Showing posts with label Demining. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Demining. Show all posts

Monday, August 13, 2012

Prize winner vows to make Cambodia landmine-free

Ra Aki poses for a photo in a Cambodian jungle while working to remove mines in this undated photo. Courtesy of the AsiaN

08-12-2012
By Kim Se-jeong
The Korea Times

A winner of the Manhae Peace Prize said his de-mining project will continue until his fellow Cambodians have safe land to cultivate crops and build houses.

“If I clear landmines, village people can use (the land) to build houses and to plant crops. (I want) to make land for them to use safely,” said Ra Aki wearing a camouflage jacket during an interview with The Korea Times, Sunday.

He received the prize Sunday. The 16th Manhae Grand Prize, conferred by the Manhae Foundation, gives prizes in categories of peace, social service, academic excellence, art, literature and missionary work.

Thursday, July 26, 2012

P. Penh delays plans for landmine mission

26/07/2012
Wassana Nanuam & Apinya Wipatayotin
Bangkok Post

Cambodia has delayed plans to send military officials to work out details of landmine clearance around the Preah Vihear temple with their Thai counterparts in Thailand, a military source says.

The source yesterday said Cambodia had neither informed the Thai army about the reason for the postponement nor fixed a new time for the meeting.

"I still don't understand why Cambodia won't abide by the agreement made during the meeting," the source said.

Thailand and Cambodia agreed in June to carry out landmine-clearing operations in areas designated by the International Court of Justice (ICJ), following the second round of the Joint Working Group talks in Cambodia.

Tuesday, April 03, 2012

Photographers bear witness to Cambodia’s landmine legacy

Sean Sutton's photographs exploring the enduring effect of landmines in rural Cambodia will be on display this month at the InterContinental Hotel. Photo by Sean Sutton
Fatal footprint. Photo by Sean Sutton
Tuesday, 03 April 2012
Deborah Seccombe and Sean Gleeson
The Phnom Penh Post
Impact Clearing Cambodia’s Deadly Legacy runs from April 5 to 25 at The Insider Gallery, Intercontinental Hotel Phnom Penh 296 Mao Tse Toung Blvd, Phnom Penh. The exhibit is part of MAG’s Landmine Awareness Week of Action running from the March 28 to April 4.
As part of international efforts to raise awareness around the impact of landmines, organisations working on the issue in Cambodia are turning to art, particularly photography, to illustrate the devastating legacy of unexploded ordnance that remain in the Kingdom even decades after the official end of armed conflict.

This Wednesday, a photography exhibition titled Impact Clearing Cambodia’s Deadly Legacy will launch at InterContinental Hotel to coincide with the United Nations International Day for Mine Awareness.

The show, co-presented by the Mine Advisory Group, features work by former international press photographer Sean Sutton documenting 15 visits to the Kingdom.

Monday, February 27, 2012

Kiwis tackle deadly scourge of Cambodia

27/02/2012
MICHELLE COOKE
Fairfax NZ News

New Zealand aid money and two Wellingtonians are helping unearth a deadly scourge buried in Cambodia.

A recent $1.3 million Foreign Affairs Ministry aid donation to Cambodia to clear landmines "will save lives", Human Rights Watch arms adviser Mary Wareham says.

Buried beneath the Cambodian soil are thousands of landmines, planted both by the Khmer Rouge and by the Vietnamese and Cambodian Governments, which tried to push them out.

Saturday, February 18, 2012

Japan provides demining equipment of 16 mln USD to Cambodia

17/02/2012
Xinhua

The government of Japan on Thursday provided Cambodia equipment and supplies for demining operations in equivalent to 16 million U.S. dollars, marking the sixth phase of Japanese grant to the country’s demining sector over the past decade.
The donation included heavy and light demining machines, vehicles, detectors, tents, tools, equipment and other apparatus, according to a press release from Cambodian Mine Action Centre (CMAC).

The handover ceremony was held at CMAC demining unit in Siem Reap province with the participation by Sok An, deputy prime minister and minister in charge of the Council of Ministers, and Joe Nakano, Japanese vice minister of foreign affairs, said the press release.

