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Table of Contents
Country Reports
Ecuador, Landmine Monitor Report 2004

Ecuador

Key developments since May 2003: On 12 March 2004, Ecuador and Perú announced the completion of mine clearance in El Oro province on the Ecuador side of the border and the department of Tumbes on the Peruvian side. A total of 24,971 square meters of land was cleared in 2003, destroying 60 antipersonnel mines. Ecuador hosted a regional mine action seminar in Quito from 12-13 August 2004. On 11 August 2004, Ecuador destroyed 1,970 of the 3,970 antipersonnel mines previously retained for training.

Key developments since 1999: Ecuador ratified the Mine Ban Treaty on 29 April 1999, and became a State Party on 1 October 1999. Ecuador has not yet enacted national implementation legislation. It completed the destruction of its stockpile of 258,844 antipersonnel mines in January 2002, far in advance of the 1 October 2003 deadline. The number of mines retained for training purposes has been revised downwards from 16,000 to 4,000, and then to 2,000. In September 1999, Ecuador established a National Demining Center. In 2001, Ecuador and the Organization of American States signed a Framework Agreement for an Integrated Mine Action Program in Ecuador. A National Mine Clearance Plan for 2003-2004 was approved on 17 December 2002. Impact surveys and technical studies have been carried out since 2002 in a number of provinces. At the end of 2003, a total of 83,790 square meters of land had been cleared, destroying 4,342 antipersonnel mines and 59 antivehicle mines. Ecuador’s reporting on mined areas laid from 1995-1998 indicates that the country used antipersonnel mines after signing the Mine Ban Treaty in 1997.

Mine Ban Policy

Ecuador signed the Mine Ban Treaty on 4 December 1997, ratified on 29 April 1999 and the treaty entered into force on 1 October 1999. Ecuador has not adopted legal measures to implement the treaty nationally, including penal sanctions, as required by Article 9.[1]

While Ecuador was not an early supporter of a comprehensive mine ban,[2] it participated fully in the Ottawa Process and has subsequently attended every annual meeting of States Parties, including the Fifth Meeting of States Parties in September 2003, and most intersessional Standing Committee meetings. Since 1996, Ecuador has voted in favor of every annual pro-ban United Nations General Assembly resolution, including UNGA Resolution 58/53 on 8 December 2003.

Ecuador hosted a regional mine action seminar in Quito from 12-13 August 2004, and it has participated in other regional landmine meetings held in Colombia (November 2003), Perú (August 2003), Argentina (November 2000) and México (January 1999). In June 2004, the Presidents of Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Perú and Venezuela, comprising the Andean Community, met in Quito and issued the “Declaration of San Francisco de Quito on the establishment and development of the Andean Peace Zone,” which included a call for the eradication of antipersonnel mines under its fourth objective.[3]

Ecuador submitted its annual Article 7 report on 23 June 2004, for calendar year 2003. This includes voluntary Form J on victim assistance measures, and information on the joint mine clearance operation with Perú under Form K. This is the country’s sixth Article 7 report.[4]

Ecuador has not engaged in the extensive discussions that States Parties have had on matters of interpretation and implementation related to Articles 1, 2, and 3. Thus, it has not made its views known on the issues of joint military operations with non-States Parties, foreign stockpiling and transit of antipersonnel mines, antivehicle mines with sensitive fuzes or antihandling devices, and the permissible number of mines retained for training.

Ecuador is a State Party to Amended Protocol II (Landmines) of the Convention on Conventional Weapons, but it did not attend the Fifth Annual Conference of States Parties to Amended Protocol II in November 2003.

Servicio Paz y Justicia Ecuador (SERPAJ) has served as the ICBL’s representative for Ecuador since May 2001. It has carried out Landmine Monitor’s country research for Ecuador since Landmine Monitor Report 2001.

