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PAKISTAN: Landmines ruin lives,
leave hundreds dead
April 4, 2008 - (IRIN) Palvasha Ahmed and her two
younger sisters know all too well the risks posed by landmines.
“Our cousin, Maryum Ahmed, 19, was injured by a landmine nearly
a year ago in her village in South Waziristan. She lost her right
foot and now goes around on a crutch. No one will marry her,”
the 17-year old said in Peshawar, the provincial capital of Pakistan’s
North West Frontier Province (NWFP).
For most young women in the conservative NWFP and adjoining tribal
areas, most of which lie along Pakistan’s border with Afghanistan,
not getting married could well be the worst possible tragedy in
life: Disabled girls are unlikely to be taken as brides and this
means a life of dependence on their own family, who often sees them
as a burden.
Palvasha, the daughter of a shopkeeper from South Waziristan who
moved to Peshawar a few years ago to escape conflict between government
forces and militants there, also explained: “My cousin could
get only limited treatment because her father refuses to let her
be examined by a male doctor.”
This is the norm across much of the tribal areas, with access of
women to healthcare gravely handicapped due to the traditional refusal
to allow them contact with any man who is not a close family member.
Nearly 50 mine casualties in 2008
According to the Peshawar-based non-governmental organisation (NGO),
SPADO, (Sustainable Peace and Development Organisation), which is
engaged in a campaign against anti-personnel landmines and cluster
bombs, there have been at least 48 casualties in Pakistan during
the last three months caused by mines. For 2007 the figure stands
at 184 and for 2006, 488.
Raza Shah Khan, executive director of SPADO, believes there are
upwards of six million landmines in Pakistan, though no official
figures are available.
However, according to a 2007 report by the international Landmine
Monitor, Pakistan and its eastern neighbour India were the world’s
largest producers of landmines; together stockpiling at least 11
million antipersonnel mines.
In addition to areas along the Afghan border, the report said mines
were still in place in Kashmir, a territory disputed between India
and Pakistan, even though both sides claimed to have carried out
de-mining operations along the Line of Control, the tentative border
that separates Indian and Pakistani-administered parts of Kashmir.
“Villages in Poonch District here, near Indian-controlled
territory, have many mines. The earthquake of October 2006 and also
rains since then have caused mines from the Indian side to slip
to Pakistani-controlled territory, which is located downhill,”
Muhammad Farooq, a social activist based in the town of Bagh in
Pakistan-administered Kashmir, told IRIN.
Over 400 killed
The Ottawa-based Landmine Monitor states there have been at least
1,144 incidents involving landmines in Pakistan from 2002 to 2006,
with at least 440 killed and 704 injured.
In incidents since then, military personnel have been the most frequent
victims, followed by children.
Landmines are being used by both militant insurgents and government
forces, in internal conflicts against religious extremists in tribal
areas of the NWFP and against nationalist elements in Pakistan’s
vast southwestern province of Balochistan.
“We hear regularly of injuries caused by landmines in areas
where there is fighting, such as the Kohlu District,” said
Farid Ahmed, coordinator of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan
(HRCP) in Balochistan.
“Both militants and armed forces personnel use landmines,
often planted along roadsides,” he explained.
According to SPADO, most recent casualties have been reported from
the North and South Waziristan agencies and the neighbouring Bajaur
Agency.
This is both because the tribal territories lie along the Afghan
border, which has been heavily mined since 1979 - the year the former
Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan - and because mines continue to
be used by militants battling Pakistani forces.
Settling local scores
Alarmingly, local tribes are reported to have begun using mines
as a part of their arsenal against rival tribesmen or to settle
personal feuds, adding to the number of mines on the ground in many
areas.
Women, who often walk long distances to fetch water, or children,
are frequently the victims of such mines. Their growing use by non-state
militants, also means no records or maps exist as to where they
have been placed.
Pakistan is among 37 countries in the world that are not yet signatories
to the 1997 Convention on the Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling,
Production and Transfer of Anti-Personnel Mines and on Their Destruction,
commonly known as the landmine ban treaty.
Organisations within the country continue to demand that it sign
the agreement, but there is as yet no evidence this is likely to
happen in the near future. Awareness regarding the issue or concern
about the risk to civilians posed by landmines is still low, even
though hundreds have been killed or maimed by the devices in recent
years in tribal areas of the NWFP, in Pakistan-administered Kashmir
and in Balochistan.
From:http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=77611
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