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Japan provides $16m demining equip to Cambodia

2012-02-16
Xinhua

PHNOM PENH - The government of Japan on Thursday provided Cambodia equipment and supplies for demining operations in equivalent to $16 million, marking the sixth phase of Japanese grant to the country's demining sector over the past decade.

The donation included heavy and light demining machines, vehicles, detectors, tents, tools, equipment and other apparatus, according to a press release from Cambodian Mine Action Centre (CMAC).

The handover ceremony was held at CMAC demining unit in Siem Reap province with the participation by Sok An, deputy prime minister and minister in charge of the Council of Ministers, and Joe Nakano, Japanese vice minister of foreign affairs, said the press release.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

[Thai] Mine clearers wounded by land mine

15/06/2011
Bangkok Post

Six members of navy humanitarian team involved in deactivating land mines were wounded by an explosion in Chanthaburi's Pong Nam Ron district, near Cambodia, on Wednesday.

The six were part of a 10-member team scouring a former mine field in a tapioca plantation near Marum village in tambon Khlong Yai on the border with Cambodia.

Tuesday, June 07, 2011

CAMBODIA-THAILAND: Border dispute hits de-mining efforts

Cambodia is littered with landmines (Photo: Sean Sutton/MAG)

BANGKOK, 7 June 2011 (IRIN) - Cambodia's ongoing border dispute with Thailand is undermining mine-clearance activities inside the country, specialists say.

"The lack of clearance along parts of the border stops the removal of mines, leading to more casualties," Cameron Imber, programme manager for the British demining NGO Halo Trust, told IRIN from the northwestern town of Siem Reap.

The heavily mined border area in the country's northwest includes a 1,065km long minefield known as "K5", which runs along the 798km Thai-Cambodian border. Laid by the north Vietnamese in the mid-1980s, K5 runs all the way from Koh Kong Province in the southwest up to Preah Vihear in the northwest.

Packed with up to 2,400 mines per linear km, K5 remains excluded from mine-removal programmes because the two countries have been at loggerheads over ownership of an ancient Hindu temple and UN World Heritage site on the Cambodian side of the border. Thousands were displaced on both sides earlier this year.

Thursday, February 03, 2011

Landmine and unexploded ordnance casualty figures rise in 2010

MAG works in the most heavily mined areas of Cambodia.
02 Feb 2011
Source: member // MAG (Mines Advisory Group)

The number of landmine and unexploded ordnance casualties in Cambodia rose by 17 per cent to 286 last year, underlining the continued need for MAG’s lifesaving work in the country.

Figures from the Cambodian Mine/Explosive Remnants of War Victim Information System (CMVIS) show that 71 people died and 215 were injured as a result of 150 accidents, the same accident total as recorded in 2009.

MAG focuses not only on removing as many mines as possible but on removing those mines that pose the greatest threat to lives, livelihoods and development. MAG’s operations in Cambodia are focused in the areas with the greatest number of landmine casualties.

Friday, November 12, 2010

Cambodian Deminers Headed to Lebanon

Sok Khemara, VOA Khmer
Washington, DC Thursday, 11 November 2010
"The 219 soldiers will be sent off after a ceremony Nov. 17."
Cambodia will send more than 200 deminers as UN peacekeepers to Lebanon next week, Defense Minister Tea Banh said.

The 219 soldiers will be sent off after a ceremony Nov. 17, the defense minister said.

The Lebanon mission will add to Cambodia's record of demining. The country was riddled with mines and ordinance after decades of civil war, and now its experts have served tours in Sudan and other countries.

One team is continuing demining in Sudan, said Chhum Socheat, a defense spokesman.

