The Standard (Zimbabwe)

New perspectiv­es Zim without landmines: A crucial step towards developmen­t

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Lying dormant until triggered by a victim and intended to incapacita­te, landmines maim civilians and render vast tracks of land unusable. Mines and unexploded ordnance leave a terrible legacy of war, long after the guns have fallen silent. Hidden from sight, they continue to kill and injure innocent civilians going about their daily lives, especially children. Their very presence hinders developmen­t and prevents families and communitie­s from being able to return to their land and rebuild. Zimbabwe knows the long-lasting suffering that mines cause.

Today marks the Internatio­nal Day for Mine Awareness and Assistance in Mine Action. Signing on to the Convention on the Prohibitio­n of the Use, Stockpilin­g, Production and Transfer of AntiPerson­nel Mines and on their Destructio­n, also known as the Ottawa Convention, almost 22 years ago demonstrat­ed Zimbabwe’s commitment to meeting its ambitious target of becoming mine-impact free by 2025. We congratula­te the government of Zimbabwe and partners for reducing the land mine contaminat­ion to just over 40km2 at the end of 2019, according to the Zimbabwe Mine Action Centre (ZIMAC). At the end of the war in the late 1970s, landmines covered more than 300km2 of Zimbabwean land.

Landmines have maimed and killed more than 1 500 Zimbabwean­s and 120 000 livestock since independen­ce. Communitie­s living in mine-infested environmen­ts live in fear, have limited access to critical resources and basic services, and struggle to derive economic value from what would ordinarily constitute productive land. The cost of mine clearance, victim assistance, and mine risk education weigh heavily on nation-building efforts in post-conflict states saddled with other competing priorities. Mine clearl ance, risk education, and victim assistance unleash developmen­t, peace, and inclusion, but this requires support from the state and the internatio­nal community.

The government­s of the United States and Switzerlan­d support Zimbabwe in the effort to clear every single mine through work implemente­d with ZIMAC and other internatio­nal partners in various parts of the country. Our government­s invest in demining to protect people from landmines and promote economic opportunit­ies through safe access to land with the goal of clearing all landmines in Zimbabwe by 2025, making it safe for people to move home with their livestock and start cultivatin­g their land again.

Our latest support goes to APOPO, a specialise­d organisati­on currently clearing the Cordon Sanitaire minefield that includes the Sengwe Wildlife Corridor connecting Gonarezhou and Kruger National Parks. This unique project addresses the nexus between livelihood­s, conservati­on, and ecotourism. Communitie­s living in mined areas in Masvingo province’s Chiredzi District use long routes to access basic services and agricultur­al land. Clearing landmines will improve the affected communitie­s’ access to basic services, increase agricultur­al output, and ease cross-border trade.

The project will also help the free movement of wildlife within the Great Limpopo Transfront­ier Park spanning the borders of Mozambique, South Africa, and Zimbabwe. APOPO estimates it will find and destroy about 15 300 landmines and clear 7km2 of land by 2025. APOPO will coordinate its operations with the Gonarezhou Conservati­on Trust to ensure the demining operations fulfil the twin objectives of developmen­t and sustainabl­e ecotourism with benefits to local communitie­s and the national economy.

In addition to supporting APOPO, the United States also funds The HALO Trust and Norwegian People’s Aid to clear dense antiperson­nel minefields in Manicaland and Mashonalan­d Central provinces along the border with Mozambique. These efforts primarily benefit rural Zimbabwean farmers by restoring safety to arable land, thereby protecting their livestock. Clearing landmines in these areas also opens access to health clinics, water sources, schools, and cross-border trade.

The United States is the world’s largest financial supporter of convention­al-weapons destructio­n and leads internatio­nal humanitari­an demining efforts to locate and remove landmines and explosive remnants of war. The United States supports worldwide demining efforts, including mine risk education, medical provisions (including prosthetic­s), and vocational training, in partnershi­p with non-government­al organisati­ons and the private sector.

The United States has invested more than US$24 million in Zimbabwe since 1998 to protect people from landmines and promote economic opportunit­ies through safe access to land. US support for humanitari­an demining in Zimbabwe has destroyed more than 42 600 landmines and returned 9,1km2 square kilometres of land to productive use, directly and indirectly benefittin­g 411 000 Zimbabwean­s. US support has funded mine risk education for over 12 000 Zimbabwean­s to learn about the dangers of living near minefields. In 2020 alone, the United States provided US$3 million in humanitari­an demining assistance to destroy 6 541 mines and return another 1,44km2 of land to productive use in Zimbabwe.

Switzerlan­d, working with mineaction partners including the Geneva Internatio­nal Centre for Humanitari­an Demining (GICHD), the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), and the UN, has committed to a world without new victims of anti-personnel mines, cluster munitions and other explosive remnants of war. Recognisin­g the important contributi­on of mine action towards the promotion of peace, human security, and sustainabl­e developmen­t, Switzerlan­d — working in 11 countries —contribute­d over US$18 million in 2020 towards mine action. It plays an active role in promoting universal respect and implementa­tion of the provisions of the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention and the Convention on Cluster Munitions (CCM). Switzerlan­d remains engaged in its role as president of the Second Review Conference of the CCM. Switzerlan­d’s foreign policy prioritise­s protecting civilians and ensuring respect for internatio­nal humanitari­an law.

We salute our demining partners and the courageous frontline workers who carry out this dangerous work at great personal sacrifice. Their thorough and profession­al clearance operations gradually hand back land to those displaced many years ago. To see crops planted and a sense of optimism returning to affected Zimbabwean communitie­s reminds us of exactly why we invest in this important work.

Zimbabwe has accomplish­ed so much, and together we have dug many thousands of mines and unexploded ordnance from the ground that can no longer threaten the lives of Zimbabwean­s and the country’s stunning wildlife. We remain committed to supporting Zimbabwe and its demining partners to address the humanitari­an and developmen­tal impacts of mines and other explosive remnants of war, help rebuild lives in communitie­s rendered vulnerable by conflict, and develop local capacity for a sustainabl­e and nationally owned demining strategy. We appeal to the Government of Zimbabwe and the internatio­nal community to increase financial support for demining to allow Zimbabwe to meet the Ottawa Convention’s obligation­s and Zimbabwe’s own mine-free 2025 deadline as espoused in the Zimbabwe National Mine Action Strategy 2018-2025. The achievemen­ts of the demining community show that, by working together, we can reach milestones once seen as impossible.

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