Production, Transfer and Use

Ecuador has not produced antipersonnel mines and has no production facilities.[5] It has not exported antipersonnel mines,[6] and instituted an export moratorium in 1995.[7] According to Article 7 reports, Ecuador imported antipersonnel mines in the past from Belgium, Brazil, Chile, Singapore, the former Soviet Union, Spain, and the United States.[8]

In January 2002, Ecuador transferred 1,644 of its retained mines to the United States, for research and development purposes, as permitted under Article 3 of the Mine Ban Treaty. On 2 January 2002, the US Embassy in Quito facilitated the transfer to the US Navy Explosive Ordnance Disposal Technology Division in Indian Head, Maryland.[9]

Ecuador has acknowledged using antipersonnel mines during the “Cenepa” border war with Perú in 1995. In its 2003 Article 7 report Ecuador stated that antipersonnel mines in the country’s affected regions were laid between 1995 and 1998.[10] This indicates that Ecuador used antipersonnel mines after signing the Mine Ban Treaty in December 1997, but prior to ratification and entry into force in 1999. In June 2004, Ecuador reported that the mines were emplaced prior to the signing of the Peace Accord with Perú on 26 October 1998.[11] Landmine Monitor has previously reported on Ecuadorian mine use after the February 1995 cease-fire.[12]

There are no known reports of mine use in Ecuador in the reporting period, including along the border with Colombia. In February 2004, Ecuadorian media reported that military engineers of the army brigades stationed along that border were “sufficiently prepared to detect and remove mines or explosives.”[13] The Ecuadorian Army recovered a landmine among weapons found abandoned at a Colombian rebel (FARC) camp forty kilometers northeast of Lago Agrio in Ecuadorian territory in November 2002.[14]

Stockpiling and Destruction

Ecuador completed destruction of its stockpile in January 2002, destroying a total of 258,844 antipersonnel mines.[15] Between April 1999 and March 2000, a total of 101,458 antipersonnel mines were destroyed by the Army at its “El Corazón” practice institution in Machachi, Pinchinca province near Quito.[16] Another 143,325 antipersonnel mines were destroyed between August and 11 September 2001.[17] Between September 2001 and January 2002, 9,561 PRB M-409 antipersonnel mines were destroyed by the Engineers Brigade No. 25 “Cenepa.”[18] On 17 January 2002, an additional 4,500 mines originally retained for training were destroyed at El Corazón in front of witnesses from the OAS and government.[19]

No media or civil society representatives witnessed the stockpile destruction done in 1999 or 2000, but they were invited to subsequent events, including one held on 11 September 2001 in which 8,051 mines were destroyed.[20] The Ecuadorian Mine Clearance Center, CENDESMI (Centro de Desminado del Ecuador) was the institution in charge of stockpile destruction, while the Army carried out the destruction by open detonation.

Mines Retained for Training

On 11 August 2004, Ecuador destroyed 1,970 of the 3,970 mines it previously was retaining for training. The mines were destroyed in the presence of the OAS, Red Cross, ICBL, and diplomatic representatives.[21] All the mines are held by the Army Engineers Brigade No. 23 “Cenepa,” which is tasked with demining the country.[22]

Ecuador initially reported that a total of 170,344 antipersonnel mines would be retained for training.[23] At the May 2000 Standing Committee on Stockpile Destruction meeting in Geneva, the ICBL stated its alarm at the high number of mines that Ecuador intended to retain. The country representative subsequently told Landmine Monitor that this number in its initial Article 7 report was an error and the correct figure would be provided before the annual meeting of States Parties in September 2000.[24] In its second Article 7 report submitted August 2000, Ecuador stated that its stockpile totaled 170,344 antipersonnel mines (since 154,344 mines were transferred for destruction between March and July 2000), and it would retain 16,000 mines for training.[25]

At the Third Meeting of States Parties in September 2001, Ecuador announced that it would further reduce the number of mines retained for training from 16,000 to 4,000 mines.[26] Landmine Monitor reported on the other 12,000 mines including those reported destroyed or transferred.[27] In April 2003 Ecuador reported that it had adjusted the number retained to 3,970.[28]

Landmine Problem, Survey and Assessment

Ecuador’s mine problem along its border with Perú is a result of the 1995 “Cenepa” border conflict. Five main areas were affected by mines: 1) Cordillera del Cóndor region in the provinces of Morona Santiago and Zamora Chinchipe; 2) Cusumaza-Bombuiza region also in Morona Santiago province; 3) the Tiwinza square kilometer inside Peruvian territory;[29] 4) Loja province; and 5) El Oro province.[30]

On 12 March 2004, Ecuador and Perú announced the completion of mine clearance in El Oro province on the Ecuador side of the border and the department of Tumbes on the Peruvian side.[31] Mine clearance operations in Loja province were scheduled for completion in mid-2004.[32] The provinces of Pastaza and Orellana were previously suspected of being mine-affected, but in June 2004, Ecuador reported they were not.[33]

