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Table of Contents
Country Reports
Mauritania, Landmine Monitor Report 2006

Mauritania

Key developments since May 2005: New national implementation legislation has been drafted. Mine clearance resumed in early 2006 after being suspended for the whole of 2005 due to lack of funds. In 2005, the National Humanitarian Demining Office continued with marking, surveying and small-scale explosive ordnance disposal; it released 960,000 square meters of suspected hazardous areas and cleared 43 items of unexploded ordnance. Mauritania and the UN mission in Western Sahara held a meeting to discuss further regional cooperation in mine action.

Mine Ban Policy

The Islamic Republic of Mauritania signed the Mine Ban Treaty on 3 December 1997, ratified on 21 July 2000, and became a State Party on 1 January 2001. A national commission has been in charge of the landmine issue and implementation of the Mine Ban Treaty since July 2002.[1]

Mauritania has not enacted national implementation legislation.[2] In May 2006, a Ministry of Defense official told Landmine Monitor that a new draft implementation bill was submitted to the Ministry of Justice in 2005.[3] He said it was likely the law would be approved at the end of 2007, following parliamentary elections scheduled for March 2007. The draft law envisages penal sanctions of one to five years imprisonment and a fine of up to one million MRO (US$3,841).[4]

Mauritania submitted its sixth Article 7 transparency report on 27 April 2006, covering 30 April 2005 to 30 April 2006.[5]

Mauritania attended the Sixth Meeting of States Parties in Zagreb, Croatia in November-December 2005, but made no statements. It also attended the intersessional Standing Committee meetings in June 2005 and May 2006. At the May meeting, it made a presentation on its mine clearance and mine risk education activities. Mauritania also made a statement on mines retained for research and training, calling on other States Parties to reduce the number of mines as much as possible.[6]

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

Production, Transfer, Stockpiling and Destruction

Mauritania has reported that it has never manufactured antipersonnel mines and does not possess any landmine production facilities.[7] It is not known to have exported mines.

Mauritania completed the destruction of its stockpile of 21,168 antipersonnel mines on 5 December 2004, ahead of its deadline of 1 January 2005. It destroyed 16,168 French-made APID 51 mines in 2001 and 2002.[8] It destroyed the final 5,000 antipersonnel mines on 5 December 2004 (1,738 Soviet PMN mines, 1,728 French Model 51 mines and 1,533 “MP” mines, which are most likely Yugoslav PMA-3 mines).[9]

Mauritania has retained a stockpile of 728 antipersonnel mines for training purposes: 100 PMN mines, 161 Model 51 mines and 467 MP mines.[10] Mauritania did not utilize the new expanded Form D on retained mines agreed by States Parties at the Sixth Meeting of States Parties in November-December 2005.

Landmine and ERW Problem

The mine and explosive remnants of war (ERW)[11] problem in the north of Mauritania resulted from its involvement in the conflict over the disputed region of Western Sahara between 1975 and 1978. All parties to the conflict used mines extensively. Mauritania has tentatively estimated that as much as one quarter (310,000 square kilometers) of its national territory could be affected by hundreds of thousands of mines and ERW. However, as none of the areas have been mapped and no countrywide survey has been conducted, Mauritania expects the forthcoming Landmine Impact Survey to provide a more realistic estimate as well as specific indications of the locations and nature of the threat.[12]

The northern regions (wilaya) of Tiris Zemmour and Dakhlet Nouadhibou are mine and ERW-affected, while the Adrar region, whose northern part borders the two above mentioned regions, is suspected to be contaminated with mines and ERW.[13] Affected areas are said to be mainly around the urban centers of Dakhlet Nouadhibou, Zoueèrate, Bir Moghrein, Choum, F’Deèrik, Atar, Chinguetti and Boulenoir, as well as more remote locations on the northern and western borders. Some 27 minefields have been identified, which are said to be very poorly marked. In 2003, Mauritania estimated that about 294,000 people live in or near these areas, and nomads are believed to be particularly at risk.[14]

It has been reported that landmines and ERW impede the grazing of livestock and cultivation of agricultural land. Key industries, including metal and ore extraction, fishing and tourism, have been affected by the presence of mines.[15]

Mine Action Program

National Mine Action Authority: The National Committee for the Implementation of the Ottawa Convention was established by decree in 2002.[16] The interministerial committee includes members of the ministries of defense, foreign affairs and cooperation, infrastructure, interior and justice. It reports to the Office of the Prime Minister and is chaired by a representative of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.[17] The committee reportedly met twice during 2005 to adopt the 2006 mine action plan and internal regulations for the National Humanitarian Demining Office (NHDO).[18]

