- Ottawa Treaty
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Not to be confused with Ottawa Conference.
Ottawa Treaty
(Mine Ban Treaty)Convention on the Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling, Production and Transfer of Anti-Personnel Mines and on their Destruction States Parties to the Ottawa TreatyDrafted 18 September 1997 Signed 3 December 1997 Location Ottawa, Ontario, Canada Effective 1 March 1999 Condition Ratifications by 40 states Signatories 133 Parties 158 (Complete List) Depositary Secretary-General of the United Nations Languages Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Russian and Spanish The Ottawa Treaty or the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention, officially known as the Convention on the Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling, Production and Transfer of Anti-Personnel Mines and on their Destruction, aims at eliminating anti-personnel landmines (AP-mines) around the world. As of September 2011[update], there were 158 States Parties to the treaty. Two states have signed but not ratified while 36 states are non-signatories, making a total of 38 states not party.[1]
Contents
Implementation
Besides ceasing the production and development of anti-personnel mines, a party to the treaty must destroy its stockpile of anti-personnel mines within four years, although it may retain a small number for training purposes (mine-clearance, detection, etc.). Within ten years after ratifying the treaty, the country should have cleared all of its mined areas. This is a difficult task for many countries, but at the annual meetings (see below) they may request an extension and assistance. The treaty also calls on States Parties to provide assistance to mine-affected persons in their own country and to provide assistance to other countries in meeting their Mine Ban Treaty obligations.[2][3]
The treaty covers only anti-personnel mines. It does not address mixed mines, anti-tank mines, remote controlled claymore mines, anti-handling devices (booby-traps) and other "static" explosive devices.
Destruction of stockpiles
According to the 2009 Landmine Monitor Report, signatory nations have destroyed more than 44 million mines since the treaty's entry into force on 1 March 1999. Eighty-six countries have completed the destruction of their stockpiles, and another 63 countries have declared that they did not possess stockpiles to destroy.[4]
Retention of Landmines
Article 3 of the treaty permits countries to retain landmines for use in training in mine detection, mine clearance, or mine destruction techniques. Seventy-one countries have taken this option. In total, 197,000 mines have been declared as being currently retained by various countries under Article 3.[5]
Landmine-free countries
Through 2008, eleven States had cleared all known mined areas from their territory: Bulgaria, Costa Rica, El Salvador, France, Guatemala, Honduras, FYR Macedonia, Malawi, Suriname, Swaziland, and Tunisia.[6] At the November-December 2009 Cartagena Summit for a Mine-Free World, Albania, Greece, Rwanda, and Zambia were also declared mine-free.[7]
On 2 December 2009, Rwanda was declared free of landmines.[8] The announcement was made at the Cartagena Summit on a Mine-Free World in Colombia. It follows a three year campaign by 180 Rwandan soldiers, supervised by the Mine Awareness Trust and trained in Kenya, to remove over 9,000 mines laid in the country between 1990 and 1994.[8] The soldiers checked and cleared 1.3 million square metres (1.3 square km) of land in twenty minefields.[8] The official Cartagena Summit came after the Rwandan Ministry of Defence's own announcement of the completion of the demining process on 29 November 2009.[9] Under article 5 of the Ottawa Treaty, Rwanda was requested to become mine-free by 1 December 2010.[9] On 18 June 2010, Nicaragua was declared free of landmines.[10] On June 14 2011, Nepal was declared a landmine-free zone (the second country to be landmine-free in Asia). [11]
Signatories
Main article: List of parties to the Ottawa TreatyThe original international citizens initiative launched in 1997 by the International Campaign to Ban Landmines gained 855,000 signatories worldwide. The Convention gained 122 country signatures when it opened for signing on 3 December 1997 in Ottawa, Canada. Currently, there are 158 States Parties to the Treaty.[12] Thirty-seven countries have not signed the treaty and two more are waiting for ratification.
The list of about three dozen states that have not signed the treaty includes a majority of the permanent members of the United Nations Security Council (People's Republic of China, the United States and Russia), India, Israel and both Koreas, where landmines remain active in the Demilitarized Zone.[13]
Criticism
Ratification has not been universal, and most landmine production occurs in countries that do not currently intend to ratify the treaty. 37 countries have not signed the treaty; nonsignatories include Russia, United States, China, Somalia, Myanmar, United Arab Emirates and Iraq.[14] Furthermore, organized state actors are capable of mapping and marking of minefields and demining after the conflict has ended, which reduces the hazards to civilians.[15] In contrast, indiscriminate dispersal is typically done by parties that already flout the laws of war, as in using mines as a weapon for state terrorism in a protracted civil war, where international treaties have little effect.
