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Nicaragua Gets Rid of Landmines, Foments Peace |
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By Nohelia González*
This Central American nation
is achieving its goal of destroying the anti-personnel mines in
the army's inventory.
MANAGUA - Nicaragua has so far eliminated 63
percent of the landmines planted in the country during the civil
war in the 1980s, a notable effort towards becoming a territory
free of these weapons that do not win wars but mutilate and kill
innocent civilians.
In the current international pre-war climate,
the result of Nicaragua's efforts sends an encouraging message of
the fight for the demilitarization of the planet, says the International
Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).
From 1982 to 1999, during the conflict between
the leftist Sandinista government and the "contra" rebels,
financed by the United States, 135,643 landmines were placed in
Nicaraguan soil. As of December, 85,917 of those were destroyed,
according to the National De-Mining Commission.
Nicaragua also achieved the objective of destroying
133,435 mines stored by the army before March 1, as demanded by
the Ottawa Convention, which prohibits the use, production, transfer
or storage of these explosives), ratified by this country in 1998.
But still pending is the removal of 49,726
mines disseminated over 209 different areas.
Total mined territory reached 409 square km
in 70 of Nicaragua's 145 municipalities. These small bombs had also
been placed on 39 bridges, 323 high-tension electrical towers and
three energy plans, as well as at military and communications installations.
In 1998, Hurricane Mitch changed the location
of many mines, which were dragged elsewhere by floods, complicating
efforts to remove them.
Anti-personnel mines are seen as one of the
worst scars of the war because they have affected vast areas of
production and infrastructure, but mostly because they have claimed
many human lives.
The presence of these weapons "constitutes
a social problem that interferes with development and slashes at
human dignity," defense minister José Adán Guerra
told Tierramérica.
The de-mining endeavor is part of a state humanitarian
policy in that the landmines are an obstacle to the economic progress
of the communities where they are found, he added.
"The hard work of the national and international
authorities and institutions in their joint effort to prevent the
accidents caused by these devices allows us to be optimistic about
the results of this project," ICRC spokesman for Central America,
Mexico and the Caribbean, Jaime Saúl Arroyo, said in a conversation
with Tierramérica.
The effectiveness of the warnings about the
dangers of living in mined areas "should be evident in the
reduction of the number of mine-related incidents," he said.
Between 1984 and 1999, 600 accidental mine
detonations killed 575 people in Nicaragua, most of them civilian.
Last year, however, only six such incidents
occurred, and all were during the military's efforts to remove the
mines, Arroyo noted.
Making Nicaragua into a model of demilitarization
at this stage is possible because of international financing and
the collaboration of the nation's army, said the ICRC official.
According to the National De-Mining Commission, deactivating a single
device costs an average of 460 dollars.
The human tragedies caused by the mines are
now much less frequent, but it took a major effort to raise public
awareness, through seminars, distribution of brochures and information
campaigns, Arroyo said.
The campaign has reached a million Nicaraguans
and involves 650 people, including volunteers and civilian and military
officials.
The ICRC itself has 80 volunteers, half of
whom are primary schoolteachers, and the rest children and adolescents
who conduct talks with their peers about "the hidden danger
in the ground."
A program for social reinsertion, an initiative
with the participation of Mexico, Canada and the Pan-American Health
Organization, will provide assistance to 92 survivors of landmine
explosions this year.
The Organization of American States assistance
program for de-mining efforts in Central America provides immediate
medical attention to victims of landmine accidents.
Worldwide, some 30 million stored landmines
were destroyed by the Mar 1 deadline, the date set by the Ottawa
Convention on these devices.
* Nohelia González is
a Tierramérica contributor.
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