Mine Action Center: The NHDO was also established by decree in 2002 to coordinate mine action in Mauritania under the Ministry of Defense.[19] Demining has been undertaken mainly by the Armed Forces Engineer Corps. The NHDO coordinates survey, training of deminers, priority setting, resource mobilization and mine risk education; it carries out quality assurance on clearance operations.[20] The NHDO’s main office is in the capital, Nouakchott, and a regional office is located in Nouadhibou in the north.[21]

The NHDO has been equipped with the Information Management System for Mine Action (IMSMA) version 3 since 2004.[22] As part of the implementation of the impact survey, the Geneva International Centre for Humanitarian Demining (GICHD) provided refresher training in June 2006.[23] Information for IMSMA is said to be collected by both NHDO and other operators, and to be accessible to anyone.[24]

There is no mine action legislation in Mauritania. NHDO reported that standing operating procedures based on the International Mine Action Standards (IMAS) would be finalized in 2006 or 2007.[25]

Three Mauritanian Army Engineering Corps officers were trained in 2005 at the regional demining school in Benin.[26] By June 2006, Mauritania had seconded an instructor to train students at the school.[27]

Strategic Planning and Progress

Mauritania’s mine action strategy was drafted in 2002 and revised in 2004 prior to the First Review Conference of the Mine Ban Treaty.[28] For the period 2005-2009, Mauritania identified three objectives for demining: identify all mine-affected areas and mark those that cannot be cleared; clear all high and medium-impact areas; and support training of personnel in demining, survey and marking activities.[29]

Demining and mine risk education (MRE) have been conducted on a small scale, falling short of a more systematic mine action program, mainly as a consequence of lack of national and international resources.[30] The mine action strategy aimed to enhance NHDO’s planning, coordination and implementation capacity, with support from the UN Development Programme (UNDP), so that it can address the mine and ERW problem with little or no assistance from the international community.[31] In November 2005, UNDP deployed a chief technical advisor, as previously recommended by a UNDP mission in 2004.[32]

Mauritania’s 2005 action plan obtained support from Canada for an MRE program implemented by UNICEF, NHDO and local NGOs. In 2005, due to shortage of funding, the NHDO conducted only small-scale battle area clearance and technical survey in Tiris Zemmour and Dakhlet Nouadhibou.[33] In 2006, it planned to continue operations in the two affected regions, prioritizing the identification and clearance of mined areas in Dakhlet Nouadhibou that represent a serious risk to the population or hamper economic development; areas cleared were to be used for grazing, urban development, tourism and fishing.[34]

In 2006, Mauritania also expected to undertake a limited Landmine Impact Survey (LIS), covering three areas in northern Mauritania suspected to be mine-affected: Tiris Zemmour, Dakhlet Nouadhibou and Adrar. The LIS will be based on Survey Action Center protocols and is expected to obtain UN certification. Data will to be collected by five teams from national NGOs. The LIS is expected to serve as the baseline for clearing all landmines in Mauritania by 2011, in accordance with its Mine Ban Treaty obligations.[35]

Mauritania applied to the UNDP Completion Initiative in 2005, but its application was not included in the first selection. It planned to revise its mine action strategy in light of the LIS results and then reapply.[36]

The 2006 action plan also envisaged changing the mine action management structure by transferring NHDO from the Ministry of Defense to a civilian ministry. A proposal had been received positively by the Ministry of Economic Affairs and Development, which is not part of the implementing National Committee and was under review by the Ministry of Defense. The new structure was expected to help integrate mine action with other national plans and priorities, while the Ministry of Defense would continue to provide army engineers for demining operations.[37]

In May 2006, a meeting in Nouadhibou between Mauritania’s mine action authorities and operators and the UN Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara (MINURSO) agreed to continue exchanging information and to move towards a regional approach to mine action. This would include mine risk education for Saharawi children and nomads on both sides of the border.[38]

Summary of Efforts to Comply with Article 5

Under Article 5 of the Mine Ban Treaty, Mauritania must destroy all antipersonnel mines in mined areas under its jurisdiction or control as soon as possible, but no later than 1 January 2011. At the First Review Conference, Mauritania stated that its “objective is to be mine-free by 2011.”[39] However, at the Standing Committee meetings in June 2005 and May 2006, Mauritania declared that it would be “free from the impact of mines by 2011.”[40] An end-state of “mine impact-free” does not fulfill the requirements of Article 5.

