Kazumi Ogawa, Director UN Mine Action Service UNMAS
/
3:09
/
MP4
/
369.9 MB
Download

Edited News | UNMAS

Kazumi Ogawa, Director UN Mine Action Service - UNMAS

Global demining efforts strained by rising conflicts and shrinking aid

Demining experts from around the world have been sharing their collective shock at the widespread and growing threat from unexploded ordnance, the new head of the UN Mine Action Service (UNMAS) said on Wednesday.

“They’re telling me, ‘Never in my career have I ever seen so many conflicts,’” said Kazumi Ogawa, speaking following the conclusion of a meeting of Mine Action National Directors and UN advisers in Geneva.

Despite the clear need to continue demining work in the world’s conflict zones and those now at peace, “for various reasons, the level of funding has gone down in terms of humanitarian assistance”, Ms. Ogawa noted.

In Gaza, for instance, a staggering 90 per cent of the people that are injured by explosive hazards from the Hamas-Israel war are civilians – “and of those, the majority of them are children”, she stressed.

UNMAS has warned that between five and 10 per cent of all munitions fired in Gaza have not detonated. The result is that potentially lethal unexploded ordnance is now “ingrained” in the devastated enclave, the mine action service chief said.

“We can gather the explosive hazards and we cordon them off in Gaza and so they're blocked off, but we're not able to destroy them - we're not able to take them out at the moment. And so, they sit there in piles and you're getting more and more piles of explosive hazards that sit around that children are expected to walk around.”

She added: “You have fathers that will go through the rubble to try to get home and find explosive devices and won’t know what to do with it; you'll find children that are playing, right, and coming across these hazards.”

Despite such a massive threat, there’s never enough support for demining and risk education, particularly today, amid a crisis in support for international agencies and bodies including the UN, and a spike in the number of conflicts.

“The problem is, as budgets - national budgets - are diverted towards, defence, for example, and away from humanitarian assistance, what we're seeing is the effect of that on the ground,” said Ms. Ogawa. “So, in Afghanistan, for example, one child is killed every day.

In addition to the human cost of landmines and other unexploded remnants of war, the economic impact is a significant brake on development too.

“If a child is maimed, you're asking the family to take care of that child through adulthood, the community to make concessions for that child as he or she becomes a participant in the community. I mean, it's just it's not just one person dying, right?” Ms. Ogawa explained.

The UNMAS Director highlighted the positive work supported by the UN around the world to counter landmines and other unexploded weapons, which is helping communities and nations to rebuild.

In Colombia, where there’s a legacy of antipersonnel mines and other explosive ordnance contamination from the decades-long civil war, an initiative from national transitional justice mechanism involves former fighters “to help with the recovery and restoration of those communities, including through demining and mine action, victim assistance, risk education”, Ms. Ogawa said.

“It's a way of incorporating - instead of penalizing the ex-combatants by putting them in jail, it's really incorporating them to be a part of the community. And to go back and to make amends alongside the members of the community.” If you talk to the Special Jurisdiction for Peace in Colombia, it's super exciting what they're doing.”

The 1997 international treaty to eradicate landmines – known officially as the Anti-Personnel Landmines Convention – has proved effective at prohibiting antipersonnel landmines but in 2025 and early 2026, several European nations initiated or completed the process of withdrawing from it.

The new UNMAS Director stressed the value of the Treaty and its relevance to everyone, everywhere: “Let's remember that we're here not just for adherence to international conventions for the sake of adherence for us to be able to say, ‘Oh, here's one more country.’ It's so that it then trickles down and creates the conditions for people to live in safety and security.”

ends

Kazumi Ogawa, Director UN Mine Action Service - UNMAS

TRT: 3 min 45s
SOURCE: UNTV CH
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS
ASPECT RATIO: 16:9
DATELINE: 29 APRIL 2026 GENEVA, SWITZERLAND

Speaker:

  • Kazumi Ogawa, Director UN Mine Action Service - UNMAS

SHOTLIST

  1. Exterior wide, UN Geneva flag alley.
  2. SOUNDBITE (English) – Kazumi Ogawa, Director UN Mine Action Service – UNMAS: “What was striking to me this past week is the number of national directors, the number of partners who have a lot of extensive experience, who come to me and say, ‘Never in my life, never in my career have I ever seen so many conflicts,’ and at the same time, as you know, for various reasons, the level of funding has gone down in terms of humanitarian assistance.”
  3. Wide, destruction in Gaza, from UNMAS film “Gaza: Creating Safe Pathways”.
  4. Close, destruction in Gaza, from UNMAS film “Gaza: Creating Safe Pathways”.
  5. Wide, a busy road in Gaza, from UNMAS film “Gaza: Creating Safe Pathways”.
  6. Wide, a shelled mosque in Sudan, from UNMAS film “2 min 51 sec in Sudan”.
  7. Wide, a huge mound of earth and rubble in Gaza, from UNMAS film “Gaza: Creating Safe Pathways”.
  8. SOUNDBITE (English) – Kazumi Ogawa, Director UN Mine Action Service – UNMAS: “In the case of Colombia, what has happened is that the perpetrators of the violence in the communities are sentenced in a way, to go back to and help with the recovery and restoration of those communities, including through demining and mine action, victim assistance, risk education.”
  9. Wide, mine clearance expert working, from UNMAS film “2 min 51 sec in Sudan”.
  10. Wide, mine clearance expert working, from UNMAS film “2 min 51 sec in Sudan”.
  11. SOUNDBITE (English) – Kazumi Ogawa, Director UN Mine Action Service – UNMAS: “It's a way of incorporating - instead of penalizing the ex-combatants by putting them in jail - it's really incorporating them to be a part of the community. And to go back and to make amends alongside the members of the community. If you talk to the special jurisdiction for peace in Colombia, it's super exciting what they're doing.”
  12. Wide, artillery shells and weapons lying on forest floor, from UNMAS film, “South Sudan: Peace is Cheaper Than War”.
  13. Wide, panning, artillery rounds on forest floor, from UNMAS film, “South Sudan: Peace is Cheaper Than War”.
  14. Close, spent casing on forest floor with rusted unidentified objects, from UNMAS film, “South Sudan: Peace is Cheaper Than War”.
  15. Medium de-zoom, rocket propelled grenade on forest floor, from UNMAS film, “South Sudan: Peace is Cheaper Than War”.
  1. SOUNDBITE: (ENGLISH): Kazumi Ogawa, Director, UN Mine Action Service (UNMAS): “In Gaza, as our Director of Programmes has said, it's particularly ingrained in the way that the community functions. And so, you have fathers that will go through the rubble to try to get home and find explosive devices and won’t know what to do with it; you'll find children that are playing, right, and coming across these hazards.”
  1. Wide, young men wielding sledgehammers to break down slabs of concrete from destroyed buildings, from UNMAS film “Gaza: Creating Safe Pathways”.
  2. Close, large empty missile casing amid rubble, from UNMAS film “Gaza: Creating Safe Pathways”.
  3. Wide, devastation in Gaza, from UNMAS film “Gaza: Creating Safe Pathways”.
  1. SOUNDBITE: (ENGLISH): Kazumi Ogawa, Director, UN Mine Action Service (UNMAS): “The problem is, as budgets - national budgets - are diverted towards defence, for example, and away from humanitarian assistance, what we're seeing is the effect of that on the ground. So, in Afghanistan, for example, one child is killed every day. One child is killed every day.”
  1. Wide, large explosion of ordnance removed from Khartoum, from UNMAS film “2 min 51 sec in Sudan”.
  2. Wide, flattened buildings in Gaza, from UNMAS film “Gaza: Creating Safe Pathways”.
  3. Wide, Gazans walk amid destruction in the enclave, from UNMAS film “Gaza: Creating Safe Pathways”.
  4. Wide, massive destruction in Gaza, from UNMAS film “Gaza: Creating Safe Pathways”.
  5. Medium, UNMAS workers and demining experts from UNMAS film “2 min 51 sec in Sudan”.
  6. Medium, demining expert attaching knee pad, from UNMAS film, “South Sudan: Peace is Cheaper Than War”.
  7. Medium, demining expert attaching helmet and visor, from UNMAS film, “South Sudan: Peace is Cheaper Than War”.
  8. Medium, demining expert adjusting protective body vest, from UNMAS film, “South Sudan: Peace is Cheaper Than War”.
  9. Wide, demining expert using detector in field, from UNMAS film, “South Sudan: Peace is Cheaper Than War”.
  10. Medium, demining expert on knees and using trowel to dig in field, from UNMAS film, “South Sudan: Peace is Cheaper Than War”.
  11. Wide, child onlookers, from UNMAS film, “South Sudan: Peace is Cheaper Than War”.


