Key developments since May 2002: Austria
has served as co-chair of the Standing Committee on the General Status and
Operation of the Convention since September 2002. Austria has continued to play
a key role in promoting universalization and full implementation of the Mine Ban
Treaty. Austrian funding for mine action in 2002 more than doubled to
€2.06 million (US$1.96 million), including €1.27 million for
Afghanistan.
Mine Ban Policy
Austria signed the Mine Ban Treaty on 3 December
1997 and ratified it on 29 June 1998, becoming a State Party on 1 March 1999.
National legislation containing penal sanctions for activities prohibited by the
Mine Ban Treaty pre-dates the treaty. Production and transfer of antipersonnel
mines ceased before entry into force of the Mine Ban Treaty, with the exception
of Claymore-type directional fragmentation munitions. Stockpile destruction was
completed in 1996, and no antipersonnel mines were retained for training and
development.
Austria submitted its Article 7 transparency report for calendar year 2002 on
29 April 2003. Data is unchanged since the previous report, with the exception
of mine action funding reported on the voluntary Form J. This is
Austria’s fifth Article 7
report.[1]
Austria has continued to play a key role in the Mine Ban Treaty
intersessional work program and in promoting universalization and full
implementation of the Mine Ban Treaty. At the Fourth Meeting of States Parties
in September 2002, Austria became co-chair of the Standing Committee on the
General Status and Operation of the Convention. Austria actively participated
in the contact groups on universalization and on Articles 7 and 9, as well as
the new contact group on resource mobilization. Austria has undertaken several
démarches encouraging States Parties to submit their Article 7 reports or
enact national legislation as required by Article 9. Austria was one of five
countries that offered to host the 2004 Review Conference and participated
actively in the President’s Consultations on preparations for the 2004
Review Conference.
In 2002-2003, Austria chaired the Human Security Network (HSN). A
declaration by the HSN in support of the treaty was presented at the Fourth
Meeting of States Parties and included in the meeting’s final report. The
declaration, agreed on 12 September 2002 by foreign ministers of HSN members,
stated that they remain strongly committed to further strengthening the
humanitarian norm established by the Mine Ban Treaty, and noted that “no
conceivable military utility of antipersonnel mines could possibly outweigh and
justify the devastating humanitarian costs of these weapons.” It expressed
their determination to “work strenuously” towards universalization
of the treaty.[2]
The Austrian Minister of Foreign Affairs, as chair of the HSN, wrote to
foreign ministers of all states not yet party to the treaty to encourage them to
join. At the HSN’s annual meeting in May 2003, it was agreed that states
replying to the HSN would be invited to enter into a dialogue and encouraged to
attend the Fifth Meeting of States Parties and the intersessional meetings.
States not replying to the HSN letter would receive follow-up communications.
The HSN also adopted a workplan for 2003-2005 that included member countries
acting as “regional champions” of the Mine Ban Treaty, coordination
of universalization activities by diplomatic missions in states not yet party to
the treaty, and focusing its activities on the Middle East and G8
countries.[3]
The NGO, Austrian Aid for Mine Victims, wrote to the Minister for Foreign
Affairs in January 2003 emphasizing the importance of involving non-state actors
in universalization of the treaty. The Minister replied that the Austrian
presidency of the HSN had two main priorities, human rights education and
children in armed conflicts, as well as the mine
ban.[4]
Other efforts by Austria aimed at promoting and universalizing the treaty
included bilateral contacts with countries in Central Asia and the Caucasus, the
Middle East and the rest of
Asia.[5] In November 2002,
Austria voted in favor of UN General Assembly Resolution 57/74, which calls for
universalization and full implementation of the Mine Ban Treaty.
Austria has previously expressed detailed views on the issue of antivehicle
mines with antihandling devices or sensitive
fuzes.[6] At the Fourth Meeting
of States Parties, Austria welcomed practical steps suggested by the
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) intended to take the issue
“beyond legalistic debate,” and encouraged all countries to express
views “in the hope of
convergence.”[7] Austria
did not intervene on this matter in the discussions in the Standing Committee
meetings in February and May 2003.
