Nearly fifty years after the nine-year Secret War (1964–1973), Laos is the scene of a US$35–$40 million annual enterprise, employing more than 3,000 workers who, with assistance from governments and nongovernmental organizations (NGO) around the world, are engaged in unexploded ordnance (UXO) clearance, victim assistance and mine risk education (MRE). The 2.2 million tons of bombs included an estimated 270 million cluster munitions, many of which failed to detonate on impact and created a lethal landscape to which villagers returned after the war. The inevitable post-war casualties now number more than 20,000. A high percentage of victims over the past several decades were not alive when the bombs fell
Lao PDR inherited from the Vietnam war the most unexploded ordnance (UXO) contamination per capita i...
Since Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia have similar mine and unexploded ordnance risk problems, a regional...
MAG (Mines Advisory Group) has recently been tasked with a new project to collaborate with the UXO s...
The Lao National Unexploded Ordnance Programme (UXO Lao) has established a regional office and field...
This thesis examines one man-made disaster, resulting from the plethora of UneXploded Ordnance (UXO)...
In this article, UXO Lao reports on its development from 1996 to the present. Focuses include issues...
From the end of the Vietnam War to 1994, 10,000 Laotians fell casualty to the millions of pieces of ...
The Lao People’s Democratic Republic is the world’s most heavily unexploded ordnance-contaminated na...
Over thirty-four years since the 1960-1975 Second Indochina War, Unexploded Ordnance (UXO) continues...
Sepon mine, owned by the largest international mining company in Laos, MMG Lane Xang Minerals Limite...
For over 30 years since the end of the Second Indochina War, UXO (Unexploded Ordnance) contamination...
During the Vietnam War, an estimated 580,000 or more bombing missions were carried out over Laos, dr...
A brief country report from Laos and its contamination of UXO left following the Second Indochina Wa...
Long after the Vietnam War\u27s end, remnants of the conflict remain in playgrounds, schools, farms ...
Unexploded Ordnance (UXO) contamination presents a considerable level of danger in almost all post-c...
Lao PDR inherited from the Vietnam war the most unexploded ordnance (UXO) contamination per capita i...
Since Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia have similar mine and unexploded ordnance risk problems, a regional...
MAG (Mines Advisory Group) has recently been tasked with a new project to collaborate with the UXO s...
The Lao National Unexploded Ordnance Programme (UXO Lao) has established a regional office and field...
This thesis examines one man-made disaster, resulting from the plethora of UneXploded Ordnance (UXO)...
In this article, UXO Lao reports on its development from 1996 to the present. Focuses include issues...
From the end of the Vietnam War to 1994, 10,000 Laotians fell casualty to the millions of pieces of ...
The Lao People’s Democratic Republic is the world’s most heavily unexploded ordnance-contaminated na...
Over thirty-four years since the 1960-1975 Second Indochina War, Unexploded Ordnance (UXO) continues...
Sepon mine, owned by the largest international mining company in Laos, MMG Lane Xang Minerals Limite...
For over 30 years since the end of the Second Indochina War, UXO (Unexploded Ordnance) contamination...
During the Vietnam War, an estimated 580,000 or more bombing missions were carried out over Laos, dr...
A brief country report from Laos and its contamination of UXO left following the Second Indochina Wa...
Long after the Vietnam War\u27s end, remnants of the conflict remain in playgrounds, schools, farms ...
Unexploded Ordnance (UXO) contamination presents a considerable level of danger in almost all post-c...
Lao PDR inherited from the Vietnam war the most unexploded ordnance (UXO) contamination per capita i...
Since Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia have similar mine and unexploded ordnance risk problems, a regional...
MAG (Mines Advisory Group) has recently been tasked with a new project to collaborate with the UXO s...