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by Tim Carstairs, MAG
Introduction and Background
A recent intervention at the May International Standing Committee of
Experts (ISCE) meeting in Geneva was paraphrased in this way: “The
humanitarian impact of landmines must guide the priorities of donor
countries.” This statement made by the representative of Norway goes
directly to the point and presents us all with the real problem of
ensuring that our resources are used most wisely and effectively to
address these needs. This article seeks to briefly explain how MAG conducts
the process of prioritisation as part of an integrated mine action
response.
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| Returning home after doing the family washing in the Luena river. Before MAG’s intervention, the area to either side of the path was mined; three people had been injured. |
What seems clear to us is that mine action is not and should not be allowed to remain a “stand-alone” discipline. Mine action is an integral part of wider rehabilitation and development. As the opening quote says, we have to deal with the impact of mines on people. In this case, the impact of mines and UXO is most often to be considered within a wider context of economic, social and political recovery from conflict. Prioritisation and appropriate action are therefore to be taken at the same level. Furthermore, the individuals and groups in the equation are not passive and helpless but active parts of the process and worthy of respect.
In the mid-1990s, MAG developed the practice of applying a CL model to mine action situations in Angola. We believe in working together with all actors to find the best solution to problems. The human subjects—the communities that live in mined areas or that have been driven from mined areas and wish to return—become key players within the prioritisation process. This is good development practice that has been encouraged since the late 1980s. The concept of CL is being mentioned more frequently now in relation to mine action, and we hope that this short article will help explain how we understand it.
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| Following clearance, a safe IDP camp has developed in Muachimbo, outside Luena. A school and health centre have now taken root. |
The Global Impact Survey process enables us to understand the impact of landmines and UXO on basic human needs and on the longer-term developmental process and economy and thus is a factor in establishing the long-term priorities for humanitarian mine action. That being said, the survey process is not designed to cope with the immediate needs of communities faced with life-threatening mine/UXO contamination. We also need to provide mine action to those that need it now, at the same time placing that action firmly within the development sphere, working where possible within national and provincial development parameters. In an emergency and emerging situation—Luena in eastern Angola is a good example—CL skills as developed by MAG can be a good way to fulfill this function at reasonable cost. CL enables us to carry out emergency mine and UXO clearance and at the same time build up a community-based picture of the wider development needs within society.
Water Supply in Luena
Water and access are as much immediate and urgent concerns for a beleaguered community and an IDP population as they are development needs in the longer term. In 1993, mines were laid to protect the water treatment and pumping station against attack by rebels of the Capitalist National Union for the Independence of Angola (UNITA). However, the mines did not stop the station from being damaged in fighting, and since then, fresh water has been in short supply. Deprived of running water, most townspeople would come to wash clothes, bathe and collect water using a well-worn path beside the pumping station. There is a market garden area just near the river. Three people have been injured in the area. The local community asked MAG to help with this situation. The area was cleared. In all, 17 mines were removed and destroyed from along the perimeter of the pumping station, including several just inches from the path. Clearance has enabled repairs to the pumping station to be carried out, and in April 2002, the water taps of Luena ran with fresh water again for the first time in eight years. Just 17 AP mines had impacted on some 300,000 people. |
Partnership: Mine Action for Development in Angola
No single agency or person has all the answers. No single agency or NGO
can provide all services or help with the post-conflict rehabilitation of
every aspect of community development; that is why partnership is so
important. Our experience points to partnership as being a very real
element in the ability and capacity to appropriately prioritise, organise
and coordinate the various elements of mine action for development.
Partnerships enable us to bring to bear the most relevant expertise—which
may not always be a mine action solution. MAG’s CL teams will regularly
provide information about other needs to appropriate partners. If we can
not fix it, someone else will be able to.
In Angola, MAG works with a variety of other partners in such fields as:
| Community Liaison: An Academic View Development
writers also argue for approaches like CL. “[A]s development is an
essentially humanising process, participatory development must be
consciously based on people, their needs, their analysis of issues
and their decisions,” writes Peter Oakley. There is a strong body of
opinion that argues that participation, the basis for CL, brings the
following benefits: |
As in many other areas of the globe, relative peace and stability bring with it added dangers. Luena, the capital city of Moxico province has been home to over 300,000 people. Many of these people were displaced in 1998 when conflict flared again after the elections of that year. Almost under siege for several years, movements were restricted and the population became reliant on WFP food deliveries. Mines ringed the town. Mine action became impossible between 1998 and 2000; in fact, mine clearance was not permitted during that time. Security has improved since 2000, and people are again able to think longer-term.