Mines Retained for Training
At a Standing Committee meeting in May 2003, Austria stated that “mine
clearance training can be carried out in a very effective and sophisticated
manner without the need of retaining live mines.... We think that States Parties
should not retain any APLs [antipersonnel landmines] at all.” During
discussion of the quantities retained by other States Parties, the Austrian
delegation said that the number “cannot be so high that the commitment of
a State Party to comply with the core treaty obligation can be put into doubt.
That commitment can indeed be questioned, if a State Party keeps so many mines
that they could still be used in a conflict.” Austria noted that an
understanding has emerged that the number of retained mines should be in the
hundreds or thousands, but not in the tens of
thousands.[8]
Prohibition on “assist”
In April 2003, the Green Party initiated a parliamentary inquiry that
questioned whether national legislation is less stringent than the Mine Ban
Treaty as regards the Article 1.1c prohibition on assisting others to undertake
prohibited activities.[9] This
related to a Green Party letter and parliamentary inquiry in 2002, regarding the
use of grenades with Austrian markings in an attack on the parliament building
in New Delhi in December 2001. The grenades were marked “Arges,”
indicating the Austrian company Armaturen GmbH. The issue relates to landmines
because concerns have been raised that Arges licensed Pakistan Ordnance
Factories to produce a grenade (which Arges denied) that POF adapted for use in
a bounding antipersonnel mine.[10]
The Green Party wrote to the Minister of Internal Affairs on 11 April 2003
suggesting that inadequate regulation of the licensing for foreign production of
Austrian military ammunition could allow the New Delhi incident to reoccur.
On 20 May 2003, the Minister of the Interior replied that foreign-licensed
production of Austrian “war material” would require approval under
Article 1(1) of the War Material Act and that existing law prohibits assistance
to others in carrying out prohibited acts, as set out in Article 1.1c of the
Mine Ban Treaty. The Ministry of the Interior’s reply indicated that the
investigation of this issue started over two years ago. The Ministry stated
that it could not comment
further.[11]
Austria is a State Party to the Convention on Conventional Weapons and its
Amended Protocol II and submitted its annual report under Article 13 of the
Protocol on 16 October 2002. It attended the Fourth Annual Conference of States
Parties to the Protocol on 11 December 2002. It participated actively in the
CCW Group of Governmental Experts meetings in 2002 and 2003, and is in favor of
a legally binding instrument on Explosive Remnants of War.
Mine Action Funding
At the Standing Committee meetings in February and
May 2003, Austria described mine action as an aspect of sustainable development.
It stressed the need for greater donor-recipient coordination and planning if
the necessary long-term funding is to be achieved. It said that greater
involvement of the private sector and of the public was also
desirable.[12]As a result
of Austria’s early role in establishing the Mine Ban Treaty, humanitarian
mine action became a priority topic with its own budget line. But this
separated mine action from the Austrian development cooperation program.
Austria now recognizes “that the mine problem is a
‘cross-cutting’ issue with many different aspects,” and in the
near future hopes to reorganize the development cooperation structure to
identify synergies between mine action and development
programs.[13]
At a Standing Committee meeting in May 2003, Austria also pointed out that it
does not have a separate budget for mine victim assistance. Austria said that
as mine action is integrated into the wider development agenda, mine-affected
states should include the care of mine victims within their public health
development priorities for negotiation with Austrian development agencies.