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Cambodia passes on demining skills

Ngoun Thy of the Cambodian Mine Action Centre holds the remnants of a cluster submunition.
Photograph: Irwin Loy/IPS
Clearing landmines and unexploded bombs for years has given Cambodia expertise it now shares to help other nations afflicted with similar problems

Tuesday 26 October 2010
Irwin Loy for IPS, part of the Global Development Network
guardian.co.uk

Ngoun Thy shuffled through the darkened room. To the right, mortar shells, lined up in a row. To the left, a spool of aged wiring and a pile of metal.

"Anti-tank mines," he said. The squat, rusting cylinders had been stacked up in a rough pile.

Ngoun, a senior instructor at Cambodia's national training centre for demining operations in central Kampong Chhnang province, walked to the back of the hall. "Oh, these ones," Ngoun said, crouching in a corner. "Bombies."


He picked up two half-circles the size of tennis balls; the metal shells clinked harmlessly in his hands.

This quiet hall on the outskirts of the provincial capital in central Cambodia could be a showroom for the deadly legacies of war. It is filled with the relics of almost three decades of conflict in this south-east Asian nation - rusty mines laid by once violent factions; cluster submunitions – bombies – dropped in the millions as part of the US government's secretive campaign over Cambodia in the early 1970s.

But for officials with the government's demining operation, the Cambodian Mine Action Centre (CMAC), this room also represents hope. Each of the former weapons has been painstakingly unearthed, disarmed, then left here as a reminder.

Cambodia is one of the most contaminated countries in the world when it comes to landmines and unexploded ordnance (UXO). But with almost two decades of experience slowly cleaning away that legacy from contaminated rice fields and jungle brush across the country, Cambodian authorities have also become reluctant experts. They are now hoping to use that expertise to help other developing countries afflicted with similar problems.

Cambodian deminers have participated in peacekeeping operations as part of UN missions in countries like Sudan. Cambodia is also offering its experience at the strategy level. In September, a delegation from Colombia is expected to visit Cambodia as part of ongoing training.

Roath Kanith, CMAC's director of training, research and development, compares the landmine situation in Colombia with what Cambodia faced a dozen years ago.

"Before 1998, Cambodia was partly secure, partly insecure," Roath said. "If you conduct mine/UXO operations in an insecure area, what do you do? It's the same thing in Colombia. Part of the country is secure, but part of the country is not under government control. So we can share the information we learned."

Advocates see this kind of south-south partnership among developing countries as a way to reduce dependence on developed nations' aid.

Roath, however, said such information exchanges make fiscal – and moral – sense. "Remember that Cambodia has received the support of the world community for almost 20 years. I think it's time for Cambodia to pay back to the world," he said. "Even if we don't have the money to pay directly to mine operations, we can at least export our knowledge and experience."

CMAC itself has grown from a small demining project in the early 1990s, as peace was being negotiated in Cambodia, to a national organisation with more than 2,300 deminers today.

As CMAC grew more independent, it also grew less reliant on foreign expertise. Roath said there were more than 100 foreign technical advisers at CMAC when he started working there 12 years ago. Now, he estimates, there are "two or three" throughout the entire organisation.

"In terms of training, in terms of mine/UXO clearance, we have the capability to handle all those issues," he said.

Heng Ratana, CMAC's director general and an advisor to the prime minister, said it makes sense for the country's largest demining operation to be as independent as possible.

"We have had many short-term technical advisers in the past. They can speak very good English … but maybe not so sure about technical skills and experience in the field," Heng said. "So I think promoting UXO-affected countries to share their experiences among themselves is very important."

The significance of landmines and UXO in Cambodia cannot be overstated. Surveys have estimated that landmines affected almost half of the country's villages. The mere threat that a stretch of land may be contaminated has rendered entire plots of arable land too dangerous to farm. Indeed, landmines are seen as such a barrier standing in the way of the country's development that Cambodia has included mine eradication as one of the specific targets under its Millennium Development Goals aimed at ending poverty.

"Most of the affected communities are living in rural areas. These are people who are living under the poverty line," Heng said. "People need to use safe land. So it is our obligation to provide them with that safe land for generations to come." But although Cambodian authorities now lead demining efforts in their own country, they are still reliant on donors to fund these operations.