Opponents of banning landmines make several points, among them that mines are a cheap and therefore cost-effective area denial weapon. When used correctly, it is a defensive weapon that harms only an attacker,[16] unlike ranged weapons such as ballistic missiles that are most effective if used for preemptive attacks. In addition, the psychological effect of mines increases the threshold to attack and thus reduces the risk of war.[15]
The Ottawa treaty does not cover all types of unexploded ordnance. Cluster bombs, for example, introduce the same problem as mines: unexploded bomblets can remain a hazard for civilians long after a conflict has ended. A separate Convention on Cluster Munitions was drafted in 2008 and came into effect in 2010. However, its adoption has not been as widespread as the Ottawa Treaty. Paradoxically, the Ottawa Treaty then leads to increased adoption of cluster munitions, which can be more dangerous to civilians.[15] In theory, mines could be replaced by manually triggered Claymore mines, but this requires the posting of a sentry and makes this much more expensive than using other indiscriminate weapons such as cluster bombs or artillery bombardment.
Review Conferences
- First Review Conference: 29 November – 3 December 2004, Nairobi, Kenya: Nairobi Summit on a Mine Free World.[17]
- Second Review Conference: 29 November – 4 December 2009, Cartagena, Colombia: Cartagena Summit on a Mine-Free World.[18]
Annual meetings
Annual meetings of the treaty member states are held at different locations around the world. These meetings provide a forum to report on what has been accomplished, indicate where additional work is needed and seek any assistance they may require.
- 1st annual meeting in May 1999 in Maputo (in mine-affected Mozambique) [19]
- 2nd annual meeting in September 2000 in Geneva, Switzerland [20]
- 3rd annual meeting in September 2001 in Managua (in mine-affected Nicaragua) [21]
- 4th annual meeting in September 2002 in Geneva, Switzerland [22]
- 5th annual meeting in September 2003 in Bangkok, Thailand [23]
- First Review Conference in November/December 2004 in Nairobi, Kenya [17]
- 6th annual meeting in November/December 2005 in Zagreb, Croatia [24]
- 7th annual meeting in September 2006 in Geneva, Switzerland [25]
- 8th annual meeting in September 2007 at the Dead Sea, Jordan[26]
- 9th annual meeting in November 2008 in Geneva, Switzerland [27][28]
- Second Review Conference in December 2009 in Cartagena, Colombia [29]
- 10th annual meeting in November/December 2010 in Geneva, Switzerland [30]
UN General Assembly Annual Resolutions
A recurrent opportunity for States to indicate their support for the ban on antipersonnel mines is their vote on the annual UN General Assembly (UNGA) resolution calling for universalization and full implementation of the Mine Ban Treaty. UNGA Resolution 63/42, for example, was adopted on 2 December 2008 by a vote of 163 in favor, none opposed, and 18 abstentions. Of the 39 states not party to the treaty, 18 voted in favor, 18 abstained, and three were absent.
Since the first UNGA resolution supporting the Mine Ban Treaty in 1997, the number of states voting in favor has ranged from a low of 139 in 1999 to a high of 164 in 2007. The number of states abstaining has ranged from a high of 23 in 2002 and 2003 to a low of 17 in 2005 and 2006. Several states that consistently abstained or were absent are now voting in favor, including Azerbaijan, China, Kazakhstan, the Lao People’s Democratic Republic (Lao PDR), the Marshall Islands, and Morocco.[31]
Participants in the formation process
Diana, Princess of Wales
The Ottawa Treaty was ardently championed by Diana, Princess of Wales. In January 1997, she visited Angola and walked twice through a minefield.[citation needed] In January 1997, Angola's population was approximately 10 million and had about 10–20 million land mines in place from its civil war.[32] In August 1997, she visited Bosnia with the Landmine Survivors Network. Her work with landmines focused on the injuries and deaths inflicted on children.