Development programs have the advantage of multi-year funding, whereas
Austria’s mine action budget has to be approved
annually.[14]
Austria’s most recent Article 7 report gives details on mine action
funding in 2002 which total €2,061,701 (US$1.96
million).[15] This includes
€1.27 million for Afghanistan. Mine action funding in 2002 was more than
twice that of the previous year: ATS13,683,385
($888,511).[16]
According to the Article 7 report, projects funded in 2002 were:
Afghanistan – €800,000 ($760,000) to the Austrian Red Cross and
ICRC for victim assistance
Afghanistan – €225,000 ($213,750) in technical support to the
Organization for Mine Clearance and Afghan Rehabilitation for mine clearance
Afghanistan – €245,200 ($232,940) as value of Schiebel mine
detectors donated to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs
Angola and Mozambique – €158,180 ($150,271) to the UN
Development Program (UNDP) for training of mine action managers (taken from the
2003 budget)
Bosnia and Herzegovina – €115,545 ($109,768) to the Austrian NGO
Hope 87 for rehabilitation of mine victims in Sarajevo (taken from the 2003
budget)
Mozambique – €270,389 ($256,870) to the Austrian Development
Cooperation for capacity building and mine risk education in Sofala
Nicaragua – €82,910 (78,765) to Horizont 3000 for rehabilitation
and mine risk education in Rio Coco
International Trust Fund – €45,037 ($42,785) for rehabilitation
in Slovenia of 12 mine survivors from Bosnia and Herzegovina
Geneva International Center for Humanitarian Demining – €5,516
($5,240) for the Implementation Support Unit
Fourth Meeting of States Parties – €18,000 ($17,100) as support
for human resources
ICBL – €65,902 ($62,607) for the Landmine Monitor
Evaluation of the Austrian mine action program – €30,022
($28,521) for an initial desk
study.[17] The evaluation report
is not yet published.
In 2002, Schiebel, an Austrian company, successfully field-tested in Croatia
a prototype of the Camcopter, as part of the ARC aerial system for technical and
post-clearance survey of minefields. The final version of the ARC system was
planned for March 2003, with an airborne mine detection demonstration to be held
in October 2003.[18]
A charity concert took place in Vienna on 4 May 2003, organized by the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, to fundraise for a mine-free world. The proceeds
of €100,000 ($95,000) were matched by the Minister of Foreign Affairs and
given to the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF). The artists Anne-Sophie Mutter
and Lambert Orkis donated their work to the cause.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs stated in June 2003 that its policy for
future mine action funding is to concentrate on Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia,
and Mozambique.[19]
It was reported previously that funds designated for Mozambique in 2001 were
not used due to the slow progress of the projects. Landmine Monitor was told
that the projects are being evaluated by independent
personnel.[20] Funds designated
for Mozambique in 2002 were also not used. Alternative use of these funds was
being planned in June 2003, according to the Austria Development
Corporation.[21]
Non-governmental funding of mine action
CARE Austria donated $100,000 to a mine risk education project conducted with
CARE Laos, UNDP and UNICEF. In Ingushetia, in the Russian Federation, CARE
Austria has undertaken psychosocial rehabilitation for child mine survivors,
with $92,099 funding by UNICEF and CARE
Austria.[22] Caritas-Austria
donated €88,000 to the consortium Church Ecumenical Action in Sudan,
including some funding for mine
clearance.[23] The
Entwicklungshilfe-Klub donated €14,711 to the Jesuit Service Cambodia, via
Misereor, for victim assistance in
2002.[24]
The Austrian Red Cross has no mine-related projects, but channels funds to
the ICRC for victim assistance and mine risk education in Afghanistan. The
€6,525 proceeds of a Red Cross fundraising film premiere in 2002 were
donated to the ICRC.[25]
The Rotary Club-Salzburg West donated $3,000 via Austrian Aid for Mine
Victims (AAMV) for wheelchairs to the Jesuit Service Cambodia. It also donated
€7,000 from the proceeds of a golf tournament to AAMV for its mine action
work in 2002.[26] In 2003, the
Rotary Club Salzburg-West donated a further €5,000 to AAMV, again from the
proceeds of a golf tournament.[27]
[1] Article 7 Report, 29 April 2003 (for
calendar year 2002); Article 7 Report, 3 May 2002 (for calendar year 2001);
Article 7 Report, 30 April 2001 (for calendar year 2000); Article 7 Report, 28
April 2000 (for the period 30 April-31 December 1999); Article 7 Report, 29 July
1999 (for the period 1 March-30 April
1999). [2] Human Security Network,
“Declaration on Promoting the Universalization of the Convention on the
Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling, Production and Transfer of Anti-Personnel
Mines and on Their Destruction,” 12 September 2002. Members of the HSN
are Austria, Canada, Chile, Greece, Ireland, Jordan, Mali, the Netherlands,
Norway, Slovenia, South Africa, Switzerland, and
Thailand. [3] “Universalization
Panel (Human Security Network),” intervention by Austria, Standing
Committee on the General Status and Operation of the Convention, Geneva, 12 May
2003, available at
www.gichd.ch. [4]
Letter from Benita Ferrero-Waldner, Minister for Foreign Affairs, 30 January
2003. [5] Email from Alexander Kmentt,
Counselor, Permanent Mission to the UN in Geneva, 20 January
2003. [6] See Landmine Monitor Report
2002, pp. 91-92. [7] Intervention by
Austria, Fourth Meeting of States Parties, Geneva, 16-20 September 2002.
