Indian Campaign To Ban Landmines

International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL)/Landmine Monitor
Regional Meeting
Colombo, Sri Lanka
27-30 January 2003

Final Declaration
31 January 2003

We, Asia-Pacific representatives of the International Campaign to Ban
Landmines (ICBL) met in Colombo, the capital of Sri Lanka, from 27-31 January 2003 to:

· Discuss the status of the 1997 Convention on the Prohibition of the
Use, Stockpiling, Production and Transfer of Anti-personnel Mines and on
Their Destruction (Mine Ban Treaty) in this region;
· Develop our campaigning strategy in the region for 2003;
· Prepare our research for the ICBL’s fifth annual Landmine Monitor
report;
· Visit the mine-affected Vanni region in the north of the country to
see the landmine problem, mine clearance and mine risk education
activities, as well as medical and rehabilitation services available to
landmine survivors;
· Meet with representatives of the Government of Sri Lanka, the
diplomatic community, United Nations agencies and local and international
nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) to discuss Sri Lanka’s mine problem
and efforts to resolve it;
· Reaffirm our commitment to achieve a Mine-Free World.

We Express:
· Our deep appreciation to the government and people of Sri Lanka for
their generous hospitality during our stay in their beautiful country and
our sincerest hope that the current peace process negotiations will reach a
successful conclusion;
· Our gratitude to the Landmine Monitor donors for their financial
support of our regional meeting;
· Our heartfelt thanks to our host, the Inter-Religious Peace
Foundation and the Sri Lanka Campaign to Ban Landmines, for their
professional organisation of our regional meeting;
· Our sincerest thanks to the United Nations Development Programme
(UNDP) for its able hosting of our field visit to the Vanni;
· Our gratitude to the UNDP, UNICEF, the Tamil Rehabilitation
Organization, the Swiss Foundation for Mine Action, Norwegian People’s Aid,
Mines Advisory Group and White Pigeon for sharing their mine action
experience and expertise with us.

We Welcome:
· Sri Lanka’s commitment to join the Mine Ban Treaty as soon as
possible, as reflected in the statement to the opening plenary of our
regional meeting by the Prime Minister, Hon. Ranil Wickremesinghe;
· The February 2002 ceasefire between the government and the
Liberation Tamil Tigers of Eelam (LTTE), which is believed to have resulted
in no new laying of antipersonnel mines since this date;
· The fact that half of the forty governments of the Asia-Pacific
region have joined the Mine Ban Treaty since it was opened for signature on
3 December 1997;
· The accession to the Mine Ban Treaty by Afghanistan, a heavily
mine-affected country, on 11 September 2002;
· The destruction of stockpiled antipersonnel mines by Australia,
Cambodia, Malaysia, New Zealand, and the Philippines;
· The scheduled completion of Japan’s stockpiled antipersonnel mines
(due 8 February 2003) and Thailand’s (by May 2003);
· The initial Article 7 transparency reports submitted by thirteen
States Parties from the region detailing their implementation of the Mine
Ban Treaty;
· The fifth annual global gathering of States Parties, that will take
place in Bangkok, Thailand from 15-19 September 2003.

We express our deepest concern that:
· Nineteen countries of the region remain outside the Mine Ban Treaty
including eight of the fourteen mine producers left in the world (China,
India, North Korea, South Korea, Myanmar, Pakistan, Singapore, and
Vietnam), some highly mine-affected countries (Laos, Sri Lanka, and
Vietnam), and others including Bhutan, Mongolia, Nepal, and the island
states of East Timor, FS Micronesia, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Tonga and
Tuvalu.
· Five countries of the region signed the Mine Ban Treaty in December
1997, but have still not yet ratified (Brunei, Cook Islands, Indonesia,
Marshall Islands, and Vanuatu);
· China has the world’s largest stockpile of antipersonnel mines (110
million), Pakistan the fourth largest (6 million), India the fifth largest
(4-5 million), and South Korea has 2 million in stock;
· Since December 2001, India and Pakistan have laid more mines than
anywhere else in the world in recent years;
· In Burma (Myanmar), both government and rebel groups continue to
use mines extensively;
· Mine use by rebels has been on the rise in Nepal, and there is now
acknowledgment of mine use by government forces;
· Armed non-state actors in the Philippines, India, and Pakistan used
mines in 2002;
· Warring factions (Taliban, Al-Qaeda, and Northern Alliance) in
Afghanistan used antipersonnel mines in 2001 and 2002 (the U.S. did not);
· Bangladesh has not yet initiated destruction of its stockpiled mines;
· At least thirteen countries in Asia have reported new landmine
casualties in 2002 and 2003;
· Existing mine action and survivor assistance are inadequate to meet
the demand posed by mine and UXO-affected communities in half the countries
of Asia.

We therefore challenge:
· Any government or non-state actor that is using, manufacturing,
transferring or stockpiling antipersonnel mines to immediately cease these
activities;
· Those governments that have not yet signed or ratified the Mine Ban
Treaty to do so no later than the time of the Fifth Meeting of States
Parties in September 2003;
· Non-state actors to renounce the use, production, transfer and
stockpiling of antipersonnel mines, including by submitting a Deed of
Commitment affirming this stance;
· All governments of the region to support efforts to achieve a total
antipersonnel mine ban by non-state actors by, among other measures,
allowing NGOs to safely engage non-state actors on this issue and by
humanitarian mine action by non-state actors;
· The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), South Asian
Association of Regional Cooperation (SAARC), and other regional and
sub-regional bodies to develop a concrete and comprehensive programme of
mine action in the region, including advocacy in support of the Mine Ban
Treaty;
· All States Parties of the region to destroy their stockpiled
antipersonnel mines without delay, and no later than their treaty-mandated
deadlines;
· All States Parties of the region to establish domestic national
legislation criminalising the use, manufacture, stockpiling, and transfer
of antipersonnel landmines;
· All States Parties of the region to issue a full Article 7
transparency report detailing their implementation of the Mine Ban Treaty,
including the annual report required by the end of April 2003;
· All governments of the region to enhance their cooperation,
coordination and transparency in all aspects of mine action between
themselves and with Asian members of the ICBL, including its Landmine
Monitor researchers;
· Donor governments to provide adequate resources to support
comprehensive mine clearance, mine risk education and survivor assistance
programs in all mine-affected countries in Asia-Pacific;
· All relevant stakeholders to continue to vigorously work towards
the creation of a Mine-Free Asia-Pacific.

# # #


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Sign & Ratify the Treaty * Clear Mines * Help Survivors

Liz Bernstein
International Campaign to Ban Landmines
110 Maryland Ave NE
Box 6, Suite 509

Washington , DC 20002
USA


Tel: +1 202 547 2667
Fax: +1 202 547 2687
http://www.icbl.org

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