The current pace of mine clearance indicates that Mauritania is not on course to meeting its Article 5 obligations. Only a very small portion of the 230,000 square kilometers suspected to be mine-affected has been cleared or released (26,000 square meters were cleared in 2004, 960,000 square meters were reduced in 2005, and 20,000 square meters were cleared during the first half of 2006). The LIS may reduce significantly the overall size of suspected mined area.

Demining

By the end of 2005, only the NHDO with the Army Engineers Corps were involved in demining operations in Mauritania. In 2005, following successive coup d’état attempts in Mauritania, the French NGO, Halte Aux Mines Antipersonnel (HAMAP) Démineurs, stopped its mine clearance operations on the mine belt north of the Nouadhibou peninsula on the border with Western Sahara; it resumed clearance activities in 2006.[41]

Identification of Mined Areas: Surveys and Assessments

NHDO started a technical survey in May 2005 with two survey teams of six personnel each, in Tiris Zemmour and Dakhlet Nouadhibou regions. A total of 1,240,000 square meters of affected areas were surveyed, and 960,000 square meters were cancelled; the survey was nationally funded.[42]

Marking and Fencing

Between August 2004 and November 2005, a UNICEF-sponsored project was implemented by the NHDO and local NGOs to raise awareness among the local population of the risk from mines and unexploded ordnance (UXO), and to mark suspected mined areas. Between August and November 2005, the perimeters of some 2.5 square kilometers of suspected mined areas were marked with concrete poles and warning signs. However, it was thought that the marking signs were placed too far away from one another. In 2006, the NHDO planned to improve the visibility of the markings by adding more warning signs.[43]

Mine and ERW Clearance

In 2005, only limited battle area clearance/explosive ordnance disposal (EOD) operations took place in Zoueèrate and Nouadhibou. Two EOD operations were conducted in Zoueèrate and six in Nouadhibou, destroying in total 43 items of UXO.[44] Manual mine clearance was not conducted, due to shortage of funds.

Limited demining operations resumed in 2006; by 30 April, 85 antipersonnel mines, six antivehicle mines and 177 UXO had been destroyed.[45] Operations were carried out by the army in Nouadhibou, funded by HAMAP.  In February, HAMAP resumed its own clearance activities; by mid-May, three operations had been conducted on the PK 24 mine belt in Nouadhibou with some 20,000 square meters of mine-affected land cleared, and 137 antipersonnel mines and three antivehicle mines destroyed.[46]

A fourth HAMAP operation had started by mid-May and was planned to last until June 2006. HAMAP expected to conduct another four operations in Tmeimichatt during the second half of 2006.[47]

Quality assurance of cleared land is achieved by sampling, using manual methods; cleared land is then usually handed over to the local governor with a certificate. NHDO believed that after mine and battle area clearance, land has been used swiftly by the population. The NHDO did not report any demining undertaken by villagers.[48]

Mine Risk Education

Mine risk education (MRE) has been coordinated and conducted by NHDO, with UNICEF and HAMAP also undertaking some activities. In June 2005, Mauritania reported that MRE was based on a needs assessment among the at-risk population in known danger areas.[49]

MRE activities have been conducted on a small scale only, mainly because of lack of resources, and came to an end in November 2005.[50] Until then, a network of 160 community activists conducted MRE for nomads and villagers in the mine-affected areas. Mauritania reported that 8,265 nomads from a target population of 10,650 in the regions of Dakhlet Nouadhibou and Tiris Zemmour received MRE.[51]

UNICEF also implemented a national MRE program for teachers and children, in partnership with NHDO, regional authorities, local and national education departments. The activities targeted the 17,500 primary school students in Tiris Zemmour and Dakhlet Nouadhibou; 28 teachers were trained from an original 400 planned.[52] Canada financially supported NHDO and NGOs to implement MRE in 2005; it had previously conducted MRE in 2004 in the Nouadhibou region.[53]

UNICEF also incorporated an MRE component into the school curriculum; MRE messages were delivered as part of the school curriculum throughout all schools in Zoueèrate and Bir Moghrein on 4 April 2006.[54] During 2005, 35,000 school books, 15,000 posters (according to the UN, 33,000 posters) and 18,000 stickers were distributed.[55]

