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Table of Contents
Country Reports
AFGHANISTAN, Landmine Monitor Report 1999

AFGHANISTAN

Background

Afghanistan has suffered greatly from war since 1978, and all sides to the various armed conflicts have used antipersonnel mines, particularly Soviet forces and the Afghan government from 1979 to 1992. Landmines reportedly continue to be laid today in fighting between the Taliban, which controls all but parts of central and northeast Afghanistan, and a loose coalition of opposition forces.

Landmines have been planted indiscriminately over most of the country. Agricultural farms, grazing areas, irrigation canals, residential areas, roads and footpaths, both in urban and rural areas, are contaminated. Mines are a major obstacle to repatriation, relief, rehabilitation and development activities.

Afghanistan is one of the heaviest mined countries in the world. In spite of eight years of intensive mine clearance, only 146 square kilometers of mined area have been cleared. An area of 713 square kilometers remains to be cleared. Landmines kill or maim an estimated ten to twelve people each day in Afghanistan. It is believed that almost 50 percent of landmine victims die due to lack of medical facilities.

Mine Ban Policy

Afghanistan has not signed the 1997 Mine Ban Treaty. This is due at least in part to the unstable political situation and the status of Afghanistan’s seat in the United Nations. Though the Taliban controls nearly all of the country, the government of Burhanuddin Rabbani, ousted by the Taliban in September 1996, still holds Afghanistan’s U.N. seat. The Taliban has formal diplomatic recognition from only three governments. However, both the Taliban and the ousted government have made statements in support of a comprehensive ban on antipersonnel mines. These statements have been offset by continued reports--yet to be confirmed--of mine use by all sides in the ongoing war.

Mullah Muhammad Omer, the supreme leader of the Taliban, in October 1998 issued a statement in which the Taliban “strongly condemns” the use of landmines as an “un-Islamic and anti-human act,” expresses strong support for the 1997 Mine Ban Treaty, and declares, at the national level, “a total ban on the production, trade, stockpiling and use of landmines.” More fully, the statement says:

1. At international level, the IEA [Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan] calls for a total ban on the production, trade, stockpiling and use of landmines, and is ready to actively cooperate in this regard.

2. At national level, the IEA announces a total ban on the production, trade, stockpiling, and use of landmines, and makes a commitment to the suffering people of Afghanistan and the international community that the IEA would never make use of any type of landmines.

3. The IEA asks all the opposition groups to avoid use, trade and stockpiling of landmines and do not cause more harm to the bereaved and suffering people of Afghanistan.

4. Those who use landmines in personal, political or any other differences in Afghanistan would be punished in accordance with the Islamic law.

5. The IEA thanks all those countries that have signed the Ottawa treaty, and strongly urges all those countries that have not yet signed this treaty to immediately stop production, trade, stockpiling and use of landmines and respect the Ottawa international treaty.[1]

The Rabbani government declared its support for an immediate and comprehensive ban on antipersonnel mines in a statement to the U.N. Human Rights Commission in Geneva in March 1996. It had previously, during the 1994-1995 preparatory meetings for the Review Conference of the Convention on Conventional Weapons, called for a ban on production and export, but not use.[2] The Rabbani government voted in favor of the December 1996 U.N. General Assembly Resolution calling on states to pursue vigorously an international agreement banning antipersonnel mines. It was absent for the votes on the pro-ban UNGA resolutions in 1997 and 1998. The government attended the preparatory meetings of the Ottawa Process, but did not endorse the pro-ban treaty Brussels Declaration of June 1997, and did not participate in the treaty negotiations in Oslo in September 1997.

The Afghan Campaign to Ban Landmines (ACBL) reports that all of the major military opposition factions have expressed their support for the landmine ban process, but no formal written statements have been provided yet. The ACBL, established in 1995, is a non-governmental organization composed of national and international NGOs working in Afghanistan.

Production

There is no evidence of antipersonnel landmine production in Afghanistan, past or current, by any government or warring faction.