Today, the Ministry for Social Assistance and Reintegration (MINARS)—the government authority charged with social and refugee matters—is gradually relocating internally displaced persons (IDPs) in different and previously unused areas to relieve pressure on space and resources. MINARS consults with MAG before planning new refugee and IDP camps. The Muachimbo camp is just one such example. In 2001, in response to CL interventions, MAG cleared the road of mines that had cut off the village since 1993. LWF started rebuilding basic infrastructure, IDPs began arriving, and a new community is building itself once more. CL plays a key role in creating the means on the ground to build community and economy.
| STOP PRESS: Community Liaison Assists Demobilisation In
the Cunene province of southern Angola, MAG was recently requested
by the provincial authorities to help with the establishment of
resettlement camps for former UNITA soldiers and their families in
Londe. The actual quartering area is reported free of mines, but the
roads and towns in the area are heavily mined. Working with the UN
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA), MAG’s
CL team has been gathering data and has conducted initial visits,
locating eight minefields to date. |
Rebuilding is not enough in itself: as the IDPs find their feet and expand their activities from their new base, they begin to find landmines and UXO. MAG’s CL teams work within the IDP communities to help lessen the risk. The teams provide appropriate safety and avoidance messages and discussion. At the same time, they gather information about mines and ordnance to pass on swiftly to the Mine Action Team’s (MAT’s) rapid response teams to clear the danger. MAG is currently seeking funds to create more such teams to “accompany” the peace and renewed confidence that is breaking out in the province.
Despite the conflict situation, MAG teams have continued to work in Moxico
and to conduct mine awareness and data gathering work even when clearance
was no longer possible in the late 1990s. This work was supported by Save
US and by MI. Over the years, donors have been encouraged to set aside
their reluctance to fund mine action work in conflict areas and to support
humanitarian operations on behalf of populations beleaguered by the war.
We wish to thank the donors that have “kept the faith” and continue to
support MAG’s mine action work in Angola (Moxico and Cunene provinces):
the government of Germany (Foreign Affairs), LWF, Misereor, Brot fur die
Welt, UNOCHA, Anti-Landmijn Stichting and the U.S. State Department. We
believe that this continued funding has saved many lives and contributed
to growing confidence in Angola.
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The Community Liaison Process A MAG office or a MAG team is usually contacted by a village leader and informed of problems relating to mines or UXO or asked to clear a particular area. It is true to say that MAG’s flexible, mobile teams (MATs) facilitate and strengthen this process as they are accessible to the local people and are already skilled in CL. The request will be recorded, and a community liaison team will visit the village and assess local needs, discuss village mapping, collect village history, identify the beneficiaries of clearance tasks and prioritise the minefields to be cleared.
MAG will also coordinate with local authorities and NGOs to make sure that the agreed prioritisation meets with national or provincial clearance and development plans. The CL teams will if necessary negotiate land ownership and the use to which the land will be put post-clearance. In some countries where MAG works, land ownership is handed down through families and knowledge of it is carried with tribal and village chiefs. In other areas, ownership is recorded and registered with local authorities. If required, the CL team will conduct mine risk reduction education in the community prior to completion of the mine clearance. Once clearance has been undertaken, the CL teams will continue to liaise with authorities locally to ensure that agreed development of the land goes ahead smoothly, and that the identified beneficiaries are indeed benefiting. |
About MAG
MAG has 12 years experience implementing mine action around the world. The
agency currently conducts a variety of integrated mechanical, manual and
dog clearance programmes, as well as CL, training and development
programmes in a number of areas including Angola, Cambodia, Laos, Lebanon,
northern Iraq, Somaliland, southern Sudan, Sri Lanka and Vietnam.
*All photos courtesy of Sean Sutton/MAG.
Contact Information
Rob White
Head of Operations, MAG
Tel: +44 (0)161 236 4311
E-mail: rob.white@mag.org.uk
Website: www.magclearsmines.org
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Publisher: MAIC Contact: MAIC@jmu.edu |
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