Government officials and those with demining NGOs have complained of "donor fatigue" – fluctuations in year-to-year funding that may threaten future plans, as well as Cambodia's recently revised goal to clear severely contaminated areas within the next 10 years.

"The funding situation is fluctuating at this stage," Heng said. "Projects are on and off. There are gaps for a few months. It makes it very difficult for mine clearance in this country."

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Deminer Sets Sights on CNN's Top Hero Award

Aki Ra, the former Khmer Rouge soldier, plans to expand his demining project should he wins CNN's Top Hero Award. (Photo: Courtesy of Cambodia Self-Help Demining Organization)
Sok Khemara, VOA Khmer
Washington, DC Friday, 22 October 2010
“When the war was over, I thought differently and wanted to do good deeds to change the faults of my past and to help the country.”
A former Khmer Rouge soldier who has been nominated for a CNN broadcasting “Top Hero” award says he plans to expand his demining project if he wins.

Aki Ra, who runs the Cambodia Self-Help Demining Organization, told VOA Khmer he hoped to grow his organization to be able to demine the rest of Cambodia and move on to other countries.

Cambodia remains littered with mines and unexploded ordinance left from decades of civil war. Aki Ra, who is 40, has been demining since 1993, without technical guidance or assistance.


He offered advice to those who may mistakenly wander into a mine field: backtrack. “Remember the footprints,” he said. One can walk on logs or rocks to escape the field, as well, he said.

This, he said, taught him the fastest, easiest methods for clearing mine fields.

“When the war was over, I thought differently and wanted to do good deeds to change the faults of my past and to help the country,” he said.

His project now includes 25 staff in Banteay Meanchey and Battambang provinces, but he said now he is short of funding and equipment.

The CNN Heroes award is a contest that highlights community work of activists around the world.

Saturday, July 31, 2010

Cambodian Hero With Texas A&M Ties CNN’s “Hero Of The Week”



July 30, 2010
Texas A&M News & Information Services

CNN’s “Hero of the Week” is Aki Ra, a Cambodian whose land mine museum has ties to Texas A&M University. Ra is being featured this weekend on the network’s various stations.

Ra and his Self Help Demining organization have cleared about 50,000 mines and unexploded weapons since 1993. The Cambodian Land Mine Museum in Siem Reap, Cambodia, was Aggie-designed and partially funded by members of the Texas A&M student chapter of the American Institute of Architecture Students, who held a fun run and a T-shirt sale to raise money for the project.

Footage from a documentary about Ra titled “A Perfect Soldier” premiered Thursday on CNN, CNN International, CNN Breaking News and CNN Espanol. Footage will be shown as part of the CNN Hero story, airing several times Friday and over the weekend, then being re-broadcast later in August.

Scheduled airings (adjusted to Central Time) are:
  • Friday (July 30): 1-2 p.m. on CNN, 12:30 p.m., 4 p.m., 7 p.m., 9 p.m. and midnight on HLN; and 7 p.m. on CNNI.
  • Saturday (July 31): 9 a.m., 2 p.m., 4 p.m., 10 p.m. and 1 a.m. on CNN; 7 a.m. and 1 p.m. on HLN.
  • Re-runs are schedule on Monday (Aug. 2), Tuesday (Aug. 3) and (Aug. 8).
For more details, go to http://www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/cnn.heroes/index.html. Future updates as well as behind-the-scenes video updates, pictures, and commentary from the filmmakers will be posted on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/pages/A-Perfect-Soldier/10150094017135644.

Aki Ra’s website for his project is http://www.cambodianselfhelpdemining.org/.

Texas A&M architecture student involvement in the Cambodian project began in fall 2003, when Richard Fitoussi, director of the Cambodian Land Mine Museum Relief Fund (CLMMRF), requested student designs for a new facility to replace the existing museum. Texas A&M architecture design studios participated and the design by students of Julie Rogers, a senior lecturer in architecture who has a special interest in Southeast Asian art and architecture, was chosen for the project. Rogers’ group of students consulted with professional architects on the design.