At the end of 2005, UNICEF undertook an evaluation of MRE conducted by NHDO and local NGOs between August 2004 and November 2005. The evaluation concluded that: MRE must focus on nomads; product delivery and messages could be improved; and MRE should be included regularly in school curricula.[56]

Funding and Assistance

The only donor to report a funding contribution for mine action in Mauritania in 2005 was Canada, with a C$140,000 ($115,559) donation to UNICEF for MRE.[57] By comparison, some $389,373 in international funding was received in 2004.[58]

Mauritania received $749,000 through the UN Portfolio of Mine Action Projects in 2005 for NHDO capacity-building and MRE; no funds were received through the Portfolio for demining.[59]  This was 43 percent of its total appeal of $1,312,000.[60] 

In 2005, NHDO reported that the Ministry of Defense had covered NHDO salaries, medical insurance and equipment maintenance since 2001, and that the annual budget was about 50 million MRO (some $187,000).[61]  For 2006, NHDO requested a budget of $800,000 through Mauritania’s appeal in the 2006 Portfolio of Mine Action Projects. The budget was to cover operational costs, national staff costs, health insurance, equipment and maintenance.  The total appeal for Mauritania as reported in the 2006 Portfolio was $1,500,000, including the NHDO request.[62]

HAMAP had budgeted for expenditure €50,000 ($62,245) in 2005, of which €30,000 ($37,347) was contributed from HAMAP’s own funds.[63] The remainder was expected to be donated by the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs; however funding was not received.[64]

The UNDP Bureau for Crisis Prevention and Recovery (BCPR) was to contribute $190,000 to the UNDP Project to Reinforce Capacities for Humanitarian Demining for 2006.[65] Sweden contributed $200,000 in 2006 for a mine survivor needs assessment, LIS, MRE, marking, technical survey and capacity development. [66]  In a May 2006 update on mine action in Mauritania, UNDP reported that a key challenge was obtaining donor funding to supply NHDO with ambulance and medical equipment.[67] 

Landmine/UXO Casualties

In 2005, five new mine and UXO casualties were recorded in two incidents, including two killed and three injured. This is the same number of casualties as in 2004, when five new casualties (three killed and two injured) were reported in three incidents.[68]

In January 2005, a nine-year-old girl and a 13-year-old boy were killed while they were playing with an antipersonnel mine in the town of Zoueèrate.[69] Three male civilians were injured in a mine incident in Nouadhibou.[70]

On 4 April 2005, a Mauritanian man was killed in a border minefield between Greece and Turkey.[71]

Casualties continued to be reported in 2006, with one person killed and four injured in two incidents by May. In January, two Qatari nationals were seriously injured and one Mauritanian was killed when their car struck a landmine near Bir Moghrein.[72] In March, a man was injured by a landmine in Bir Moghrein. In May, a 25-year-old man was injured by a mine in Nouadhibou.[73]

The number of reported casualties is likely understated due to the size of the country and the nomadic way of life of the population. In August 2004, Mauritania started collecting casualty data within the framework of the mine clearance and MRE program, in cooperation with UNICEF. Local authorities, medical centers and NGOs transmitted information on mine incidents to NHDO. As of 15 September 2005, data collection was complete in Tiris Zemmour and Dakhlet Nouadhibou. Analysis of entered data indicated 122 mine/UXO casualties (46 people killed, 76 injured) recorded, including 28 children and one woman;[74] the 10 casualties occurring in 2005 to May 2006 have been added to this total.[75] UNICEF conducted a survey of disabled children in mine-affected areas, but did not record any child mine survivors.[76]

The total number of mine casualties in Mauritania is not known. Between 1978 and 2003, at least 345 people were killed and 246 injured in reported landmine incidents.[77]

No demining accidents were reported in 2005 or through May 2006.[78]

Survivor Assistance, Disability Policy and Practice

NHDO does not provide assistance to mine casualties and has no specific survivor assistance plan or policy.[79] The 2005 Mauritania National Completion Plan contained similar objectives for 2005-2009 to those presented to the First Review Conference in November-December 2004: “create a national capacity to treat mine/ERW survivors, providing medical assistance, physical rehabilitation, prostheses, and counseling... facilitate the socio-economic reintegration of mine/ERW survivors into their communities.” This would be done through the development of a community-based rehabilitation network and by ensuring that mine survivors “are recognized and included in disability polices, strategies and plans.”[80]

Mauritania did not use voluntary Form J in its Article 7 report submitted in April 2006 to provide information on victim assistance.

