Minefields along Tajikistan\u27s borders with Afghanistan, Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan, as well as centrally concentrated civil-war minefields continue to kill and injure Tajik citizens. Through victim-assistance projects, the Tajikistan Mine Action Centre hopes that all landmine survivors can be physically rehabilitated and socially and economically reintegrated into their communities
Every year landmines kill or injure an estimated 24,000 people. The majority of these victims suffer...
This article discusses the involvement of Tajik women in educating those in their communities about ...
More than a decade of conflict between Russian armed forces and Chechen separatists has left Chechny...
Tajikistan, a State Party to the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention (APMBC) since 1 April 2000, cont...
The Ministry of Labour and Social Protection of the Population of the Republic of Tajikistan, the Ta...
Nearly a decade after a civil war ravaged the Republic of Tajikistan, the country is still suffering...
Over the past ten years, the Marshall Legacy Institute’s (MLI) Mine Victim’s Assistance Program (MVA...
Since 2007, the Tajikistan Mine Action Centre, in cooperation with the Ministry of Labour and Social...
Landmine Survivors Network (LSN) works to help mine victims and their families recover through an in...
Initial surveying and resurveying of areas contaminated with mines are imperative processes in the L...
This article examines the effectiveness of a victim-assistance program in Nepal conducted by Ban Lan...
Following a Mine Survivors Needs Assessment Survey in 2004, the Azerbaijan National Agency for Mine ...
Due to years of conflict, Azerbaijan has become yet another territory contaminated with dangerous la...
Landmine Survivors Initiatives implemented a three-pronged, peer-support assistance system to meet l...
The Mine Action Coordination Centre for Afghanistan (MACCA) and the Department for Mine Clearance (D...
Every year landmines kill or injure an estimated 24,000 people. The majority of these victims suffer...
This article discusses the involvement of Tajik women in educating those in their communities about ...
More than a decade of conflict between Russian armed forces and Chechen separatists has left Chechny...
Tajikistan, a State Party to the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention (APMBC) since 1 April 2000, cont...
The Ministry of Labour and Social Protection of the Population of the Republic of Tajikistan, the Ta...
Nearly a decade after a civil war ravaged the Republic of Tajikistan, the country is still suffering...
Over the past ten years, the Marshall Legacy Institute’s (MLI) Mine Victim’s Assistance Program (MVA...
Since 2007, the Tajikistan Mine Action Centre, in cooperation with the Ministry of Labour and Social...
Landmine Survivors Network (LSN) works to help mine victims and their families recover through an in...
Initial surveying and resurveying of areas contaminated with mines are imperative processes in the L...
This article examines the effectiveness of a victim-assistance program in Nepal conducted by Ban Lan...
Following a Mine Survivors Needs Assessment Survey in 2004, the Azerbaijan National Agency for Mine ...
Due to years of conflict, Azerbaijan has become yet another territory contaminated with dangerous la...
Landmine Survivors Initiatives implemented a three-pronged, peer-support assistance system to meet l...
The Mine Action Coordination Centre for Afghanistan (MACCA) and the Department for Mine Clearance (D...
Every year landmines kill or injure an estimated 24,000 people. The majority of these victims suffer...
This article discusses the involvement of Tajik women in educating those in their communities about ...
More than a decade of conflict between Russian armed forces and Chechen separatists has left Chechny...