On May 22, 1999, President Clinton announced a decision on anti-personnel landmines that commits the United States to sign the Ottawa Treaty by the year 2006. With this initiative, Clinton cleared the way for the United States to join the more than 120 nations that already have signed the treaty, which is an international agreement that bans the stockpiling, use, and import and export of anti-personnel landmines. This is welcome news for the children, families and communities whose daily lives are affected by the scourge of landmines
This article provides a brief description of the threat cluster munitions, landmines and other explo...
In 1989, Sen. Patrick Leahy started a fund to get medical aid to victims of landmines. There are an ...
Landmines and cluster munitions kill or injure thousands of people each year, while also restricting...
The number of antipersonnel landmines worldwide has increased dramatically in the last twenty-five y...
UNICEF started mine-awareness activities in Kosovo February 1998. At that time the threat was percei...
Save the Children Federation (SCF/US) began its Landmine Education Project (LEP) in Kabul, Afghanist...
To Walk the Earth in Safety. The United States Commitment to Humanitarian Demining informs the reade...
As the United Nation’s lead agency on mine awareness/mine risk education (MRE), the United Nations C...
Just over 20 years ago, states and civil society came together to put an end to the harm inflicted b...
Rotary International, the U.S. State Department and James Madison University’s Mine Action Informati...
The goal of the Mine Ban Treaty (1997) can’t be clearer: a landmine free world and a safe environmen...
In 2009, the Department of State continued to lead the international donor community in providing as...
Since the anti-personnel mine-ban treaty was adopted in September 1997, mine action has helped an ev...
The United States first became involved in humanitarian demining in 1988 when it sent a team to asse...
The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has been instrumental in helping Albania address its min...
This article provides a brief description of the threat cluster munitions, landmines and other explo...
In 1989, Sen. Patrick Leahy started a fund to get medical aid to victims of landmines. There are an ...
Landmines and cluster munitions kill or injure thousands of people each year, while also restricting...
The number of antipersonnel landmines worldwide has increased dramatically in the last twenty-five y...
UNICEF started mine-awareness activities in Kosovo February 1998. At that time the threat was percei...
Save the Children Federation (SCF/US) began its Landmine Education Project (LEP) in Kabul, Afghanist...
To Walk the Earth in Safety. The United States Commitment to Humanitarian Demining informs the reade...
As the United Nation’s lead agency on mine awareness/mine risk education (MRE), the United Nations C...
Just over 20 years ago, states and civil society came together to put an end to the harm inflicted b...
Rotary International, the U.S. State Department and James Madison University’s Mine Action Informati...
The goal of the Mine Ban Treaty (1997) can’t be clearer: a landmine free world and a safe environmen...
In 2009, the Department of State continued to lead the international donor community in providing as...
Since the anti-personnel mine-ban treaty was adopted in September 1997, mine action has helped an ev...
The United States first became involved in humanitarian demining in 1988 when it sent a team to asse...
The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has been instrumental in helping Albania address its min...
This article provides a brief description of the threat cluster munitions, landmines and other explo...
In 1989, Sen. Patrick Leahy started a fund to get medical aid to victims of landmines. There are an ...
Landmines and cluster munitions kill or injure thousands of people each year, while also restricting...