Under Article 5 of the Convention on the Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling, Production and Transfer of Anti-Personnel Mines and on their Destruction,States Parties are bound by a 10-year mine-clearance deadline. As the first clearance deadlines approach in March 2009, it is evident that several countries will not be able to meet their Ottawa-imposed deadlines
Mine action is changing. This is not 1997 and what the international community has learned in the pa...
Geneva Call has been engaging armed non-state actors in a landmine ban since 2000. The Swiss-based n...
The Convention\u27s parties, with the support of a wide range of organisations, have made great prog...
The International Campaign to Ban Landmines was very specific in saying that there were to be no exc...
With clearance deadlines for States Parties to the Ottawa Convention approaching or having passed, a...
Each State Party to the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention (APMBC) that knows or suspects it has are...
With the impending 2009 Ottawa Convention deadline quickly approaching, it has become clear that Moz...
As the 10-year deadline for fulfilling Article 5 of the Ottawa Convention is rapidly approaching for...
At the Ninth Meeting of States Parties in November 2008, Ecuador was one of 15 countries to request ...
Just over 20 years ago, states and civil society came together to put an end to the harm inflicted b...
Recent conflicts, lack of funding and limited information about mined areas in Afghanistan has preve...
The Ottawa Convention was signed by 122 countries in Ottawa in December 1997. In September of the fo...
Seventy-third session First Committee Agenda item 101 (m) General and complete disarmament: implemen...
In June 2014, State Parties to the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention (APMBC) met in Maputo, Mozambi...
Key Findings: In 2019, a global total of more than 131 square kilometers was cleared of anti-perso...
Mine action is changing. This is not 1997 and what the international community has learned in the pa...
Geneva Call has been engaging armed non-state actors in a landmine ban since 2000. The Swiss-based n...
The Convention\u27s parties, with the support of a wide range of organisations, have made great prog...
The International Campaign to Ban Landmines was very specific in saying that there were to be no exc...
With clearance deadlines for States Parties to the Ottawa Convention approaching or having passed, a...
Each State Party to the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention (APMBC) that knows or suspects it has are...
With the impending 2009 Ottawa Convention deadline quickly approaching, it has become clear that Moz...
As the 10-year deadline for fulfilling Article 5 of the Ottawa Convention is rapidly approaching for...
At the Ninth Meeting of States Parties in November 2008, Ecuador was one of 15 countries to request ...
Just over 20 years ago, states and civil society came together to put an end to the harm inflicted b...
Recent conflicts, lack of funding and limited information about mined areas in Afghanistan has preve...
The Ottawa Convention was signed by 122 countries in Ottawa in December 1997. In September of the fo...
Seventy-third session First Committee Agenda item 101 (m) General and complete disarmament: implemen...
In June 2014, State Parties to the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention (APMBC) met in Maputo, Mozambi...
Key Findings: In 2019, a global total of more than 131 square kilometers was cleared of anti-perso...
Mine action is changing. This is not 1997 and what the international community has learned in the pa...
Geneva Call has been engaging armed non-state actors in a landmine ban since 2000. The Swiss-based n...
The Convention\u27s parties, with the support of a wide range of organisations, have made great prog...