With its membership, which took effect on 1 October, Somalia has agreed “to never, under any circumstances, use, produce or transfer anti-personnel mines, to assist the landmine survivors, to destroy its existing stockpile of mines within the next four years, and to demine its territory within 10 [years],” the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention Implementation Support Unit said in a statement.
Somalia has endured decades of civil war. The September 2012 Landmine and Cluster Munition Monitor said “Surveys in Bakol, Bay, and Hiraan regions in south central Somalia have revealed that, of the 718 communities in total, approximately one in 10 contained mined areas.”
The International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL) director Kasia Derlicka told IRIN, “We want to see Somalia report on how many stockpiled mines it has, and that it begins destroying them as soon as possible. We also need increased coordination between those already working to clear the land.”
Myanmar officials said in July they were considering banning anti-personnel mines. China, Egypt, India, Israel, Russia and the US are among the states not party to the treaty.
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