In 2006, NHDO was scheduled to start a study on national needs and capacities in victim assistance, and on how to put a victim assistance plan in action.[81]

NHDO, together with UNICEF, has sought funding to implement a survivor assistance program.[82] However, due to lack of national resources and international funding, the workplan, which originally covered the period 2003-2004, has been repeatedly postponed.[83]

The Ministry of Health and Social Affairs has responsibility for mine survivors and disability issues, and provides some services in cooperation with disability organizations.[84]

Mauritania has a network of basic health centers. Emergency cases are sent to the only major hospital in the country, in Nouakchott and sometimes to regional hospitals, where assistance is free of charge.[85] However, the capacity of these facilities has been limited by a lack of basic equipment, supplies and adequately trained staff. There is also a private healthcare network, which is not free of charge. Until 31 May 2006, the Spanish NGO Médicos del Mundo provided primary healthcare in Nouadhibou.[86] The Mauritanian Red Crescent Society has run an emergency and first aid program in Dakhlet Nouadhibou and Tiris Zemmour.[87]

On 1 June 2006, the World Bank approved a $10 million credit to strengthen the health network in Mauritania. The main aim is to improve nationwide access to affordable, good-quality healthcare for the poorest and most vulnerable groups in society, by training health personnel, strengthening management capacity, ensuring adequate financing and allocating resources to expand the network to areas without proper healthcare. The credit will be extended within the framework of the National Health and Social Action Policy 2005-2015 and the National Nutrition Development Policy 2005-2010.[88]  

Specialized rehabilitation facilities are based in Nouakchott, and are therefore inaccessible to the majority of the population; the services are in principle free of charge.[89] There is a satellite rehabilitation unit in Zoueèrate and some hospitals have physical rehabilitation services, such as in Nouadhibou, but these tend to be very basic. Community-based rehabilitation programs have also been set up under the Ministry of Health and Social Affairs. The programs have identified people with disabilities, paid family visits, facilitated and organized referral and access to services, and have prioritized mine-affected areas.[90] Unstable and shifting sands reportedly make the use of prostheses and wheelchairs challenging, and breakages are common.[91]

The National Orthopedic Center for Physical Rehabilitation (Centre National d’Orthopédie et de Réadaptation Fonctionelle, CNORF) in Nouakchott, supported by the Ministry of Health, provides prostheses and physiotherapy services. The center was renovated and expanded in 2005. The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) Special Fund for the Disabled (SFD) supported the center with raw materials and polypropylene components, as well as on-the-job follow-up training for two technicians and an administrator who attended technical and management courses at the SFD regional training center in Addis Ababa in 2005. CNORF produced prostheses and orthoses for 394 people with disabilities in 2005.[92] The center has not maintained statistics on the number of mine survivors assisted.

There were reportedly no programs supporting the socioeconomic reintegration of landmine survivors.[93] However, the French organization GRET has run the Twize program, which includes a vocational training and micro-credit component for vulnerable groups in Nouakchott. The organization has worked in partnership with the Commission on Human Rights, Poverty Alleviation, and Integration (CHRPAI). The program is funded by the World Bank and CHRPAI until 2007.[94] It is not known if mine survivors or other people with disabilities have benefited from this project.

The Mauritanian Red Crescent Society has also provided vocational training and micro-credit in its women’s promotion centers.[95] Organizations working with and for people with disabilities were noted in last year’s Landmine Monitor.[96] 

A law prohibiting discrimination against people with disabilities in education, employment and the provision of state services was ratified at the end of 2005. However, there were no special provisions to facilitate access to buildings, jobs and education. The Federation of Specific National Associations of Disabled People represents all disabled people in Mauritania.  As the result of an awareness-raising campaign by UNICEF, national NGOs have become more involved in mine-related issues, including survivor assistance, and developed a national campaign.[97]


