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Afghanistan

MAG is helping local non-governmental demining organisations in Afghanistan to use good standard operating procedures, have well-organised institutional structures and build on their own capacity to expand.

The problem

According to Landmine Monitor 2009 [external link], the Mine Action Center for Afghanistan recorded at least 12,069 casualties from mines and explosive remnants of war between 1999 and 2008, including 1,612 killed and 10,457 injured. The vast majority of these were civilians.

“It is hard to grasp how much danger landmines pose to people in Afghanistan,” says MAG Chief Executive Lou McGrath. “More are being laid every day, and even if and when the current conflict ends people there are still at risk from these new mines, as well as ones that are decades-old.”

How MAG is helping

The Mine Action Coordination Centre for Afghanistan employs more than 8,000 Afghans in both commercial demining companies and non-governmental organisations. MAG’s International Director for Technical Development and Evaluation, Steve Priestley, visited these NGOs in July 2009 to see how MAG could help.

“The technical staff in these charities have been clearing mines in Afghanistan for years, so they do know the risks, and how to get the job done,” he said. “But what they perhaps don’t have very much experience of are the important practicalities of using good standard operating procedures, having a well-organised institutional structure and building on their own capacity to expand. MAG can help them achieve this.”

In October 2009, MAG staff who have years of experience in mine clearance and are fully trained in the established safety procedures began work in Kabul. From implementing quality assurance procedures, to teaching how to maintain and manage the machinery used in clearing mines, their job is to pass this knowledge on.

Your donation to MAG helps us to move into current and former conflict zones to clear the remnants of conflict, enabling recovery and assisting the development of affected populations.

Beneficiaries

MAG’s experience of running large, high-impact clearance operations in conflict zones over the past 20 years is invaluable to these Afghan NGOs, whose staff are committed but often lack proper training. Building the capabilities of these organisations to address the problem benefits the civilian communities, who are at risk from mines and unexploded ordnance even when conflict subsides.

Find out more

 

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MAG would like to express its thanks to the following donor to its Afghanistan operations: Belgian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

November 2009

www.maginternational.org/afghanistan

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Did you know...?

 

  • More than 70 states are believed to be affected by mines


  • At least 25 states are affected by uncleared submunitions


  • Explosions in poorly managed ammunition storage areas killed and injured hundreds of people in 2007 and 2008, contaminating previously safe land


  • More than a third of central Vietnam is still contaminated by unexploded ordnance


  • Nearly 100,000 households in Burundi are thought to possess small arms and light weapons, increasing the risk of a return to conflict at a time of ongoing political insecurity

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