This article addresses the mine-action challenges Thailand faces in maintaining compliance with the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention. Given the uncertainty of mine locations and the Thailand Mine Action Centre’s limited capacity, the delegation of Thailand’s mine-action resources can be an issue, as hazardous areas can be difficult to determine. The emergence of a new national land-release mineaction standard, however, means that Thailand’s ability to efficiently identify hazardous areas will allow limited resources to be appropriately assigned to areas needing clearance
Through the efforts of CMAC, Mines Advisory Group and HALO Trust, Cambodia is working to eliminate t...
During the past five years, I have worked in four different mine awareness programs. The first was i...
In the 1990s, Mozambique ranked among countries such as Afghanistan, Angola, Bosnia and Herzegovina,...
The Thailand Mine Action Center (TMAC) faces a number of challenges in coping with the country’s lan...
Years of conflict along the borders of Thailand have resulted in countless landmines buried along th...
The February conflict at the Thailand-Cambodia border over disputed territory has left Cambodia with...
The Thailand Mine Action Centre (TMAC) requested the Geneva International Centre for Humanitarian De...
In May 1999, Thailand became a State Party to the Convention on the Prohibition of the Use, Stockpil...
With peace and a new government in place in Cambodia, the country has turned its attention to the de...
Despite decades of national and international mine action efforts, Cambodia remains littered with la...
Cambodia\u27s mine and ERW problem is a result of the long period of civil and regional conflicts th...
The remnants of conflicts along the Thai-Cambodian, Lao, Malaysian and Myanmar borders affect the Li...
Each State Party to the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention (APMBC) that knows or suspects it has are...
Southeast Asia remains one of the most heavily mined regions in the world. Cambodia, which has a 200...
In June 2014, State Parties to the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention (APMBC) met in Maputo, Mozambi...
Through the efforts of CMAC, Mines Advisory Group and HALO Trust, Cambodia is working to eliminate t...
During the past five years, I have worked in four different mine awareness programs. The first was i...
In the 1990s, Mozambique ranked among countries such as Afghanistan, Angola, Bosnia and Herzegovina,...
The Thailand Mine Action Center (TMAC) faces a number of challenges in coping with the country’s lan...
Years of conflict along the borders of Thailand have resulted in countless landmines buried along th...
The February conflict at the Thailand-Cambodia border over disputed territory has left Cambodia with...
The Thailand Mine Action Centre (TMAC) requested the Geneva International Centre for Humanitarian De...
In May 1999, Thailand became a State Party to the Convention on the Prohibition of the Use, Stockpil...
With peace and a new government in place in Cambodia, the country has turned its attention to the de...
Despite decades of national and international mine action efforts, Cambodia remains littered with la...
Cambodia\u27s mine and ERW problem is a result of the long period of civil and regional conflicts th...
The remnants of conflicts along the Thai-Cambodian, Lao, Malaysian and Myanmar borders affect the Li...
Each State Party to the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention (APMBC) that knows or suspects it has are...
Southeast Asia remains one of the most heavily mined regions in the world. Cambodia, which has a 200...
In June 2014, State Parties to the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention (APMBC) met in Maputo, Mozambi...
Through the efforts of CMAC, Mines Advisory Group and HALO Trust, Cambodia is working to eliminate t...
During the past five years, I have worked in four different mine awareness programs. The first was i...
In the 1990s, Mozambique ranked among countries such as Afghanistan, Angola, Bosnia and Herzegovina,...