[1] Article 7 Report, Form A, 25 April 2005. The national commission has representatives from the ministries of foreign affairs, national defense, interior and justice, as well as the National Assembly and NGOs.
[2] Mauritania has cited two existing laws and a decree as relevant to implementation of the treaty: Law 99 Portant code minier (Ordonnance 85-156); Article No. 437 of the 1983 Penal Code (Ordonnance 83-162); and 1993 Arrêté No. 152/PM portant sur les mesures de restriction. See Article 7 Report, Form A, 26 April 2006, and previous Article 7 reports.
[3] Interview with Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, Director, National Humanitarian Demining Office (NHDO), Ministry of Defense, and Jim Sawatzky, Chief Technical Advisor, UNDP Mauritania, Geneva, 10 May 2006. Landmine Monitor has a copy of the draft law. Mauritania earlier reported that an implementation law was drafted in 2001 and sent to the Ministry of Justice in March 2003, but no further action was reported.
[4] Exchange rate: US$1 = 282.280 MRO, www.oanda.com, accessed 6 July 2006.
[5] Previous Article 7 reports were submitted on 20 June 2001, 12 June 2002, 30 April 2003, 18 June 2004 and 25 April 2005.
[6] Statement by Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, Standing Committee on General Status and Operation of the Convention, Geneva, 12 May 2006 (notes by Landmine Monitor).
[7] Article 7 Report, Forms E and H, 27 April 2006.
[8] Email from Maj. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, 27 April 2004; Article 7 Report, Form G, 30 April 2003.
[9] Article 7 Report, Forms D and G, 25 April 2005; statement by Mauritania, Standing Committee on Stockpile Destruction, Geneva, 15 June 2005. The quantities provided for each type of mine total 4,999, not 5,000. For details on the destruction ceremony and funding, see Landmine Monitor Report 2005, pp. 422-423.
[10] Article 7 Report, Forms B and D, 27 April 2006.
[11] Under Protocol V of the Convention on Conventional Weapons, explosive remnants of war are defined as unexploded ordnance and abandoned explosive ordnance. Mines are explicitly excluded from the definition. There was no report of abandoned explosive ordnance in 2005-2006.
[12] See UN, “Country Profile: Mauritania,” www.mineaction.org, accessed 2 June 2006; Landmine Monitor Report 2005, p. 423; UN, “2006 Portfolio of Mine Action Projects,” New York, p. 267, www.minesaction.org; response to Landmine Monitor Questionnaire by Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, and Jim Sawatzky, UNDP/NHDO, 15 April 2006.
[13] Article 7 Report, Form C, 27 April 2006; response to Landmine Monitor Questionnaire by Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, and Jim Sawatzky, UNDP/NHDO, 15 April 2006. Mines found in these regions are French APID 51, Russian PNM, Italian VS50 and Czech PPMi SR.
[14] See Landmine Monitor Report 2004, pp. 565-566; Landmine Monitor Report 2005, p. 423; UN, “Country Profile: Mauritania.”
[15] See Landmine Monitor Report 2005, pp. 423-424; UN, “Country Profile: Mauritania,” www.minesaction.org.
[16] Email from Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, 17 August 2005; UNDP Completion Initiative, “Mauritania: Mine Action Completion Plan 2005-2009,” June 2005.
[17] Article 7 Report, Form A, 27 April 2006; UN Mine Action Service (UNMAS), “Mission d’Evaluation des Nations Unies de la Problématique des Mines et Munitions Non Explosées en République Islamique de Mauritanie,” May 2003.
[18] Response to Landmine Monitor Questionnaire by Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, and Jim Sawatzky, UNDP/NHDO, 15 April 2006.
[19] Article 7 Report, Form A, 27 April 2006.
[20] UNMAS, “Mission d’Evaluation des Nations Unies de la Problématique des Mines et Munitions Non Explosées en République Islamique de Mauritanie,” May 2003.
[21] See Landmine Monitor Report 2005, p. 424.
[22] Ibid, p. 425.
[23] Interview with Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, and Jim Sawatzky, UNDP/NHDO, Geneva, 12 May 2006; email from Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, 4 June 2006.
[24] Response to Landmine Monitor questionnaire by Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, and Jim Sawatzky, UNDP/NHDO, 15 April 2006.
[25] Ibid; interview with Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen and Jim Sawatzky, Geneva, 12 May 2006.