In August 2003, the OAS provided information on the landmine problem in Morona Santiago province where clearance operations were planned for calendar year 2004. In the northeast of Limón Indaza cantón, a total of 60 dangerous areas were reported, affecting approximately 2,597 inhabitants.[34] In Tiwinza cantón,[35] 22 dangerous areas affect approximately 2,660 inhabitants, mainly indigenous Shuar.[36] Most of Morona Santiago consists of native forest rich in biological, ecological and cultural diversity and an ecological park (“Parque Ecológico Cóndor”) is planned for the area.[37]

In the first half of 2003, three new impact studies were carried out: two in Huaquillas cantón in El Oro province and one in Macará cantón in Loja province, with an additional two mined areas reported.[38] Previous impact surveys carried out in El Oro and Loja provinces during the first half of 2002 identified 12 mine-affected areas.[39]

According to the OAS, in San Juan Bosco cantón 2,160 antipersonnel mines lie in an area estimated at 211,080 square meters, while in Tiwinza cantón approximately 1,350 mines lie in an area of approximately 46,302 square meters. In Zamora Chinchipe province, initial survey results indicate the presence of approximately 2,500 antipersonnel mines affecting an area estimated at 143,219 square meters. In addition, various sites mined by Ecuador are now located in Peruvian territory following the Peace Accord and completion of border-marking. The area at risk contains approximately 1,090 antipersonnel mines, in an area of approximately 56,005 square meters.[40]

In May 2001, after two children were killed and a third seriously injured by unexploded ordnance in Montalvo Parrish, Pastaza province, the leader of the Ashuar Federation of Ecuador (FINAE), Domingo Peas, reportedly said that several indigenous communities could not work the land for fear of explosives.[41] In November 1998, the “Families of the Shuar and Ashuar of the Frontier” issued a joint declaration asking both governments to demine the border.

From 16 to 20 August 1999 the OAS conducted a multi-disciplinary mission with the US Department of State in Ecuador and Perú to evaluate the antipersonnel mine situation in the border regions of the two countries.[42] From 23 to 27 August 1999, UNMAS organized and led a multi-disciplinary and inter-agency mission to Ecuador.[43]

In 1999 the Latin American Association for Human Rights (ALDHU) reported that both parties laid some 130,000 to 150,000 antipersonnel landmines during the conflict. UNMAS reported that those figures did not contradict information from the Ecuadorian military who estimated that the number of mines on the Ecuadorian side of the Cordillera del Cóndor region to be in excess of 90,000.[44] Ecuadorian military minefield records were provided to the Multinational Observation Mission (MOMEP), but were not made public.

Mine Action Coordination

The Ecuadorian Mine Clearance Center (CENDESMI, Centro de Desminado del Ecuador), established by Executive Decree 1297 on 22 September 1999, and the General Command for Mine Clearance of the national Army are responsible for mine action in the country, in coordination with the OAS Mine Action Program (AICMA). CENDESMI has an administrative unit, an operations unit, and a national school of demining. It is headquartered near Quito and maintained two regional command centers at “Tarqui” in El Oro province and “Amazonas” in Morona Santiago province until 2004, when the centers were consolidated in Morona Santiago.[45]

The OAS AIMCA opened an office in Quito in May 2001, following the conclusion of a framework agreement between the OAS and Ecuador on 19 March 2001 to establish an integrated mine action program, with CENDESMI responsible for clearance operations, training personnel, and promoting landmine survivors training programs.[46] The Information Management System for Mine Action (IMSMA) database program was installed at the OAS office in January 2002 to assist CENDESMI in the planning, coordination and direction of the national humanitarian demining plan.[47] In February 2002 representatives from the Geneva International Center for Humanitarian Demining (GICHD) conducted training and provided technical advice on using the database system.[48] IMSMA is the main source of information for CENDESMI, the General Command, and other organizations involved in mine action.[49]

In May 2003, the Inter-American Defense Board (IADB) established a permanent team of international monitors called the Misión de Asistencia a la Remoción de Minas en Suramérica (MARMINAS, Mission of Assistance to Mine Clearance in South America) to support mine clearance in Ecuador and Perú.[50] As of July 2004, officers from Brazil, Honduras and Nicaragua were serving with MARMINAS.[51]

Mine Clearance

The Engineers Brigade No. 23 “Cenepa” of the Ecuadorian Army conducts mine clearance in the country, employing a total of 95 deminers in 2004.[52] Mine clearance operations were scheduled to commence in Morona Santiago province in the second half of 2004, while mine clearance in Zamora Chinchipe province was pending the outcome of technical studies.[53]

Ecuador has progressively reported on mine clearance results and on training activities in its Article 7 reporting. In June 2004, it provided information on progress in mine clearance by province, and by year, to the end of 2003.