The museum site was dedicated in April 2007.

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Fewer Casualties From Mines in Cambodia, but Reduced Funding Means Risk Remains

Children sit near a minefield outside their home in the northwestern Cambodian province of Battambang, one of the most heavily-mined in the country (Photo: VOA - R. Carmichael)

23 February 2010
Robert Carmichael, VOA
Phnom Penh


The number of Cambodian casualties from land mines and explosives left from decades of conflict has been steadily declining. But cuts in donor funding for demining could see this trend reversed.

Cambodia has an unenviable reputation as one of the most heavily-mined countries on earth, along with countries such as Angola and Afghanistan.

So the news that the number of people killed or injured by land mines and leftover explosives dropped 10 percent last year is welcome.

Chhiv Lim heads the office that compiles the statistics on Cambodian mine casualties. He says more than 63,000 people have been killed or injured by mines and explosives since the Khmer Rouge government was driven out of power in 1979.

"From 1979 up to the year 2000 the number of casualties was still high because during that time Cambodia had the civil war, but since year 2000 until the year 2005 the number of casualties [was] still 800 per year," he said. "But since the year 2006 until now the number of casualties has dropped down - this is good news for Cambodia."

Chhiv Lim says that last year 243 people were killed or injured by land mines and leftover explosives in Cambodia, down from 271 the year before.

Chhiv Lim says the decline is due to Cambodia's demining program, which uses clearance teams from the government as well as from private groups such as Halo Trust and Mines Advisory Group, or MAG.

Efforts to educate people about the dangers of mines and explosives have also helped.

Jamie Franklin, the country head of MAG, says better coordination and improved clearance methods devised over the past two decades contributed to lower victim numbers too.

"And I think ongoing clearance and the increasing clearance that has been achieved over the last 10 years along with the risk-reduction and mine-risk education and the high level of awareness of the dangers of mines and UXO [unexploded ordnance] and the risks that they pose have helped contribute toward the ongoing reduction in annual casualty rates," said Franklin.

Franklin says the peace and stability that Cambodia has enjoyed since the civil war ended has also helped.

One-third of the casualties are children, and almost all of those are boys. Chhiv Lim says studies show men and boys tend to be more willing to play with or examine explosives than women are. "But some boys they're clever, [they say] 'I cannot play with this one, I must go home.' But there are still some boys whose behavior has not changed," he said.

That makes education a key part of the country's effort to reduce mine casualties.

Removing mines remains the primary task, and that is slow, dangerous and expensive work. Franklin says it took MAG's 15 de-mining teams the whole of last year to clear just three square kilometers, at a cost $3 million.

The Cambodian government says more than 600 square kilometers of land remains contaminated with land mines. Cambodia has signed the international treaty to ban land mines, and was supposed to clear all land mines by the end of last year.

Given the scale of the problem, that was impossible, and the country was recently granted a 10-year extension to rid itself of mines. But there is a risk that even the 2019 deadline could be missed.

MAG's Franklin says funding for demining worldwide is decreasing as donors switch spending priorities to other areas. If there is less money for removing mines, at a time when Cambodia's growing population needs more land, that could mean more casualties.

"And so there is a risk that if the support to clearance and the clearance reduces that we could see either a slowdown in the reduction of annual casualty rates or a reversal of the trend that we have been seeing for the last 15 to 17 years," he said.

Demining experts say if donors cut funding, Cambodia can not meet the 2019 deadline to make its people safe from land mines.

Friday, January 08, 2010

CMAC chalks up three-year high in 2009 demining efforts

PHNOM PENH, Jan. 8 (Xinhua) -- The area cleared of land mines and unexploded remnants of war reached 31 square km for the first 11 months of 2009, surpassing the combination of the previous years, which hovered at around 27 square km, local media reported on Friday.

data from the Cambodian Mine Action Center (CMAC) said the increase was due to a combination of training in new methods of mine clearance and a flexible application of clearance tools, the Cambodia Daily quoted Oum Sang Onn, CMAC's director of operations and planning, as saying.