Transfer

Afghanistan is not known to have ever exported antipersonnel mines. However, there are unconfirmed reports of small-scale smuggling of landmines to some neighboring parts of Pakistan, Kashmir and Sri Lanka.

The former Soviet Union supplied large quantities of antipersonnel mines to pro-Soviet Afghan governments. The exact types and quantities of mines transferred cannot be ascertained. The U.S. provided mines to the mujahideen. Fifty types of mines from ten countries have been found in Afghanistan. (See list below).

In the October 1998 statement on landmines, the Taliban “asks and demands of the whole international community and neighboring countries to immediately stop export of landmines to Afghanistan” and “strongly condemns the exporters of landmines to Afghanistan and considers such an act a violation of the international law.”[3]

The Taliban has accused Iran of supplying mines to the opposition forces in Afghanistan, a charge Iran has denied. In December, the Taliban said it captured 400 antipersonnel mines with Iranian markings from the opposition in Bangi district of the northern province of Takhar.[4]

In an interview, a representative of the ousted Rabbani government acknowledged that its forces were still using, and actively importing, antipersonnel mines. He indicated that Tajikistan was now the main supply route for mines, mostly of Soviet origin.[5]

Stockpiling

It appears that the Taliban and all of the warring factions have stockpiles of antipersonnel mines, but there are no reliable estimates of the quantities available. The list below of mines encountered in Afghanistan may give some indication of mine types in stockpile.

There are no indications that the Taliban or any warring faction has begun destruction of stockpiles. Efforts are being made by Mine Action Program for Afghanistan (MAPA) to verify any future destruction.

Use

The vast majority of mines now in Afghanistan were laid by the Soviet Union in its war with the mujahideen from 1979-1992. Many of the mines were remotely delivered, by helicopter and airplane. Soviet and Afghan government troops placed antipersonnel mines around their security posts, military bases and strategic points for protection; in the outskirts of cities to stop the advancement of mujahideen forces; as well as in and around villages to depopulate them to reduce local support for the mujahideen. The mujahideen planted mines (mainly antitank) in the main roads and supply routes of Soviet and government troops to reduce their mobility and cut short their supplies. Most of these mines were laid in and around the provinces bordering Iran and Pakistan, and alongside the Salang highway connecting Kabul with the former Soviet Union.

Various mujahideen factions have been fighting since 1992, and all sides have used antipersonnel mines. In particular, large numbers of mines were planted in different parts of Kabul City and its outskirts during factional war after the fall of communist regime in 1992, and when the Taliban ousted the Rabbani government from Kabul in September 1996. There have been press reports of new use of mines by both sides in late 1998 and early 1999. In a report published shortly after the Taliban’s mine ban announcement, The Frontier Post stated, “Since their autumn offensive on October 10, 1998, the Taliban militia has since heavily mined the 10-kilometer strip between the districts of Nijrab and Tagab in Kapisa province...and one Western analyst estimated that any attempt to cross the zone could result in 30 percent to 50 percent casualties.”[6] The Rabbani government has also accused the Taliban of new use of antipersonnel mines.[7]

A military official from the ousted government has admitted that it is still using mines, justifying it as a legitimate and useful weapon. He said that government forces had placed thousands of antipersonnel mines in the Salang region in 1998, and the mines had played a key role in defeating the Taliban offensive.[8]