When the Second Reading of the Landmines Bill took place in 1998 in the British House of Commons, Foreign Secretary Robin Cook praised Diana and paid tribute to her work on landmines:
All honourable Members will be aware from their postbags of the immense contribution made by Diana, Princess of Wales, to bringing home to many of our constituents the human costs of landmines. The best way in which to record our appreciation of her work, and the work of NGOs that have campaigned against landmines, is to pass the Bill, and to pave the way towards a global ban on landmines.[33]Lloyd Axworthy
In his Canadian Foreign Affairs portfolio (1996–2000), Lloyd Axworthy became internationally known for his advancement of the concept of human security and, in particular, of need to ratify the Ottawa Treaty. For his leadership against landmines, he was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize (1997).[34][35]
See also
- Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons
- Convention on Cluster Munitions
- Geneva Call, an NGO that engages non-state actors to ban landmines
- Geneva International Centre for Humanitarian Demining, host for the secretariat (ISU) of the Ottawa Treaty
- Mine action
References
- ^ ICBL Website, www.icbl.org
- ^ ICBL, "Mine Ban Treaty: Victim Assistance," http://www.icbl.org/index.php/icbl/Work/MBT/Victim-Assistance
- ^ ICBL, "Mine Ban Treaty: Other Obligations," http://www.icbl.org/index.php/icbl/Work/MBT/Other-Obligations
- ^ Landmine Monitor Report 2009, pp. 16-17.
- ^ Landmine Monitor Report 2009, p. 19.
- ^ Landmine Monitor Report 2009, p. 1.
- ^ ICBL, "Four New Countries Declared Mine-Free at Landmine Summit," http://www.icbl.org/index.php/icbl/Library/News-Articles/Work/pr-4dec2009 (4 December 2009)
- ^ a b c "Rwanda – first landmine-free country". BBC News. 2 December 2009. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/8388822.stm. Retrieved 2 December 2009.
- ^ a b "Rwanda: Country Declared Mine-Free". All Africa. 30 November 2009. http://allafrica.com/stories/200911300008.html. Retrieved 2 December 2009.
- ^ Urquhart, Wendy (20 June 2010). "Nicaraguan landmines finally removed after 80s war". BBC. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/world/latin_america/10359559.stm. Retrieved 2010-06-25.
- ^ "Nepal's PM detonates its last landmine". CNN. 15 June 2011. http://edition.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/asiapcf/06/14/nepal.landmines/.
- ^ States Parties, International Campaign to Ban Landmines
- ^ [1], Landmines Remain Issue in Korea
- ^ http://www.icbl.org/treaty/snp
- ^ a b c http://web.archive.org/web/20071101133429/http://www.kansalliset.fi/node/21
- ^ http://web.eduskunta.fi/Resource.phx/pubman/templates/1.htx?id=4512
- ^ a b Nairobi Summit on a Mine Free World
- ^ Cartagena Summit on a Mine-Free World
- ^ http://www.icbl.org/1msp
- ^ http://www.icbl.org/2msp
- ^ http://www.icbl.org/3msp
- ^ http://www.icbl.org/4msp
- ^ http://www.icbl.org/5msp
- ^ http://www.icbl.org/treaty/meetings/6msp
- ^ http://www.icbl.org/treaty/meetings/7msp
- ^ http://www.icbl.org/treaty/meetings/8msp
- ^ http://www.icbl.org/campaign/calendar/ninth_meeting_of_states_parties_to_the_anti_personnel_mine_ban_convention
- ^ http://www.icbl.org/treaty/meetings/9msp
- ^ The Washington Post. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/11/25/AR2009112503680.html.[dead link]
- ^ "APminebanconvention.org". 10MSP. http://www.apminebanconvention.org/meetings-of-the-states-parties/10msp/. Retrieved 14 April 2011.
- ^ Landmine Monitor Report 2009, p. 6.
- ^ Angola's Landmines
- ^ Charity – Diana, Princess of Wales
- ^ cities plus – Bio Sheets
- ^ Axworthy, Lloyd
External links
- Anti-personnel landmines and explosive remnants of war ICRC
- Landmines and international humanitarian law ICRC
- Convention on the Prohibition of Anti-personnel Mines full text
- ICBL website (International Campaign to Ban Landmines)
- Landmine and Cluster Munition Monitor
- Text of the Treaty at the Center for a World in Balance
- veteransforamerica.org List of Treaty Signatories from the Veterans for America.
- E-Mine – Electronic Mine Information Network by United Nations Mine Action Service.
- LandmineAction.org
- dianacelebration.com Charity – Diana, Princess of Wales
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