(Landmine Monitor notes.) [8]
“Article 3,” intervention by Austria, Standing Committee on the
General Status and Operation of the Convention, Geneva, 16 May 2003, available
at
www.gichd.ch. [9]
Letter of inquiry from Dr. Peter Pilz, Member of Parliament, and colleagues, 11
April 2003. Parliamentary Inquiry number XXII.GP.-NR/J/2003-04-11.
[10] See Landmine Monitor Report 2002,
pp. 90-91; Landmine Monitor Report 2001, p.
606. [11] Letter (no. GZ
11.200/160-III/3/03) to Dr Andreas Kohl, President of the National Assembly,
from Dr. Ernst Strasser, Minister of the Interior, 20 May 2003.
[12] Intervention by Austria, Standing
Committee on the General Status and Operation of the Convention, Geneva, 3
February 2003 (Landmine Monitor notes). For details of Austrian funding policy,
see Landmine Monitor Report 2002, p.
92. [13] “Resource
Mobilization,” intervention by Austria, Standing Committee on the General
Status and Operation of the Convention, Geneva, 12 May
2003. [14] “Victim
Assistance,” intervention by Austria, Standing Committee on Victim
Assistance and Socio-Economic Reintegration, Geneva, 13 May
2003. [15] Article 7 Report, Form J, 29
April 2003 (for calendar year 2002). Exchange rate of €1 = $0.95, used
throughout this report unless dollar figure only given. Federal Reserve,
“List of Exchange Rates (Annual),” 6 January
2003. [16] See Landmine Monitor Report
2002, p. 92. [17] Article 7 Report, Form
J, 29 April 2003; email from Romana Koenigsbrun, Department for Disarmament and
Non-Proliferation, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 15 January
2003. [18] Emails from Petra
Hoermann-Wambacher,Scheibel Gmbh, 9 and 21 January
2003. [19] Email from Georg Zehetner,
Department for Disarmament and Non-Proliferation, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 5
June 2003. [20] Emails from Margit Scherb,
Department VII.6, Austrian Development Cooperation, Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
9 May 2003, and from Christian Zeinninger, regional coordinator in Mozambique,
Austrian Development Cooperation, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 12 April 2003.
See also Landmine Monitor Report 2002, p.
95. [21] Email from Sigrid Kodym,
Department VII.1, Austrian Development Corporation, Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
25 June 2003. [22] Fax from Reinhard
Trink, Emergency Director, CARE Austria, 14 January
2003. [23] Email and telephone interview
with Franz Karl Prüller, Caritas-Austria, 13 January
2003. [24] Email and telephone interview
with Franz Christian Fuchs, Entwicklungshilfe-Klub, 9 January
2003. [25] Email from Helga Kohl, Austrian
Red Cross, 10 January 2003. [26] Email
from Judith Majlath, AAVM, 19 July
2002. [27] Telephone interview with Dr.
Christian Horn, Rotary Club Board Member, 8 July 2003.