Photo: Louise Redvers/IRIN. Employee from a commercial mining company near Zakho in Dohuk, close to Iraqi Kurdistan's border with Turkey.
Source: IRIN
SULAYMANIYAH, 6 November 2014 (IRIN) - Militants from the group calling
itself Islamic State (IS) are booby-trapping land and buildings with
improvised explosive device (IEDs), creating new misery for displaced
Iraqi families trying to return home and adding to dangers for
government forces working on the front line.
Last week four mine clearance workers died and two were seriously
injured when an IED detonated in a house in Zummar, close to Mosul Dam
in Nineveh Governorate, in northern Iraq.
Witnesses said the opening of a bathroom door triggered an explosion
causing the property to collapse, instantly killing the men. The group,
employed by the Iraqi Kurdistan Mine Action Agency (IKMAA), run by the
semi-autonomous Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), were working
alongside the Peshmerga, the Kurdish military, who had recently won back
the territory from IS.
Aid agencies are warning displaced Iraqis not to rush home to territory
reclaimed from IS because of the risk of mines and other explosive
remnants of war (ERWs) and have expressed concerns about mined borders
areas between different military front lines.
“Large numbers of people are at significant risk,” said Nina Seecharan,
Iraq country director for UK-based Mines Advisory Group (MAG) in the
Kurdistan capital Erbil.
Omer Hassan, a commercial deminer who went to the scene of the 29
October explosion to help survivors of the accident, said: “There is an
immediate need to mark villages like Zummar that are full of dangers,”
referring to red posts and flags used by clearance teams.
Hassan, who lost his leg in a landmine accident some 20 years ago and
who has dedicated his life to demining, said IS was using crude
home-made devices that were easily mistaken for other things.
“They can make booby-traps with everything,” explained Hassan. “You can
find a brand-new torch. [IS] knows the Peshmerga need it, so they leave
them. The Peshmerga picks it up, turns it on…” The torches are packed
with explosives. “You can lose a hand,” said Hassan.
Iraq is one of the most heavily mined countries in the world due to decades of conflict and territorial disputes.
According to the Landmine Monitor,
an affiliate of the International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL), the
most-recently available statistics show up to 1,838sqkm of Iraqi
territory is contaminated.
History repeating itself
In recent years intensive efforts to clear up ERWs mean most residential
areas are now mine-free, and the bulk of remaining clearance operations
are along mountainous border regions between Iran and Turkey where
various armed groups had military posts.
However, thanks to IS, landmines are once again a very real danger for Iraqis, and not just in Kurdistan.
According to a 31 October report
by the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA),
as many as 3,000 ERWs and landmines were scattered across the town of
Jurf al-Sakhr in Babil Governorate by a retreating IS.
“The issue of landmines is a major concern for us and one we urgently need to address,” said OCHA spokesman David Swanson.
Ako Aziz, the director of Mine Risk Education at IKMAA, said full
details of what happened at the property in Zummar were still to be
determined and an investigation had been launched.
He told IRIN that while the team was highly experienced, with some
members having up to 15 years in the sector working on marked minefields
and clearing ERWs from Iraq’s previous conflicts, they were not used to
clearing houses of booby-traps.
“Our deminers are not specialized in IEDs, and need more training and experience,” he said.
“[IS] are very technical in laying out IEDs. They use many different
ways and types of IEDs and a very high quality of explosives,” Aziz
said. “This is the biggest challenge to the Peshmerga, as [IS] are
booby-trapping all areas under their control.”
Raising awareness among the displaced
MAG, the only international humanitarian demining NGO left doing
clearance work in Kurdistan, has been running awareness-raising sessions
with displaced Iraqi families since June, when IS seized control of Mosul - forcing 600,000 people to flee in a matter of days.
“We’ve been working with displaced families to make them aware of the
potential dangers, now and for when they return home,” MAG’s Seecharan
explained. “Children who are naturally inquisitive and unable to read
danger signs are particularly at risk.”
She said, however, that MAG clearance teams could not assist the
military in their clearance operations because their remit was only
humanitarian.
“While MAG’s imperative is to take action to prevent harm to civilians
and civilian demining personnel, there has to be a clear line between
humanitarian clearance in areas where active hostilities have ceased,
and activities in support of ongoing military operations,” she said.
There are around a dozen commercial demining operators working in Iraq,
including some international firms. Many are contracted by oil and gas
companies clearing land for exploration, though some are also working
for the government preparing for infrastructure projects and national
parks.
Although the expertise is available in country to help the Iraqi
authorities clear up the ERWs, the long-running budget dispute between
Baghdad and Erbil means Kurdistan does not have sufficient money to take
on new contractors.
Iraq also has an obligation to clear all of its landmines by 2018,
having signed the Ottawa Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Treat in 2007. For some
time this target has seemed ambitious, even more so now with so many new devices being laid by IS.
A report
by the Landmine Monitor in August 2013, citing the most-recent
statistics from Iraqi government agencies, said that since the late
1980s more than 29,000 people have been victims of landmine accidents in
the country.
Nearly 15,000 of those casualties - including 6,000 deaths - were in Kurdistan.
In 2012, the latest year for which data is available, there were 84 mine
accidents across Iraq with 42 deaths, though many more incidents are
likely to have gone unreported. Since 2012, 11 deminers have lost their
lives in clearance accidents across Kurdistan, IKMAA said.