualties and Victim Assistance

Action points based on findings

·         Dedicate increased national and international funding to address the needs and promote the rights of mine/explosive remnants of war (ERW) survivors and other persons with disabilities. Over the last decade, there has been little progress overall in improving access and quality of assistance to survivors in the Republic of Guinea-Bissau due to lack of funds and of government support.

·         Ensure that broader programs, such as international cooperation for post-conflict reconstruction and political stabilization efforts, reach the most vulnerable members of society, including survivors and other persons with disabilities.

·         Empower mine/ERW survivors and other persons with disabilities to advocate for equal opportunities and increased access to assistance.

Victim assistance commitments

Guinea-Bissau is responsible for a significant number of landmine survivors, cluster munition victims and survivors of other ERW who are in need. Guinea-Bissau has made commitments to provide victim assistance through the Mine Ban Treaty and Convention on Conventional Weapons Protocol V; it also has victim assistance obligations under the Convention on Cluster Munitions.

Casualties

Casualties Overview

All known casualties by end 2013

1,533 mine/ERW casualties from 1963 to December 2013

Casualties in 2013

10 (2012: 5)

2013 casualties by outcome

3 killed; 7 injured (2012: 2 killed, 1 injured)

2013 casualties by device type

1 unspecified mine; 9 ERW

In 2013, 10 mine/ERW casualties were recorded in Guinea-Bissau, all within the Region of Oio. Two incidents were caused by ERW, resulting in a total of nine casualties, a man and eight children.[1] In April 2013, a 13-year-old boy was killed by a landmine. The number of casualties in 2013 was twice the number of mine/ERW casualties that occurred in 2012.

There were a total of 1,533 casualties from mines/ERW reported, dating from 1963 to December 2013.[2] However, this was not believed to be a comprehensive figure.[3] An estimated 80% of all casualties have been male, the majority of whom were farmers.[4] No information was available on whether the figure included both military and civilian casualties.

Cluster munition casualties

While the total number of casualties from cluster munitions is not known in Guinea-Bissau, there were 11 casualties in 1998 during an attack on a weapons depot; the explosion that caused the casualties involved cluster munitions.[5]

Victim Assistance

As of December 2013, there were more than 1,410 mine/ERW survivors recorded in Guinea-Bissau. Some of these may have already died, but it is likely there are many more unrecorded.[6]

Victim assistance coordination

In 2013, the National Mine Action Coordination Center (Centro Nacional de Coordenação da Accão Anti-Minas (CAAMI), the national focal point for victim assistance, found its efforts to coordinate victim assistance largely stymied due to a lack of national or international resources.[7] Mine/ERW survivors were included in a target of the National Poverty Reduction Strategy 2011–2015 that aims for the “equal opportunity for rehabilitation, and reintegration of all persons with disabilities (victim of armed dispute or conflict, included the mine/ERW injured people),” their full participation in the socio-economic reconstruction, and the re-establishment of their rights and dignity.[8]

At the end of 2013, Guinea-Bissau presented the objectives of the National Victim Assistance Strategy for the first time. The objectives included establishing a new coordination mechanism on victim assistance in the country, implementing a new national data collection system, strengthening current victim assistance programs, increasing mobilization of donor funds to such programs, and increasing employment levels of survivors in national and international organizations.[9]

Guinea-Bissau provided updates on its progress and challenges in assisting victims at the Fourth Meeting of States Parties to the Convention on Cluster Munitions in Lusaka in September 2013.[10] At the Thirteenth Meeting of States Parties to the Mine Ban Treaty, Guinea-Bissau presented the objectives of its national victim assistance plan and appealed to the international community for technical and financial assistance for its implementation.[11]

Inclusion and participation in victim assistance

In 2013, mine/ERW survivors were included in the planning and provision of victim assistance through representative organizations such as the Persons with Disabilities’ Federation of Associations of Defense and Advocacy which represents 12 organizations of persons with disability, or the Persons with Disabilities’ Association for the Struggle for National Freedom.[12]

Service accessibility and effectiveness

Aside from the opening of a new rehabilitation center in the capital in 2011, there has been little progress overall in improving access and quality of assistance to survivors in Guinea-Bissau in recent years due to lack of funds and of government support. There were few facilities near mine-affected areas, emergency transportation was almost non-existent, and services were further hampered by a lack of communication mechanisms and roads/transport.[13]