Mine Clearance by Province to December 2003[54]

Province
Area cleared
meters2
AP mines destroyed
AV mines destroyed
UXO destroyed
El Oro
46,419
186
59
1
Loja
16,289
19
0
1
Morona Santiago
21,082
4,137
0
0
Total
83,790
4,342
59
2

Mine Clearance by Year to December 2003.[55]

Period
Area cleared
meters2
AP mines destroyed
AV mines destroyed
UXO destroyed
to 2000
43,957
2,686
23
0
2001
11,021
1,466
0
0
2002
3,841
130
36
1
2003
24,971
60
0
1
Total
83,790
4,342
59
2

On 12 March 2004, Ecuador and Perú announced the completion of mine clearance near the Zarumilla River in El Oro province on the Ecuador side of the border and the department of Tumbes on the Peruvian side.[56] According to media reports, in October 2003 clearance of the Tiwinza square kilometer in Peruvian territory was completed.[57] Ecuador reported in June 2004 that the last certifications were being done in Loja and operations would conclude shortly.[58] By August 2004, clearance in Loja had not concluded.

Ecuador reported that in 2003 training courses were held for all mine clearance personnel: a first and second advanced course in mine clearance; a second course for sappers; a first course for leaders; and a second course on retraining.[59]

Mine Risk Education

In Ecuador, the Army, the OAS, and the national Red Cross carry out mine risk education (MRE) activities.[60] Ecuador reported that an MRE campaign was carried out in schools and on local radio and television in Macará cantón, Loja Province on 27 May 2003, reaching 1,1031 students, 19 local authorities, 21 teachers and some 5,000 local inhabitants.[61] On 4-5 September 2003, MRE was carried out in Huaquillas cantón, El Oro Province, reaching 860 students, 14 local authorities, 40 teachers, and 146 local inhabitants, while a total of 6,000 persons received MRE by radio for a month.[62]

In February 2004, the Ecuadorian Red Cross and the Army’s General Command for Mine Clearance carried out an mine risk education campaign out in Zapotillo cantón, Loja Province, reaching 5,580 people.[63] In 2004, the CENDESMI approved plans for MRE campaigns in Zapotillo cantón in Loja province and Santiago cantón in Morona Santiago Province.[64]

In June 2004, following reports of the deaths of two indigenous Shuar persons in Morona Santiago province, a Ministry of Foreign Affairs official stated that the indigenous population in Morona Santiago was not aware of the mine problem and MRE campaigns were needed using local structures and languages, radio, and train the trainer methods.[65]

The OAS AICMA program has established a toll-free phone number which provides information on landmines and prevention, and collects public reports on discoveries of landmines.[66]

Previously, Ecuador reported mine risk education campaigns in Loja Province and El Oro in 2002-2003, reaching 2,100 and 3,000 people respectively.[67] In March 2001 and in May 2002, Ecuador reported that MRE campaigns had been carried out in El Oro and Morona Santiago provinces.[68] Landmine Monitor visited El Oro Province in March 2002 and found that there was little awareness of the mine problem among the local population, perhaps because mined areas are not located in populated centers.[69]

In May 2002, Ecuador reported that it had taken appropriate measures to make the population aware of the landmine problem, such as using barbed wire and danger signs.[70] A member of the General Command for Mine Clearance told Landmine Monitor in May 2002 that maintenance of marking and warnings around minefields had been difficult because the local populations stole the materials, including the barbed wire and warning signs.[71] The Director of CENDESMI told Landmine Monitor in April 2001 that mine warnings were nailed to trees in mine-affected areas to warn the local indigenous population.[72] In March 2000 ALDHU reported that the Ashuar and Shuar indigenous peoples were at risk because of the levels of illiteracy and lack of knowledge of the problem.[73]