After years of practice, including a burst of training in 2008,CMAC teams are now skilled at using everything from mine-detection dogs to bulldozer-like bush cutters that unearth and safety detonate mines and UXOs, Oum Sang Onn said.

Although the amount of land demined increased last year, the number of mines that were actually cleared fell from 26,206 separate mines in 2008 to 18,046 for the first 11 months of 2009. Oum Sang Onn said this may be because most of the heavily-mined areas of the country have already been cleared.

In contrast, the number of cleared UXOs increased from 114,101 in 2008 to 122,557 in the first 11 months of 2009, which Oum Sang Onn attributed to efforts to teach villagers to report locations of mines and UXO, and of more UXO-clearance teams being deployed beginning in 2008.

The northwest is the country's most heavily mined region, with Battambang province having the most, Oum Sang Onn said. UXO are spread across the country, he said, a result of bombing in the east and ground fighting in the west.

Casualties of mines and UXO have declined steadily in recent years, according to the Cambodia Mine/UXO Victim Information System, falling from 450 in 2006, to 352 in 2007, to 271 in 2008. Figures for 2009 have yet to be published.

Tuesday, January 08, 2008

A former Cambodian boy soldier defuses his past

Exhibiting his past: Aki Ra, above, in the courtyard of his Cambodia Landmine Museum shows a Russian-made antipersonnel mine that he found in the jungle and defused by hand. His childhood was spent laying such devices. (Photo: Annie Linskey)

Aki Ra laid mines with his bare hands for the Khmer Rouge and now takes them away to villagers' delight and official frustration.

January 08, 2008
By Annie Linskey
Contributor to The Christian Science Monitor


Siem Reap, Cambodia
Walking through his new land-mine museum, Aki Ra picks up a Russian-made antipersonnel mine. He avoids touching the trigger pad even though he defused the device a long time ago.

"You hold like this, no problem," he says, pinching the sides of the coffee-cup-size mine. It's green, to match the Cambodian jungle where it once lay buried, threatening the life and limb of all who came near. Aki Ra is comfortable handling explosives. He grew up laying minefields for the Khmer Rouge. "I put mines around Siem Reap buildings, Otdar Meanchey, near the Thai border," he says. "I cannot forget that stuff."

He now works to undo that damage. Ten years ago he opened an ad hoc land-mine museum in his home. Back then, it was just a collection of mines that he'd defused, but it drew thousands of tourists who were in town to visit Angkor Wat and other famous temples. Last summer he moved the Cambodia Landmine Museum – to a building that architecture students at Texas A&M University designed to display his collection.

His willingness to show the mines to tourists has made him the unofficial face of the problem in Cambodia. Photo displays at the new museum present him as the little guy trying to make his country safe.

But in the world of official demining and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), Aki Ra is unorthodox. He has had no formal education. He has an e-mail address but rarely checks it. He dislikes planning – if a village chief asks for help clearing mines, he's apt to stop off, impromptu, to help. His removal process involves creeping up to a mine, prodding the side of it with a stick, and plucking it out of the ground with his hands. Then he moves on. He doesn't keep records. Big demining groups, on the other hand, prioritize location and follow international safety standards. They grid minefields and painstakingly check every inch of land using metal detectors. They rarely touch land mines, preferring to blow them up with explosives. They keep careful records of the number of mines they find and the exact perimeter of the land cleared.

Aki Ra's methods irritate these big groups. The government here has temporarily banned him from clearing mines, so he has resigned himself to getting certified. This fall, an American sponsor helped him attend demining courses in England; now he is applying for a license. He has lots of support: At least five foreign groups raise money for his projects, the former Canadian ambassador to Cambodia has lobbied on his behalf, and the Cambodian minister in charge of land-mine clearance is carefully complimentary.

"I admire him," says Sam Sotha, of the Cambodian Mine Action and Victim Assistance Authority. "When he first started, he was very small. He started something from empty hands. From scratch. Alone. Now he has his name. His reputation is all over."