Mines found in Afghanistan and their Origins

NR-127 Belgium

Type 69 China

Type 72 China

PP-MI-SR Ex-Czechoslovak

PP-MI-SR-IIEx-Czechoslovak

PT-MI-K Ex-Czechoslovak

Pt-Mi-K Ex-Czechoslovak

SB-33 Italy

SH-55 Italy

TC-2.4 Italy

TC-3.6 Italy

MD-2 Pakistan

P2-Mark 3 Pakistan

G-Vata-6 Ex-USSR

MON-100 Ex-USSR

MON-200 Ex-USSR

MON-50 Ex-USSR

MON-90 Ex-USSR

OZM-3 Ex-USSR

OZM-4 Ex-USSR

OZM-72 Ex-USSR

OZM-UUK-AP Ex-USSR

PDM-2 Ex-USSR

PFM-1 Ex-USSR

PFM-15 Ex-USSR

PGMDM Ex-USSR

PMD-6 Ex-USSR

PMD-6M Ex-USSR

PMN Ex-USSR

PMN-2 Ex-USSR

PMP Ex-USSR

POMZ Ex-USSR

POMZ-2 Ex-USSR

POMZ-2M Ex-USSR

TC-6-AT Ex-USSR

TM-41 Ex-USSR

TM-46 Ex-USSR

TM-57 Ex-USSR

TM-62 Ex-USSR

TM-62M Ex-USSR

TMB-44AT Ex-USSR

TMDB Ex-USSR

TMK-2 Ex-USSR

TMN-46 Ex-USSR

VS-MK2 Singapore

Mark-2 United Kingdom

Mark-7 United Kingdom

PMA-1A Ex-Yugoslavia

TMA-5 Ex-Yugoslavia

RAP-2 Zimbabwe

Landmine Problem[9]

Afghanistan is one of the most heavily mine-affected countries in the world. Clearing of mines and unexploded ordnance is a pre-requisite for rehabilitation and development of Afghanistan. Mines have had a devestating socio-economic impact -- roads, irrigations systems, agricultural and grazing areas have been rendered unusable, and inhabitants have been forced to leave their homes and properties. Mines are a major obstacle for resettlement of Afghan refugees and Internally Displaced Persons; mine victims become burdens on their families. Mines drain Afghanistan’s already exhausted economy.

Mine Clearance Planning Agency (MCPA) under the auspices of MAPA, has conducted general level one surveys which show that an estimated 859 square kilometers of land has been contaminated by mines in about 1,585 villages. This total includes about 223 square kilometers of agricultural land, about 63 square kilometers of roads, and 532 square kilometers of grazing land. The 1993 National Survey of Mine Situation in Afghanistan indicated that a total of 361,000 domestic animals have been killed by landmines in 979 villages.

For several years, the United Nations has estimated the number of mines in Afghanistan at 10 million. A 1998 U.N. study reported the estimate had been reduced to 5-7 million.1[0] Many involved in actual clearance of mines believe that it is not possible to make an accurate estimate at this time, and that the number is in fact irrelevant -- it is the amount of land denied and the socio-economic impact that matter.

A summary of area mined, and area cleared, by land type is presented in the table below.

Table: Area Mined and Area Cleared1[1]

Land Type

Total Mined
Area Identified
(Sq. Km)

% of Total Mined Area in Afghanistan

Area Cleared
as of June 1998






Sq. Km

% Cleared
Agricultural land

223

26

54

24
Irrigation system

9

1

6

64
Residential area

33

4

21

64
Roads

63

7

21

33
Grazing land

532

62

44

8
Total

859

100

146

17

Mine Action Funding

Afghan authorities have not provided financial or technical support to humanitarian mine action programs in Afghanistan. However, they have provided support in the form of security, assistance in resolving problems with local authorities, and information on mined areas and impact.

The humanitarian mine action program in Afghanistan is coordinated by the United Nations Mine Action Program for Afghanistan (MAPA). Donors voluntarily contribute to MAPA and its components. Though funding of MAPA has been generally sufficient, several times it has faced severe shortages that affected field operations, caused temporary salary reductions and suspensions of personnel.

Funding for MAPA has totaled $113 million from 1991 through October 1998. It has grown from $15.6 million in 1995, to $17.8 million in 1996, to $20.2 million in 1997, to $22.3 million in 1998 (through October). The biggest donors have been Sweden, the United States, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the European Community.

The allocation of funds to various components of mine action for 1997 and 1998 are as follows: mine clearance (80%); battle area clearance and explosive ordnance disposal (6%), minefield survey and marking (6%), mine awareness training (5%), and mine clearance training (3%).1[2]

Note: Funds for Victim Assistance programs are not included in the adjoining table since MAPA does not have a Victim Assistance component.