Audio Files 2
Download Kazumi Ogawa, Director UN Mine Action Service - UNMAS (Edited Story)
Download
Download Kazumi Ogawa, Director UN Mine Action Service UNMAS (Edited Story)
Download

Similar Stories

Gaza health update - WHO, UNRWA

1

1

1

Edited News | UNRWA , WHO

Gaza health update - WHO, UNRWA ENG FRA

Gaza: Life-saving medicines blocked as killing continues, disease gains ground

In Gaza, a dire humanitarian situation marked by continuing violence, rodent infestations and the spread of diseases is being made worse by blockages of essential medical supplies, UN agencies warned on Friday.

UN Human Rights Spokesperson Shabia Mantoo on involuntary returns to Afghanistan

1

1

1

Edited News | OHCHR , UNOG

UN Human Rights Spokesperson Shabia Mantoo on involuntary returns to Afghanistan ENG FRA

UN Human Rights spokesperson Shabia Mantoo, warned against the continuing trend of involuntary returns of Afghan refugees and asylum-seekers from host countries to Afghanistan, in violation of international human rights and refugee law, at the bi-weekly press briefing in Geneva.

Celestial sphere reopening

1

11

1

1

Edited News , B-roll , Images | UNOG

Celestial sphere reopening ENG

Flak jackets and final goodbyes: Lebanon’s first responders under fire

1

1

1

Edited News | IFRC , OHCHR

Flak jackets and final goodbyes: Lebanon’s first responders under fire ENG FRA

Lebanon's first responders face high risks amid conflict, with 116 killed since March.

Ebola update - WHO

1

1

1

Edited News | WHO

Ebola update - WHO ENG FRA

DRC Ebola outbreak: hundreds of suspected cases, no vaccine

A fast-spreading Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has health workers rushing to stop transmission while the roll out of any potential vaccine is months away, the UN World Health Organization (WHO) said on Tuesday.

UN report on Occupied Palestinian territory large scale violations of international law including atrocity crimes

1

1

1

Edited News | OHCHR

UN report on Occupied Palestinian territory large scale violations of international law including atrocity crimes ENG FRA

A UN Human Rights Office report released today covers 19 months of large-scale violations of international law including atrocity crimes, from October 2023 to the end of May 2025.

Somalia famine risk – OCHA, UNICEF

1

1

1

Edited News | OCHA , UNICEF

Somalia famine risk – OCHA, UNICEF ENG FRA

At least six million people in Somalia are going days without enough food, UN aid teams warned on Friday, highlighting that nearly two million of this number are young children “at high risk of illness or death”.

Occupied West Bank, Gaza update - UNICEF, WHO

1

1

1

Edited News | UNICEF , WHO

Occupied West Bank, Gaza update - UNICEF, WHO ENG FRA

Children shot, stabbed and pepper-sprayed in occupied West Bank; scores of Gaza amputees denied prosthetics, aid teams warn

Israeli military operations and surging settler attacks in the occupied West Bank are killing and maiming Palestinian children, while in Gaza tens of thousands with life-changing injuries lack access to treatment and rehabilitation, UN agencies warned on Tuesday.

Hantavirus update - WHO

1

1

1

Edited News | WHO

Hantavirus update - WHO ENG FRA

The risk of hantavirus spreading to the general population is “absolutely low”, the UN World Health Organization (WHO) stressed on Friday.

Lebanon emergency update - UNHCR, IFRC

1

1

1

Edited News | UNHCR , IFRC

Lebanon emergency update - UNHCR, IFRC ENG FRA

Death and destruction have continued unabated in Lebanon while communities are still unable to return to their homes despite a ceasefire that began on 17 April, humanitarians said on Tuesday.

Hantavirus latest - WHO

1

1

Edited News | WHO

Hantavirus latest - WHO ENG FRA

Deadly hantavirus on board cruise ship may be transmitted among humans - WHO

Hantavirus victims on a ship in the Atlantic Ocean may have been infected prior to joining the cruise and human-to-human transmission on board cannot be ruled out – although it is rare - the World Health Organization (WHO) said on Tuesday.

OHCHR - Conviction and sentencing of Kim Sokha, 33 others in Cambodia

1

1

1

Edited News | OHCHR

OHCHR - Conviction and sentencing of Kim Sokha, 33 others in Cambodia ENG FRA

UN rights chief concerned by upheld convictions of Cambodian activists.