• • •

As Aki Ra's reputation has grown, he's become more reticent. He agreed to a interview only after prodding from a donor. "People ask the same questions about my life and my background," he says.

But bits and pieces of his life do emerge in a conversation that, though foggy and inconsistent in places, reveals a story of survival and success against the odds. As an orphan who became a boy soldier in the Khmer Rouge, he hunted deer and wild boar using an AK-47. He laid land mines around homes and farms, sometimes to kill animals for food, sometimes to kill villagers. "My friends, many of them are dead," he says. "Some are still alive but no legs. No arms."

In 1979, as the Vietnamese Army swept through Cambodia, Aki Ra was forced to join them, fighting against the Khmer Rouge and laying more land mines. Later, he joined the Cambodian Army. Then, in 1994, the United Nations taught Aki Ra how to clear land mines.

Walking through the museum, he shows mines he retrieved, including a stack of antitank mines, each as wide as a dinner plate. In one corner are stacks of Bouncing Betties, fearsome bombs that look like soda cans but shoot up from the ground, exploding at waist level.

The mine problem is very real in Cambodia. Between January 2006 and August 2007, 300 people were killed or injured by land mines, according to the Cambodia Mine/UXO Victim Information System. In the same time, there were 415 casualties from UXO or unexploded ordnance, like the thousands dropped by US forces on the Vietnam-Cambodia border before Pol Pot rose to power.

• • •

Professional mine clearers view Aki Ra's museum and methods as an affront to their own careful work. Where are the fields he's cleared? Are they really safe? Or is he giving villagers a false sense of security?

"I've received many complaints," says Mr. Sotha.

Tim Porter, program manager for HALO Trust, a Western NGO that employs 1,100 deminers in Cambodia, rolls his eyes when Aki Ra is mentioned: "[He] is promoting himself off the back of a problem that exists. Those people who get involved [with his cause] when they're on holiday in Cambodia don't get the full picture and that is wrong."

While demining NGOs focus on areas considered high priority, Aki Ra has won friends by going to low-priority villages. A few years ago, he cleared unexploded bombs for a neighbor – a Japanese expatriate named Morimoto Kikuo, who hasn't forgotten.

After walking though the museum, Aki Ra takes his family – including a 3-year-old son named Mine, as in land mine – to a party at Mr. Kikuo's farm. Kikuo describes Aki Ra this way: "He's like a soldier still. Someone has ordered him to demine. If he cannot demine, he cannot live."

Toward the end of a meal of rice, meat, fish, eggs, and soup, Aki Ra's cellphone rings. He gestures frantically for a pen. It's "Mr. Bomb," an old friend and demining partner from Australia. Aki Ra writes his hotel room number down on his palm and motions that it's time to go.

Mr. Bomb, aka Tony Bower-Miles, and another Australian are visiting for three months. "We're here to help this country and help Aki Ra," says Mr. Bomb, pointing to four nylon cases in the corner of his hotel room, each containing a metal detector. Mr. Bomb, who fought in Vietnam and has no license to remove land mines here, has arranged for an Australian TV crew to tape them. "You need to tell them your story," Mr. Bomb tells Aki Ra. "It could raise a million dollars."

Aki Ra just looks sad. He's tired of telling his story.

Later, he goes to a simple Siem Reap bathhouse because the running water at his house isn't working properly. He stretches out in a whirlpool and reiterates that it is hard for him to talk about the past. Even though life is better now, he says he has nightmares when he talks about the Khmer Rouge. Unexpected loud noises scare him. He says he's breathed too much TNT, drunk too much bad water in the jungles.

"When I'm finished with land mines in Cambodia, I think I'll forget about all the bad things, the war, the land mines," he says. "I will farm."

Wednesday, November 07, 2007

Son Chhay: If Cambodia could send deminers to other countries, like a recent mission to Sudan, it should be able to clear its own mines on time

Landmine Efforts Ten Years Behind, PM Says

Chun Sakada, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
06 November 2007


Cambodia will not be free of landmines until at least 2020, Prime Minister Hun Sen said Tuesday, ten years later than it had hoped.