Table: Details of funds received by MAPA from 1991 to 31 October 1998 in US$1[3]

Country

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998 *

Total
Contributions e/f from 1997

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

4,817,433

4,817,433
Australia

-

658,868

138,279

274,800

306,000

293,600

748,380

335,550

2,701,477
Austria

-

180,000

-

315,725

159,982

203,030

16,667

10,000

885,404
















273,224

273,224
Canada

-

-

562,559

716,874

355,540

737,419

777,940

705,937

3,856,269
CEC

-

-

-

-

2,785,321

5,077,730

3,624,437

3,027,613

14,515,101
Cyprus

-

-

-

-

10,000

-

-

-

10,000
Denmark

-

400,000

-

202,823

900,000

900,000

598,802

729,639

3,731,264
Finland

235,294

227,635

175,991

756,559

242,825

423,191

380,952

-

2,442,447
France

-

-

-

-

-

-

167,000

-

167,000
Germany

-

-

-

-

374,232

2,388,041

2,000,000

2,373,000

7,135,273
Greece

-

16,365

-

-

-

-

-

-

16,365
Japan

5,000,000

2,000,000

2,000,000

-

2,000,000

-

1,000,000

210,267

12,210,267
Korea

-

-

75,000

-

-

-

-

50,000

125,000
Netherlands

-

586,281

780,457

341,591

789,345

1,363,527

2,530,993

1,482,945

7,875,139
Norway

765,004

1,126,877

1,819,103

631,606

562,375

886,163

1,508,107

1,439,273

8,738,508
Sweden

894,457

872,600

1,148,494

1,894,524

2,218,743

2,535,812

2,500,000

2,278,481

14,343,111
Switzerland

-

-

709,220

-

344,828

344,828

-

135,135

1,534,011
UK

904,350

954,350

1,494,000

1,085,840

1,970,728

1,183,088

1,209,678

3,346,000

12,148,034
USA

123,000

1,105,023

1,500,000

3,227,405

2,564,089

1,308,507

2,000,000

1,000,000

12,828,024
Direct/in kind Contribution

-

2,955,000

6,972,428

7,521,244

-

115,328

1,111,111

125,949

18,801,060


















Mine Clearance

The MAPA program, is one of the world’s largest civilian mine clearance programs, and is considered by many to be the most successful and cost effective program in the world. MAPA began its activities with a training program in 1988 and its field operation was launched in early 1990.1[4] Since 1990, an area of 146 square kilometers has been cleared.1[5] Currently an average of more than 30 square kilometers of land is cleared each year, at a cost of about 60 cents per square meter. The U.N. reports that more than 686,813 mines and UXO have been destroyed.1[6]

Currently, 3,900 Afghans undertake mine clearance and related activities under the auspices of MAPA. Organizations involved in mine clearance and training operations are: Mine Clearance Planning Agency (MCPA), Organization for Mine clearance and Afghan Rehabilitation (OMAR), Afghan Technical Consultants (ATC), Demining Agency for Afghanistan (DAFA), Mine Detection Dog Center (MDC), Monitoring, Evaluation and Training Agency (META), and the Agency for Rehabilitation and Energy Conservation in Afghanistan (AREA). All are based in Pakistan. HALO Trust, based in Kabul, conducts clearance independent of MAPA.

MAPA has the following criteria for prioritization: the area must be secure and free from conflict; the population will obtain immediate economic or social benefits after demining operation; the local people are ready to provide security and assistance where possible; the local authorities have requested assistance; refugees are returning to the area; and the area should be free of poppy cultivation or complying with the UNDCP policy.

MAPA’s priority system has five categories. The first priority is:

Agricultural areas, roads, villages, canals and irrigation systems requested by UN agencies and other NGOs. The requesting agency must provide proof that funds are available for rehabilitation to begin after completion of the demining operation.

