The use of improvised explosive devices by guerrillas, drug cartels and paramilitary groups has threatened Colombian society for the past 30 years. This article examines the types of IEDs found in Colombia, and the extent and history of its IED problem. Also outlined are the Colombian government’s efforts to counter IEDs, and possible solutions to the challenges ahead, such as enhanced intelligence and community security
Due to ongoing civil conflict, many Colombian civilians experience both financial and physical harm,...
Referred to as La Violencia, political unrest in Colombia\u27s countryside lasted from 1948 until 19...
Colombia is the only country in Latin America where landmines are still being emplaced, and it is al...
Colombia, a country overwhelmed by four decades of war, has the highest concentration of contaminati...
As a country plagued with landmines, Colombia has faced a number of challenges relating to victim as...
This article addresses the increasingly prevalent threat of improvised explosive devices around the ...
Four decades of near-continuous conflict between non-state actors and government forces have left Co...
Today, one of the populations in the world that suffers the most from landmine use by armed non-stat...
Years of conflict between the Colombian government and the militant groupFuerzas Armadas Revoluciona...
The presence of unexploded ordnance and anti-personnel mines in regions of Colombia has displaced fa...
Improvised explosive device (IED), for many a meaningless set of three words, but for professionals ...
Colombia is still in the throes of armed conflict and organised violence that has been ongoing durin...
Nearly a decade after launching an effort to build national capacity to clear landmines from its ter...
Editorial: IEDs and IMAS Feature: Physical Security and Stockpile Management in the SPOTLIGHT: Colom...
Improvised explosive devices have become a significant threat to the people of Afghanistan and have ...
Due to ongoing civil conflict, many Colombian civilians experience both financial and physical harm,...
Referred to as La Violencia, political unrest in Colombia\u27s countryside lasted from 1948 until 19...
Colombia is the only country in Latin America where landmines are still being emplaced, and it is al...
Colombia, a country overwhelmed by four decades of war, has the highest concentration of contaminati...
As a country plagued with landmines, Colombia has faced a number of challenges relating to victim as...
This article addresses the increasingly prevalent threat of improvised explosive devices around the ...
Four decades of near-continuous conflict between non-state actors and government forces have left Co...
Today, one of the populations in the world that suffers the most from landmine use by armed non-stat...
Years of conflict between the Colombian government and the militant groupFuerzas Armadas Revoluciona...
The presence of unexploded ordnance and anti-personnel mines in regions of Colombia has displaced fa...
Improvised explosive device (IED), for many a meaningless set of three words, but for professionals ...
Colombia is still in the throes of armed conflict and organised violence that has been ongoing durin...
Nearly a decade after launching an effort to build national capacity to clear landmines from its ter...
Editorial: IEDs and IMAS Feature: Physical Security and Stockpile Management in the SPOTLIGHT: Colom...
Improvised explosive devices have become a significant threat to the people of Afghanistan and have ...
Due to ongoing civil conflict, many Colombian civilians experience both financial and physical harm,...
Referred to as La Violencia, political unrest in Colombia\u27s countryside lasted from 1948 until 19...
Colombia is the only country in Latin America where landmines are still being emplaced, and it is al...