[26] Centre de Perfectionnement aux Actions post-conflictuelles de Déminage et de Dépollution (CPADD), “Bilan total du Centre de Perfectionnement aux Actions post-conflictuelles de Déminage et de Dépollution (CPADD),” April 2006.
[27] Interview with Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, and Jim Sawatzky, UNDP/NHDO, Geneva, 12 May 2006.
[28] Email from Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, 17 August 2005.
[29] Statement by Mauritania, Standing Committee on Mine Clearance, Mine Risk Education and Mine Action Technologies, Geneva, 10 May 2006.
[30] UN, “Country Profile: Mauritania,” www.minesaction.org.
[31] UNDP Completion Initiative, “Mauritania: Mine Action Completion Plan 2005-2009,” June 2005.
[32] Response to Landmine Monitor questionnaire by Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, and Jim Sawatzky, UNDP/NHDO, 15 April 2006; see Landmine Monitor Report 2005, p. 425.
[33] UN, “Country Profile: Mauritania,” www.minesaction.org; response to Landmine Monitor Questionnaire by Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, and Jim Sawatzky, UNDP/NHDO, 15 April 2006.
[34] Response to Landmine Monitor Questionnaire by Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, and Jim Sawatzky, UNDP/NHDO, 15 April 2006.
[35] NHDO, “Work Plan 2006,” Mauritania, undated; email from Jim Sawatzky, UNDP/NHDO, 5 June 2006.
[36] Interview with Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, and Jim Sawatzky, UNDP/NHDO, Geneva, 12 May 2006.
[37] Ibid.
[38] Email from Joël Kaigre, President, HAMAP Deèmineurs, 28 May 2006; email from Maj. Gen. Kurt Mosgaard, Force Commander, MINURSO, 31 May 2006; email from Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, 4 June 2006; email from Jim Sawatzky, UNDP/NHDO, 5 June 2006.
[39] UN, “Final Report, First Review Conference of the States Parties to the Convention on the Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling, Production and Transfer of Anti-Personnel Mines and on Their Destruction,” Nairobi, 29 November-3 December 2004, APLC/CONF/2004/5, 9 February 2005, p. 60.
[40] Statements by Mauritania, Standing Committee on Mine Clearance, Mine Risk Education and Mine Action Technologies, Geneva, 14 June 2005 and 10 May 2006.
[41] Email from Joël Kaigre, HAMAP Démineurs, 26 March 2006.
[42] Interview with Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, and Jim Sawatzky, UNDP/NHDO, Geneva, 12 May 2006; emails from Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, 3 May and 5 June 2006.
[43] Statement by Mauritania, Standing Committee on Mine Clearance, Mine Risk Education and Mine Action Technologies, Geneva, 10 May 2006; interview with Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, and Jim Sawatzky, UNDP/NHDO, Geneva, 12 May 2006; see Landmine Monitor Report 2005, p. 426.
[44] Emails from Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, 3 May and 5 June 2006.
[45] Article 7 Report, Form G, 27 April 2006.
[46] Emails from Joël Kaigre, HAMAP Démineurs, 26 March and 25 May 2006; email from Jim Sawatzky, UNDP/NHDO, 22 July 2006.
[47] Ibid. Twenty deminers from the Engineer Corps conducted manual clearance with one HAMAP supervisor; two HAMAP deminers joined the last days of each clearance operation to assist the destruction of cleared mines and UXO.
[48] Interview with Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, and Jim Sawatzky, UNDP/NHDO, Geneva, 12 May 2006.
[49] See Landmine Monitor Report 2005, p. 426.
[50] UN, “Country Profile: Mauritania,”www.minesaction.org.
[51] Article 7 Report, Form I, 27 April 2006; presentation by Mauritania, Standing Committee on Mine Clearance, Mine Risk Education and Mine Action Technologies, Geneva, 10 May 2006.
[52] Article 7 Report, Form I, 27 April 2006; email from Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, 14 June 2006.
[53] See Landmine Monitor Report 2005, p. 427.
[54] Email from Jim Sawatzky, UNDP/NHDO, 19 June 2005, after a meeting with Mohamed Lemine Ould Ahmed Seyfer, Coordinator, Special Protection Project, UNICEF Mauritania.
[55] Article 7 Report, Form I, 27 April 2006.
[56] Response to Landmine Monitor Questionnaire by Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, and Jim Sawatzky, UNDP/NHDO, 15 April 2006.
[57] Mine Action Investments database; email from Carly Volkes, (DFAIT), 7 June 2006. Average exchange rate for 2005: US$1 = C$1.2115, used throughout this report. US Federal Reserve, “List of Exchange Rates (Annual),” 3 January 2006.
