Edited News | UNMAS
UN deminers appeal for greater support to slow deadly legacy from world’s conflicts
The deadly legacy of conflicts old and new from Gaza to Sudan and beyond continues to kill and maim civilians on a near-daily basis, mine action workers said on Wednesday, as they appealed for greater support for their lifesaving work in a context of deep funding cuts.
Speaking on the sidelines of a key international meeting in support of landmine action taking place at UN Geneva, experts in the field explained how shrinking resources in Afghanistan and Nigeria have exposed unsuspecting civilians to lethal unexploded ordnance, too.
Afghanistan’s child victims
According to the UN-partnered Landmine Monitor report, a staggering 77 per cent of all casualties in Afghanistan last year were children. Some 54 people are killed there every month by the explosive remnants of war, giving the country the third highest explosive ordnance casualty figures in the world.
“It tends to be kids, mostly boys in the hills tending sheep and goats and they are picking up things of interest and playing with them or throwing stones at them and killing or injuring themselves,” explained Nick Pond, who heads mine action work at the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA).
Despite the urgent need for more deminers to make Afghanistan safe after decades of conflict, a lack of funding has meant that the UN-led team has “dropped and dropped”, Mr. Pond told journalists. “In 2011 there were 15,000 people working in demining, and now we've got about 1,300.”
Total recorded child casualties in Afghanistan since 1999 number 30,154 children, “so the work in Afghanistan is key to decreasing the [global] number of casualties”, said Christelle Loupforest, UNMAS Representative in Geneva. She noted that although mine clearance work in the Occupied Palestinian Territory and Sudan is reasonably well funded now, the situation is dire in Afghanistan and Nigeria, with programmes facing closure by March without fresh donor support.
“It’s the same for our programme in Ethiopia,” Ms. Loupforest noted.
The situation across Sudan is also deeply concerning for stretched landmine clearance teams who fear for the 1.5 million civilians who have returned to the capital, Khartoum, the initial epicentre of the ongoing conflict between the Sudanese Armed Forces and paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF).
Just five UN Mine Action Service (UNMAS) clearance teams are at work in Sudan today and “all of them are in Khartoum, because the need is so big there”, explained Sediq Rashid, UNMAS chief in Sudan. “Lots of accidents happened already and it's very, very clear: unexploded ordnance is not different than Afghanistan or Syria or Nigeria.”
El Fasher latest
In an update on El Fasher, the city besieged for more than 500 days until it was recently overrun by RSF forces, Mr. Rashid said that access remains extremely challenging.
He noted that while people endured the siege, “the shelling never stopped” and even today “[it] is not completely stopped…there are reports of the presence of landmines as well, so it's very concerning.”
Back in Khartoum, the weapons clearance expert noted that his teams have now cleared the runway of the city’s main airport, “so we are hoping that at some point Khartoum Airport will become functional and that will make things much easier in terms of deploying the humanitarian aid workers to the area”.
Nigeria returnees at risk
In Nigeria, demining teams worry that displaced communities with nowhere to go as their camps shut are putting themselves in danger by returning home where potentially lethal explosive remnants may be hidden from view.
A full 80 per cent of all civilian casualties have happened in 11 out of 15 areas of return, said Edwin Faigmane, UNMAS chief in Nigeria.
In response, UNMAS trained the Nigerian security forces, police and civil defence workers on risk education in often unstable areas that are described as “hard-to-reach”. The tactic has paid off, Mr. Faigmane continued, “as we have begun receiving reports back from the police or from community members saying that they found an item and that they've reported it to the village authorities or village leaders, who then reported on to the security and the military forces”.
Gazans still in extreme danger
Meanwhile in Gaza, UNMAS chief there Julius Van Der Walt noted that
two years of intensive combat between Hamas fighters and Israeli forces “and with explosive weapons being deployed by all parties to the conflict” had left an “absolutely immense” level of contamination.
This directly threatens Gazans and obstructs essential support to the Strip’s 2.1 million residents by restricting lifesaving humanitarian operations, slowing early recovery efforts and making critical reconstruction extremely dangerous, Mr. Van Der Walt said.
He noted how people are being injured “simply by collecting basic necessities on a day-to-day basis”, while many families “have no choice” but to shelter in areas suspected of containing explosive ordnance. “Safer alternatives simply do not exist,” the UNMAS official said.
West Bank situation worsening
Turning to the West Bank, Mr. Van Der Walt pointed to the increasing risk of widespread explosive ordnance contamination in densely populated areas, refugee camps, urban centres and rural areas. “Communities are being forced to live side by side with deadly remnants of war,” he said.
The UN Secretary-General’s campaign on mine action launched on 16 June 2025 to insist that the norms of humanitarian disarmament are upheld - and to accelerate mine action in support of human rights and national development.
The campaign is a call to action to strengthen international disarmament efforts, and protect civilians – in particular children who made up 46 per cent of casualties in 2024 - from the impact of explosive ordnance.
ends
STORY: Landmine action in Afghanistan – UNAMA UNMAS
TRT: 3 min 11s
SOURCE: UNTV CH
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS
ASPECT RATIO: 16:9
DATELINE: 3 December 2025 GENEVA, SWITZERLAND
Speakers:
• Nick Pond, Chief of Mine Action Section, UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA)
• Sediq Rashid, UNMAS Chief of Mine Action Programme in Sudan
• Edwin Faigmane, UNMAS Chief of the Mine Action Programme in Nigeria
• Julius Van Der Walt, UNMAS Chief, Mine Action Programme, Occupied Palestinian Territory
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