MCPA maintains the MAPA mine action management information system. This database contains a wide range of information and data relating to the mine contamination threat faced by Afghans, records of minefields marked and cleared, and data related to landmine incidents and injuries.

MCPA has conducted for MAPA a major study on the socio-economic impact of mines in Afghanistan. Its interim report, Socio-Economic Impact Study (SEIS) of Mine Operations Afghanistan, indicates that clearance of agricultural lands, residential areas, irrigation systems, grazing lands, footpaths and roads has had a very positive impact for the Afghan people and economy. The SEIS report indicates that 93% of the area cleared is currently under productive use.1[7]

As of July 1998, MAPA had cleared 54 square kilometers of agricultural land, 6 square kilometers of irrigation canals, and 21 square kilometers of roads. The SEIS report indicates that a total of 3,541 public buildings including schools, hospitals, health clinics, and other governmental offices have become available for public use.

According to the findings of SEIS, 535,892 people have returned to their houses because of demining of residential areas. Nearly one-third of them are refugees or IDPs who have been repatriated to their homes. The rest are local inhabitants who did not leave their villages.

SEIS estimates that mine action operations bring the following benefits annually:1[8]

From clearance of grazing areas + livestock products: $ 43.36 million

From clearance of roads: $ 6.63 million

From clearance of agricultural land: $ 3.37 million

From clearance of irrigation systems: $ 1.06 million

Provision of employment opportunity: for more than 9,200 farmers

Repatriation of refugees and IDPs to cleaned areas: 1.53 million people

Mine Awareness Education

Effective mine awareness programs exist in Afghanistan. Some three million people had received mine awareness education at the end of 1996. In 1997 alone, 986,529 people received mine awareness education, and in 1998, another 652,934 people, bringing the overall total to more than 4.6 million people with mine awareness training.

The agency that has trained the most people is the Organization for Mine Clearance and Afghan Rehabilitation (OMAR), with more than one million in 1997 and 1998 combined. Others involved in mine awareness education are the Afghan Red Crescent Society, Save the Children Fund, Handicap International, the Ansar Relief Institute, and the Afghan Mine Awareness Agency.

The British Broadcasting Corporation Afghan Education Drama project (BBC AEDP) continued to receive direct UNOCHA funding to carry on with broadcasting and printing in a cartoon magazine mine awareness messages. Both the Pashto and Dari services of BBC broadcast the “New Home, New Life” program that disseminates community training and awareness.

Landmine Casualties

It is not possible at this time to determine the exact number of landmine victims in Afghanistan. It has been estimated that there are more than 400,000 landmine disabled people in Afghanistan.1[9] The SEIS report maintains that a better estimate would be 90,000-104,400 mine victims, based on an average rate of 14-16 victims per day for the 18 years since major mining started.2[0] The 1993 National Survey of Mines Situation report by MCPA estimated mine casualties at 20-24 per day.2[1] According to the SEIS report, effective mine action programs had reduced the toll by fifty percent, to 10-12 people per day as of June 1998.2[2]

SEIS indicates that out of 2,647 victims interviewed, 36% were children below 18 years of age. About 52% of them were 18-40 years old and 12% were above age 40. The same survey estimated that 96% of the victims were male and 4% were female.2[3] The types of casualties were as follows: Death (29%); Light injuries (49%); Severe injuries with no total loss of body part (12%); Blindness (6.5%); Single amputation of limb (3.5%); Double amputation of limbs (0.1%).2[4]

Survivor Assistance

There are about thirty organizations and NGOs that provide services and assistance to landmine survivors in Afghanistan, including medical care, surgical operations, orthopedic care, physical rehabilitation, technical training and employment opportunities. The main organizations are: International Committee of Red Cross; Handicap International and its local counterpart Guardians; Radda Barnen (CDAP) and its implementing partners, Swedish Committee for Afghanistan (SCA), Coordination of Humanitarian Assistance (CHA), and Afghan Association for Blind; IAM; World Health Organization; Comprehensive Disabled Afghan Program; Afghan Disabled Society; Save the Children Fund (USA); Sandy Gall Afghanistan; Afghan Amputee Bicyclist for Rehabilitation and Recreation (AABRAR); and Agency for Rehabilitation and Energy Conservation in Afghanistan (AREA).