Mine Action Funding

In May 2003, the OAS presented a projection of financial resources and requirements for the period 2003-2007. For Ecuador, the total was $4.4 million: $600,000 for 2003, $800,000 for 2004, $1 million for 2005, $1 million for 2006, and $1 million for 2007, which is when OAS funding for Ecuador is scheduled to end.[74]

In August 2003 the OAS reported that for calendar year 2004 it required an estimated $660,610 to implement its mine action program in Ecuador, including clearance in Morona Santiago province and the other components of the OAS AICMA program.[75]

The OAS AICMA Ecuador website lists Canada, Italy, Japan, and the United States as current donor countries for the Ecuador program.[76] According to the information they submitted to Landmine Monitor, none of those governments provided direct contributions to mine action in Ecuador in 2003.

In 2002, the United States contributed more than $1 million to Ecuador to fund humanitarian demining activities.[77] In 2001 the United States provided $1.76 million. The contribution covered the cost of US Special Operations Forces “train the trainer” programs, as well as the provision of vehicles and equipment for demining.[78] In addition, in 2001, Japan contributed $594,000 to the OAS AICMA program for both Ecuador and Perú.[79] In 2000, the US provided $1.4 million. In 1999, the US contributed $1.1 million and Canada contributed US$197,000. [80]

Landmine Casualties

No landmine casualties were reported in Ecuador in 2003. On 23 May 2004, a 20-year-old indigenous Shuar man and his 5-year-old brother were killed, and three others injured, when they handled an antipersonnel mine they had found in the Cordillera del Cóndor region and brought back to their village in Tiwinza cantón, Morona Santiago province.[81]

Between 1999 and 2003, Landmine Monitor identified only two landmine and one UXO incidents in Ecuador. On 10 January 2002, a 19-year-old Peruvian died after stepping on a landmine in Kanga, close to the Cenepa River when he was returning home. In 2001, a man received serious injuries after stepping on a mine while hunting in Shaime near the Peruvian border, and two children were killed and a third was seriously injured when a grenade they found exploded.[82]

The OAS AICMA Ecuador program maintains a registry of landmine casualties. Nine civilian casualties are registered including one person killed, two who lost a lower limb, one who lost an upper limb, two with multiple injuries, and two who were not physically harmed.[83]

There have been no recorded casualties among deminers since mine clearance operations began in Ecuador.[84]

The total number of mine casualties in Ecuador is not known as there is no systematic data collection mechanism for landmine incidents. The Ministry of Health and the National Statistics Institute do not have official registries of landmine casualties. According to the US State Department, there were about 120 landmine casualties in Ecuador between 1995 and 1999; the majority are civilians.[85]

Survivor Assistance and Disability Policy and Practice

The military in Ecuador has a healthcare system that provides integrated care to military landmine casualties through the Armed Forces Social Security Institute (Instituto de Seguridad Social de las Fuerzas Armadas), including physical rehabilitation and socio-economic reintegration programs. Civilians injured by landmines do not receive the same level of attention as military personnel; existing services remain inadequate.[86]

The OAS AICMA Ecuador program provides support to mine/UXO survivors, including transport from their communities to a rehabilitation center, lodging, medical care, prostheses, physical therapy, medicines and surgery if required. In 2003, one survivor received psychological support and physiotherapy at the Hermano Miguel Foundation and another had surgery on the right eye at the Vista Para Todos (Sight for all) Foundation. In January 2003 the OAS program in cooperation with the Ministry of Defense provided funding for a military landmine survivor to begin the three-year training program in prosthetics and orthotics at the University of Don Bosco in El Salvador.[87] In 2002, five disabled veterans from the Association of Disabled Veterans “Upper Cenepa” received training on the IMSMA system and worked at CENDESMI headquarters and at the regional demining units. In 2002, two mine survivors received new prostheses and a third required reconstructive surgery to a foot.[88]

In March 1995, a law was enacted to support the victims of the conflict with housing, pensions and school bursaries for their children.[89]

Ecuador submitted the voluntary Form J attachment with its annual Article 7 Report in 2003 and 2004, to report on victim assistance activities.[90]

One mine survivor from Ecuador participated in the Raising the Voices training in 2001.