[58] See Landmine Monitor Report 2005, p. 427.
[59] “Revised End of year Update,” (2005), received by email from Katrine Hoyer, Associate Expert, UNMAS, 11 July 2006.
[60] UNMAS, “2005 Portfolio End-Year Review,” New York, pp. 2-5, www.mineaction.org, accessed 20 May 2005. This figure differs from the $1,210,000 reported as the total appeal for Mauritania in UN, “2005 Portfolio of Mine Action Projects,” New York, p. 258, www.minesaction.org; and presented in Landmine Monitor Report 2005,
p. 427.
[61] See Landmine Monitor Report 2005, p. 427.
[62] UN, “2006 Portfolio of Mine Action Projects,” New York, pp. 270-274, www.minesaction.org; UN, “2005 Portfolio of Mine Action Projects,” New York, pp. 261-265, www.minesaction.org.
[63] Email from Joël Kaigre, HAMAP Deèmineurs, 13 June 2006. It was previously reported that all HAMAP contributions for Mauritania were from private sources, see Landmine Monitor Report 2005, p. 427.
[64] Email from Joël Kaigre, HAMAP Deèmineurs, 13 June 2006.
[65] Response to Landmine Monitor questionnaire by Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO; and Jim Sawatzky, UNDP/NHDO, 15 April 2006.
[66] Mine Action Support Group, “MASG Newsletter-First Quarter of 2006,” Washington DC, 1 May 2006, p. 7.
[67] Ibid.
[68] See Landmine Monitor Report 2005, p. 428.
[69] “Afrique de l’Ouest: Rapport sur la situation humanitaire No. 12, Janvier 2005,” IRIN, 14 February 2005.
[70] Email from Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, 31 May 2006.
[71] “Illegal immigrants killed in Greece-Turkey border minefield,” Associated Press (Kastanies), 4 April 2005”.
[72] Ahmed Mohammed, “Tourist vehicle hits land mine, kills one Mauritanian, wounds two Qatari,” Associated Press (Nouakchott), 10 January 2006.
[73] Email from Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, 31 May 2006.
[74] Email from Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, 15 September 2005.
[75] Email from Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, 31 May 2006.
[76] Interview with Mohamed Lemine Ould Ahmed Seyfer, UNICEF, Geneva, 10 May 2006.
[77] See Landmine Monitor Report 2004, p. 569.
[78] Interview with Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, and Jim Sawatzky, UNDP/NHDO, Geneva, 12 May 2006.
[79] Interview with Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, Jim Sawatzky, UNDP/NHDO, and Mohamed Lemine Ould Ahmed Seyfer, UNICEF, Geneva, 10 May 2006.
[80] UNDP Completion Initiative, “Mauritania: Mine Action Completion Plan 2005-2009,” June 2005, p. 5.
[81] Interview with Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, Jim Sawatzky, UNDP/NHDO, and Mohamed Lemine Ould Ahmed Seyfer, UNICEF, Geneva, 10 May 2006.
[82] Ibid.
[83] UN, “Country Profile: Mauritania,”www.minesaction.org.
[84] Interview with Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, Jim Sawatzky, UNDP/NHDO, and Mohamed Lemine Ould Ahmed Seyfer, UNICEF, Geneva 10 May 2006.
[85] Ibid.
[86] Médicos del Mundo, “Mauritania: proyectos finalizados,” www.medicosdelmundo.org, accessed 6 July 2006; interview with Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, Jim Sawatzky, UNDP/NHDO, and Mohamed Lemine Ould Ahmed Seyfer, UNICEF, Geneva, 10 May 2006.
[87] International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC), “Mauritanian Red Crescent Profile,” www.ifrc.org, accessed 9 June 2006.
[88] World Bank, “Press Release: Mauritania Receives US$10 million for Reforms in the Health Sector,” Washington, DC, 1 June 2006.
[89] Interview with Mohamed Lemine Ould Ahmed Seyfer, UNICEF, Geneva, 10 May 2006; see Landmine Monitor Report 2004, pp. 569-570.
[90] Interview with Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, Jim Sawatzky, UNDP/NHDO, and Mohamed Lemine Ould Ahmed Seyfer, UNICEF, Geneva 10 May 2006.
[91] See Landmine Monitor Report 2004, p. 570.
[92] ICRC, “Special Fund for the Disabled Annual Report 2005,” Geneva, 10 March 2006, p. 17.
[93] Email from Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, 15 September 2005.
[94] Groupe d'échange et de recherche technologiques (GRET), “Mauritanie,” www.gret.org, accessed 9 June 2006.
[95] IFRC, “Mauritanian Red Crescent Profile,” www.ifrc.org, accessed 9 June 2006.
[96] See Landmine Monitor Report 2005, p. 429.
[97] Emails from Lt. Col. Alioune O. Mohamed El Hacen, NHDO, 20 August and 15 September 2005; US Department of State, “Country Reports on Human Rights Practices-2005: Mauritania,” Washington DC, 8 March 2006.