This is the seventh Landmine Monitor report, the annual product of an
unprecedented initiative by the International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL)
to monitor and report on implementation of and compliance with the 1997 Mine Ban
Treaty, and more generally, to assess the international community’s
response to the humanitarian crisis caused by landmines. For the first time in
history, non-governmental organizations have come together in a coordinated,
systematic and sustained way to monitor a humanitarian law or disarmament
treaty, and to regularly document progress and problems, thereby successfully
putting into practice the concept of civil society-based verification.
Six previous annual reports have been released since 1999, each presented to
the annual meetings of States Parties to the Mine Ban Treaty: in May 1999 in
Maputo, Mozambique; in September 2000 in Geneva, Switzerland; in September 2001
in Managua, Nicaragua; in September 2002 in Geneva; in Bangkok, Thailand in
September 2003; and at the First Review Conference held in Nairobi, Kenya in
November-December 2004.
The Landmine Monitor system features a global reporting network and an
annual report.A network of 77 Landmine Monitor researchers from 72
countries gathered information to prepare this report. The researchers come
from the ICBL’s campaigning coalition and from other elements of civil
society, including journalists, academics and research institutions.
Landmine Monitor is not a technical verification
system or a formal inspection regime. It is an attempt by civil society to hold
governments accountable to the obligations they have taken on with respect to
antipersonnel mines. This is done through extensive collection, analysis and
distribution of publicly available information. Although in some cases it does
entail investigative missions, Landmine Monitor is not designed to send
researchers into harm’s way and does not include hot war-zone reporting.
Landmine Monitor is designed to complement the States Parties transparency
reporting required under Article 7 of the Mine Ban Treaty. It reflects the
shared view that transparency, trust and mutual collaboration are crucial
elements for successful eradication of antipersonnel mines. Landmine Monitor
was also established in recognition of the need for independent reporting and
evaluation.
Landmine Monitor and its annual reports aim to promote and advance
discussion on mine-related issues, and to seek clarifications, in order to help
reach the goal of a mine-free world. Landmine Monitor works in good faith to
provide factual information about issues it is monitoring, in order to benefit
the international community as a whole.
Landmine Monitor Report 2005 contains
information on 112 countries and areas with respect to landmine ban policy, use,
production, transfer, stockpiling, mine action funding, mine clearance, mine
risk education, landmine casualties, and survivor assistance. While Landmine
Monitor reports issued between 1999 and 2004 reported on every country in the
world, Landmine Monitor Report 2005 focuses on mine-affected countries,
States Parties with continued treaty implementation obligations, and non-States
Parties. Information on mine action donor countries is included in a funding
overview. Appendices with information from key players in mine action, such as
UN agencies and the International Committee of the Red Cross, are also
included.
As was the case in previous years, Landmine Monitor acknowledges that this
ambitious report has its shortcomings. The Landmine Monitor is a system that is
continuously updated, corrected and improved. Comments, clarifications, and
corrections from governments and others are sought, in the spirit of dialogue
and in the common search for accurate and reliable information on a difficult
subject.
Landmine Monitor 2005 Process
In June 1998, the ICBL formally agreed to create Landmine Monitor as an ICBL
initiative. A four-member Editorial Board coordinates the Landmine Monitor
system: Mines Action Canada, Handicap International, Human Rights Watch, and
Norwegian People’s Aid. Mines Action Canada serves as the lead agency.
The Editorial Board assumes overall responsibility for, and decision-making on,
the Landmine Monitor system.
Research grants for Landmine Monitor Report 2005 were awarded in March 2005,
following a meeting of the Editorial Board in Ottawa, Canada in February 2005.
Thematic Research Coordinators and Research Specialists met in Brussels, Belgium
in April 2005 to exchange information, assess what research and data gathering
had already taken place, identify gaps, and ensure common research methods and
reporting mechanisms for the Monitor. In April and May 2005, draft research
reports were submitted to the Landmine Monitor Thematic Research Coordinators
for review and comment. In June 2005, Research Specialists and a group of
researchers met in Geneva, Switzerland to discuss final reports and major
findings with Thematic Research Coordinators. From June to September, Landmine
Monitor’s team of Thematic Research Coordinators verified sources and
edited country reports, with a team at Mines Action Canada taking responsibility
for final fact-checking, editing, and assembly of the entire report. This report
was printed during October and presented to the Sixth Meeting of States Parties
to the 1997 Mine Ban Treaty in Zagreb, Croatia from 28 November to 2 December
2005.
Landmine Monitor Report 2005 is available online at www.icbl.org/lm/2005.