[1] Ecuador’s Article 7 reports, Form A (national implementation measures) mention only the establishment of the Mine Clearance Center by Executive Decree No 1247, 23 September 1999.
[2] During the Oslo negotiations, Ecuador supported proposals put forth by the United States, including one for a delay of nine years in the proposed entry into force period, and a clause permitting withdrawal from the treaty in times of war.
[3] “Declaración de San Francisco de Quito sobre Establecimiento y Desarrollo de la Zona de Paz Andina,” Quito, Ecuador, 12 July 2004.
[4] The fifth Article 7 Report dated 30 April 2003 (for the period March 2002–April 2003) has not been posted on the UN disarmament website as of July 2004. Other Article 7 reports were submitted: 31 May 2002 (for March 2001–April 2002), 5 March 2001 (for July 2000–March 2001), 23 August 2000 (for March-July 2000), and 29 March 2000 (for April 1999–March 2000).
[5] Article 7 Report, Forms E and H, 23 June 2004.
[6] Telephone interview with Colonel Roberto Tandazo, 31 March 2000.
[7] “Report of the Secretary General: Moratorium on the export of antipersonnel landmines,” A/50/701, 3 November 1995, p. 13.
[8] Article 7 Report, Form B, 23 June 2004; Article 7 Report, Form B, 29 March 2000 and 5 March 2001.
[9] The 1,644 mines included: T-AB-1 (1,000), VS-50 (400), PRB M-409 (200), PRB M-35 (20), P-4-AB (20), and PMD-6M (4). Interviews with Gustavo Anda, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Major Juan Carlos Guarderas, Comando General de Desminado, Las Malvinas Military Base, 25 May 2002; Article 7 Report, Form B (Observación) and Form D, 30 April 2003; Article 7 Report, Form D, 31 May 2002.
[10] Article 7 Report, Form C, 30 April 2003.
[11] Article 7 Report, Form C, 23 June 2004.
[12] See Landmine Monitor Report 2000, p. 264.
[13] Fabián Taco, “Más control en frontera,” La Hora (Quito), 26 February 2004.
[14] Dimitri Barreto P., "El Ejército destruyó una base y escuela insurgentes," El Comercio (Quito), 6 November 2002.
[15] Article 7 Report, Form G, 30 April 2003. Ecuador revised its stockpile and stockpile destruction information in its 2003 Article 7 report. Previously, Ecuador reported completion of destruction of a stockpile of 260,302 antipersonnel mines by January 2002. Article 7 Report, Form G, 31 May 2002. See also, Landmine Monitor Report 2002, pp. 235-236. Initially, in March 2000, Ecuador reported a stockpile totaling 271,802 antipersonnel mines. Article 7 Report, Form B, 29 March 2000.
[16] The 101,458 mines consisted of: MAPP pressure 78 F-2 pressure mines (93,278); MAPP 78 F-2 pressure mines (4,655), and MAPT 78 F-2 traction mines (3,525). Article 7 Report Form G, 29 March 2000.
[17] The mines consisted of: T-AB-1 (124,497), VS/50 (20,151), PRB M-35 (100), P-4-B (20), PMD-6M (8), and M18A1 (7).
[18] Article 7 Report, Form G, 31 May 2002.
[19] The 4,500 mines consisted of: T-AB-1 (1,334), VS-50 (3,121), PMD-6M (40) and P-4-AB (5). Landmine Monitor noted that the PMD-6M and P-4-B mines were in excess to those Ecuador reported in stock and having destroyed. See Ministry of Foreign Affairs press release, “Destruction Event Act,” 17 January 2002; and “4,500 anti-personnel mines destroyed in Ecuador,” Xinhua (Quito), 22 January 2002.
[20] Article 7 Report, Form G, 31 May 2002. “Ecuador: destrucción de minas antipersonal en Ecuador concluirá este martes,” AFP (Quito), 10 September 2001; “Latinoamérica cumple tratado: sigue destrucción de minas,” El Expreso (Guayaquil), 12 September 2001; “Destrucción de almacenes en Honduras, Nicaragua, Perú y Ecuador,” in El Desminado (OAS), Vol. 1 Number 1, November 2001; Brochure (in Spanish) by Ecuador and the OAS dated September 2001.
[21] Landmine Monitor was present at the destruction event.