Landmines survivor assistance is limited in Afghanistan. The main services provided are:

* first aid by the ICRC

* surgical facilities by ICRC, Kuwait Red Crescent Society Hospital, GUARDIANS

* prostheses and mobility devices produced by ICRC, GUARDIANS, CHA, SCA, AABRAR

* economic reintegration and employment support services by CDAP, SCA, AREA

According to the Afghan Campaign to Ban Landmines, there is no disability law in Afghanistan.

Note to Readers: A much longer, more detailed country report on Afghanistan has been prepared for Landmine Monitor which could not be used in full due to space considerations. The full report is available upon request.

<VANUATU | BHUTAN>

[1] Statement of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan on the Problem of Landmines, 6 October 1998.

[2] Human Rights Watch Arms Project Fact Sheets, “Nations Calling for a Comprehensive Ban on Antipersonnel Landmines,” April 1996 and January 1996.

[3] Statement of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan on the Problem of Landmines, 6 October 1998.

[4] Reuters, “Afghan Taleban Say Seize Iran-Supplied Mines,” Islamabad, 4 December 1998.

[5] Interview with Deputy Military Attache, Embassy of Afghanistan, Dushanbe, Tajikistan, (information contained in fax received 4 January 1999).

[6] Frontier Post, 18 November 1998; see also Frontier Post, 19 November 1998, and VOA (The Nation) 27 October 1998.

[7] Press release, Islamic State of Afghanistan, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 23 November 1998.

[8] Interview with Deputy Military Attache, Embassy of Afghanistan, Dushanbe, Tajikistan, (information contained in fax received 4 January 1999).

[9] Much of the remainder of this report on the Landmine Problem and Mine Action is drawn from the MCPA Interim Report to U.N. MAPA, “Socio-Economic Impact Study of Mine Action Operations Afghanistan” (SEIS), October 1998. This is the most comprehensive and up-to-date information available. However, it should be recognized that it is an interim report and its authors, the Mine Clearance Planning Agency, take full responsibility for the information and analyses in the SEIS.

1[0] UNDHA, “Afghanistan: The Development of Indigenous Mine Action Capabilities,” February 1998, p. 9, citing UNOCHA estimates, as quoted in U.S. State Department, Hidden Killers, September 1998, p. 58.

[1]1 MCPA, “Socio-Economic Impact Study of Mine Action Operations Afghanistan,” Interim Report by MCPA to United Nations, MAPA, October 1998.

1[2] United Nations, MAPA, Work plan 1997 and Work plan 1998.

1[3] United Nations, MAPA, Work plan 1997, Annual Report 1997, Work plan 1998 and Monthly activity report 31 October 1998.

1[4] In 1988 the UN established the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Assistance to Afghanistan (UNOCHA), which created its Mine Clearance Program (UNMCP), now called the MAPA.

1[5] MCPA, “Socio-Economic Impact Study of Mine Action Operations Afghanistan,” Interim Report by MCPA to United Nations, MAPA, October 1998.

1[6] UNOCHA, “Mine Action Program for Afghanistan: Workplan 1998,” 1998, p.5, as cited in U.S. Department of State, Hidden Killers, September 1998, p. 61.

1[7] MCPA, “Socio-Economic Impact Study of Mine Action Operations Afghanistan,” Interim Report by MCPA to United Nations, MAPA, October 1998. See note to readers at end country report.

1[8] Ibid.

1[9] UNIDATA report, Peshawar 1990/91.

2[0] MCPA, “Socio-Economic Impact Study,” Interim Report, October 1998.

2[1] Ibid.

[2]2 Ibid.

2[3] Ibid.

2[4] Ibid.