The country's deminers had thought they could clear the country by 2010, following the signing of a land mine treaty in 2000, but the remnants of Cambodia's conflicts have been difficult to eradicate.

Millions of landmines and unexploded ordnance remain in the country, and even when they have been cleared in Cambodia, Hun Sen said, "the mine [problem] is not finished."

"Afghanistan will still have it, [as well as] Sudan, Iraq, Congo and other places that have conflicts," Hun Sen said.

As a signatory to the landmine treaty, Cambodia does not produce mines, but other countries continue to make, sell and implement them, he said.

Sam Rainsy Party lawmaker Son Chhay criticized Cambodia's slow rate of demining, saying that if it could send deminers to other countries, like a recent mission to Sudan, it should be able to clear its own mines.

Saturday, October 27, 2007

New Lease on Life

Mine clearing allows villagers to return home

Saturday October 27, 2007
By ANUCHA CHAROENPO
Bangkok Post


The opportunity to return to their farms, once sown with landmines but now cleared, has delighted farmers in the two Thai-Cambodian border villages of Ban Thung Ruang Thong and Ban Eian in Aranyaprathet district.

"We're happy to have an opportunity to grow corn and tapioca on our land again after our farms were left unattended for many years as a result of the civil war in Cambodia," says Thung Ruang Thong village chief Aree Ploymalee.

Mr Aree went back to his farm in May. Since then he has grown corn on his three-rai farm, which he has sold for 40,000 baht.

Mr Aree, 54, is himself a war victim. He lost his right leg 32 years ago after stepping on a landmine in his village. He earned a living from rice farming to feed his family but that was not enough, and he ended up in debt.

Farms in his village were cleared by the General Chatichai Choonhavan Foundation, a non-profit humanitarian organisation, joined by the Thailand Mine Action Centre, with support from the Japanese and United States governments. As a result of their efforts, he and about 10 other farmers in the two villages now lead better lives.

The 10-million-baht mine-clearing operation started in March last year and ended in May. About 200 landmines were found and destroyed.

Lying adjacent to Banteay Meancheay province of Cambodia, the villages were once infested with mines, left over from the war between Khmer Rouge soldiers and Vietnamese-backed Cambodian soldiers between 1975-1978, and a civil war.

While the Khmer Rouge were in control of neighbouring Cambodia, hundreds of villagers living in this border area moved to a safer spot about 10 kilometres from their homes to escape the war. They stayed there until their recent return.

"Now my life is back to normal. I can go back to growing tapioca on my own land," says Somsri Nimitsuk, 53, a farmer at Ban Thung Ruang Thong.

"Villagers are also catching fish in an irrigational canal once surrounded by landmines," she says.

Ms Somsri said villagers had left to seek jobs in Bangkok and nearby provinces, leaving their children to live with their ageing parents. These young labourers returned when the rice harvest season approached.

Foundation director Sutthikiat Sopinit said he was delighted that people could now return to make use of their own land.

The foundation backs a plan to build a border market at Ban Thung Ruang Thong to boost border trade and villagers' income. But it needs approval from the army and provincial authorities.

"This market might be built and developed as the Rong Kluae Thai-Cambodian market for second-hand products, and opened as another tourist attraction in the province," he said.

Friday, September 07, 2007

Japan Gives $4 Million to Deminers

Chiep Mony, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
06 September 2007

Japan will grant $4 million to the government demining authority, for the development of better techniques and equipment as it struggles to rid itself of a lasting legacy of war.

The money would go to the Cambodian Mine Action Center, which helps Cambodia play an important role in developing mine clearance methods used around the world, Japanese Ambassador Shinohara Katsuhiro said Thursday morning, in a ceremony that was also attended by Foreign Minister Hor Namhong.

Mines continue to claim lives each year, but a decline in those deaths has led to a dearth of funding, Khem Sophoan, director of CMAC, said Thursday. The group was continuing to look for other aid, he said.