[22] The 3,970 mines consisted of: T-AB-1 (2,100), VS/50 (1,459), PRB M-409 (300), PRB M-35 (80), P-4-B (25), and PMD-6M (6). Lot numbers were not reported. Article 7 Report, Forms B and D, 23 June 2004. No details were provided on the 1,970 mines destroyed on 11 August 2004 and there is no information available on the 2,000 mines that remain for training.
[23] Article 7 Report, Form D, 29 March 2000.
[24] Notes taken by Landmine Monitor (HRW), 30 May 2000.
[25] Article 7 Report, Forms B and D, 23 August 2000; Article 7 Report, Form B, 5 March 2001.
[26] Statement by Dr. Alfredo Luna Tobar, Ecuadorian Ambassador to Nicaragua, Third Meeting of States Parties, Managua, 19 September 2001.
[27] It disposed of the 12,000 in the following way. It destroyed 4,500 mines on 17 January 2002. Another 1,644 were transferred to the United States on 2 January 2002. A total of 4,856 T-AB-1 mines originally meant to be retained were apparently destroyed by September 2001. Finally, 1,000 MOH-50 Claymore-type directional fragmentation mines were kept, but no longer recorded as antipersonnel mines. These are apparently ex-Soviet mines usually designated MON-50.
[28] Ten of the mines were M18A1 Claymore mines that Ecuador no longer counted as antipersonnel mines because they were command-detonated. Another 20 VS-50 mines were transferred to the US Navy Explosive Ordnance Disposal Technology Division in January 2002. This was an amendment of the number of VS-50 previously reported as transferred, 420 instead of 400. Article 7 Report, Form B (Observación) and Form D, 30 April 2003.
[29] Under the Peace Accord, Perú gave one square kilometer in Tiwinza as “private property” to Ecuador for commemorative purposes. Perú retains sovereignty.
[30] Article 7 Report, Form C, 30 April 2003. See also Article 7 Reports, 5 March 2001 and 29 March 2000.
[31] Boletín de Prensa No. 109, “Conclusión del desminado humanitario en la frontera ecuatoriana-peruana: El Oro y Tumbes,” Quito, 12 March 2004.
[32] Ecuador reported in June 2004 that the last certifications were being done in Loja and the end of operations would occur soon. Landmine Monitor (MAC) notes taken during presentation by Helena Yánez, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, at the Standing Committee on Mine Clearance, MRE and Mine Action Technologies, 22 June 2004. See also OAS, Update of the OAS Mine Action Program (AICMA) to the Standing Committee on Mine Clearance, MRE and Mine Action Technologies, June 2004.
[33] Article 7 Report, Form C, 23 June 2004.
[34] OEA AICMA, Portafolio 2003-2004, August 2003, p. 16.
[35] Not to be confused with the Tiwinza square kilometer territory provided to Ecuador by Perú in Peruvian territory.
[36] OEA AICMA, Portafolio 2003-2004, August 2003, p. 17.
[37] Ibid, p. 16.
[38] Ibid, p. 13.
[39] OAS, Update on Regional Mine Action Efforts, May 2003, p. 3.
[40] See OAS AICMA Ecuador webpage, “Estudios de Impacto,” at www.aicma-ec.org
[41] Marcelo Gálvez, “Dos muertos en maniobras,” El Universo (Guayaquil), 30 May 2001; Marcelo Gálvez, “Familia de niño muerto demandará a las FF.AA,” El Universo, 7 June 2001.
[42] OAS contribution to Landmine Monitor Report 2000.
[43] UNMAS, “Mine Action Assessment Mission Report: Ecuador,” 15 November 1999.
[44] ALDHU Report, “Human and Environmental Security of Shuar and Achuar (Ecuador), Aguaruna and Huambisa (Perú) Populations after the War,” August 1999; UNMAS, “Assessment Mission Report,” 15 November 1999, p. 11.
[45] OEA AICMA, Portafolio 2003-2004, August 2003, p. 15.
[46] See OAS AICMA Ecuador webpage, “Antecendentes.” OAS, “Destroying Land Mines in Ecuador, Perú,” (Newsletter), May-June 2001.
[47] See OAS AICMA, “Antecendentes.”
[48] Landmine Monitor was present at the IMSMA presentation. GICHD, “Updates on activities between January and April 2002,” 30 April 2002, p. 4.