In March 2011, the Center for Physical Rehabilitation (Centro de Reabilitação Motora, CRM) under the Ministry of Health was officially inaugurated in Bissau to serve as the main physical rehabilitation center for the country and to provide free rehabilitation services for survivors with economic need.[14] In 2013, the CRM was staffed by 34 personnel, including one Category Two Prosthetist/Orthotist and three bench technicians. In 2013, the CRM, in cooperation with the ICRC, the Federation of the Association of Persons with Disabilities, and other national organizations, began an outreach service to provide services for people living in rural areas.[15] The ICRC covered the costs for those mine/ERW survivors who accessed services, provided equipment and materials, and supported on-site technical training programs to improve the quality of the service.[16] Since opening in March 2011, the CRM has provided prosthetic and physiotherapy services to more than 600 people with disabilities, including the provision of prostheses to 21 mine/ERW survivors.[17]

Article 5 of the constitution of Guinea-Bissau prohibits discrimination against persons with disabilities, but implementation was weak. There was no law mandating access to public buildings and no efforts were made to ensure access to buildings or streets.[18] Some mine survivors were eligible to receive pensions for persons with disabilities from the Ministry of Social Solidarity and Poverty Reduction (MSSPR).[19] Disabled former military personnel received pensions from the Ministry of Defense and Ex-Combatants, but these programs did not adequately address health, housing, or food needs.[20]

In September 2013, Guinea-Bissau signed the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities; the Ministry of Social Solidarity is the focal point for the convention’s implementation.[21]

 



[1] The casualties were recorded by HUMAID, a demining organization, and provided to the Monitor via an email from Kennedy de Pina Araujo, Director, Center for Physical Rehabilitation (Centro de Reabilitação Motora, CRM), 14 March 2014.

[2] Monitor analysis of the statement of Guinea-Bissau, Mine Ban Treaty Thirteenth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 4 December 2013; and email from César de Carvalho, General Director, National Mine Action Coordination Center (Centro Nacional de Coordenação da Accão Anti-Minas, CAAMI), 12 March 2014.

[3] Statement of Guinea-Bissau, Mine Ban Treaty Thirteenth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 4 December 2013.

[4] Ibid.

[5] Handicap International (HI), Circle of Impact: The Fatal Footprint of Cluster Munitions on People and Communities (Brussels: HI, May 2007). Annex 2, p. 145.

[6] Email from César de Carvalho, CAAMI, 12 March 2014; and statement of Guinea-Bissau, Mine Ban Treaty Thirteenth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 4 December 2013.

[7] Email from César de Carvalho, CAAMI, 1 April 2014.

[8] Statement of Guinea-Bissau, Mine Ban Treaty Thirteenth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 4 December 2013.

[9] Ibid.

[10] Statement of Guinea-Bissau, Convention on Cluster Munitions Fourth Meeting of States Parties, Lusaka, 10 September 2013.

[11] Statement of Guinea-Bissau, Mine Ban Treaty Thirteenth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 4 December 2013.

[12] Email from Kennedy de Pina Araujo, CRM, 14 March 2014.

[13] Ibid; and ICRC “Physical Rehabilitation Programme: Annual Report 2011,” Geneva, June 2012.

[14] Emails from César de Carvalho, CAAMI, 3 August 2012, and 1 April 2014.

[15] Email from Kennedy de Pina Araujo, CRM, 14 March 2014; and statement of Guinea-Bissau, Mine Ban Treaty Twelfth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 4 December 2012.

[16] Email from Kennedy de Pina Araujo, CRM, 2 March 2013; and ICRC Physical Rehabilitation Project, “Annual Report 2013,” Geneva, 2014.

[17] Ibid.

[18] Statement of Guinea-Bissau, Mine Ban Treaty Twelfth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 4 December 2012.

[19] Mine Ban Treaty Article 7 Report (for the period 30 April 2010 to 30 April 2011), Form J.

[20] United States Department of State, “2012 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices: Guinea-Bissau,” Washington, DC, 19 April 2013.

[21] Email from César de Carvalho, CAAMI, 12 March 2014.