[49] Statement by Ecuador, Standing Committee on Mine Clearance, 5 February 2003.
[50] OAS, Update on Regional Mine Action Efforts, May 2003.
[51] See OAS AICMA Ecuador webpage, “Contribuyentes.”
[52] Statement by Ecuador, Standing Committee on Mine Clearance, 11 February 2004.
[53] Article 7 Report, Form F, Table 2, 23 June 2004.
[54] Article 7 Report, Form G, Table 2 (a), 23 June 2004.
[55] Article 7 Report, Form G, Table 2 (b), 23 June 2004.
[56] Boletín de Prensa No. 109, “Conclusión del desminado humanitario en la frontera ecuatoriana-peruana: El Oro y Tumbes,” Quito, 12 March 2004.
[57] “Ecuador y Perú delimitaron la zona de Tiwintza,” El Comercio (Quito), 30 October 2003.
[58] Presentation by Ecuador, Standing Committee on Mine Clearance, 22 June 2004.
[59] Article 7 Report, Form K, 23 June 2004.
[60] Intervention by Ecuador, Standing Committee on Stockpile Destruction, 15 May 2003 (Notes taken by Landmine Monitor).
[61] Article 7 Report, Form I, 23 June 2004.
[62] Article 7 Report, Form I, 23 June 2004.
[63] See OAS AICMA webpage, “Educación Preventiva.”
[64] Statement by Ecuador, Standing Committee on Mine Clearance, 11 February 2004.
[65] Presentation by Ecuador, Standing Committee on Mine Clearance, 22 June 2004.
[66] Article 7 Report, Form I, 23 June 2004.
[67] Article 7 Report, Form I, 30 April 2003; Statement by Ecuador, Standing Committee on Mine Clearance, 5 February 2003.
[68] Article 7 Report, Form I, 31 May 2002.
[69] Landmine Monitor trip to Huaquillas, Santa Rosa and Pasaje, El Oro Province, March 2002.
[70] Article 7 Report, Form I, 31 May 2002.
[71] Interview with Maj. Juan Carlos Guarderas, Comando General de Desminado, Las Malvinas Military Base, 25 May 2002.
[72] Interview with Col. Hernán Bedón, Commander of the 23rd Brigade “Cenepa” and Head of mine clearance operations, CENDESMI, 27 April 2001.
[73] Telephone interview with Juan de Dios Parra, Director, ALDHU, 24 March 2000.
[74] See OAS, “Mine Action Program: Making the Western Hemisphere landmine-safe,” Resource Mobilization: Projection of Financial Resources/Requirements 2003-2007, p. 6. Presented at the Standing Committee on General Status and Operation of the Convention, 12 May 2003.
[75] OEA AICMA, Portafolio 2003-2004, August 2003, p. 18.
[76] See OAS AICMA Ecuador webpage, “Países Donantes.”
[77] US Department of State, “To Walk the Earth in Safety: The United States Commitment to Humanitarian Demining,” September 2002.
[78] US DOS, “To Walk the Earth in Safety,” November 2001, p. 38.
[79] “OAS Mine Action Program: Statement of Contributions Received by December 2001, 1992-2001,” Non-official table provided in email to Landmine Monitor (HRW) from Carl Case, OAS, 18 June 2002.
[80] Mine Action Investments database, www.mineaction.org .
[81] “Dos Shuaras murieron al manipular una mina,” El Comercio, 27 May 2004; “Dos personas mueren por manipular una mina antipersonal,” El Diario Hoy (Quito), 27 May 2004; Presentation by Ecuador, Standing Committee on Mine Clearance, 22 June 2004.
[82] For details see Landmine Monitor Report 2002, pp. 239-240.
[83] See “Cuadro de Registro de Víctimas de Minas Antipersonal en el Ecuador,” in OAS AICMA Ecuador webpage, “Asistencia a Víctimas.”
[84] Presentation by Ecuador, Standing Committee on Mine Clearance, 11 February 2004.
[85] US DOS, “To Walk the Earth in Safety,” November 2001, p. 38.
[86] See also Landmine Monitor Report 2001, pp. 333-334; Landmine Monitor Report 2002, p. 240.
[87] Article 7 Report, Form J, 23 June 2004; see also OAS AICMA, “Asistencia a Víctimas.”
[88] Article 7 Report, Form J, 30 April 2003.
[89] See Landmine Monitor Report 2002, p. 240.
[90] Article 7 Report, Form J, 23 June 2004; Article 7 Report, Form J, 30 April 2003.