International delegates say landmines put life on hold May 1, 2004 By Kathleen LaCamera* PITTSBURGH
(UMNS) — Even though Mozambique’s civil war officially ended in 1994,
United Methodist Bishop Joao Somane Machado says his country is now
facing a different kind of threat: a war with landmines. | The African Continent featuring the Republic of Mozambique. A UMNS graphic by Laura J. Latham. | “The
development of our country in peace depends on removing landmines,”
explained Bishop Machado during an interview at the 2004 General
Conference of the United Methodist Church. “This is a very critical
issue. Two million mines are still here.”Unexploded
landmines are a threat in areas where food is grown and cattle are
grazed and where children go to school, according to Machado. Women out
gathering firewood for cooking find landmines instead. People are
begging on city streets because farming is too dangerous. According
to estimates from the International Campaign To Ban Landmines, there
are 15,000 to 20,000 new landmine casualties each year; the vast
majority are civilians. Last year, 23 percent of reported casualties
were children. In Mozambique, Angola, the Balkans, East Asia, Central
America and beyond, even after the fighting stops, life is still on hold
because of landmines. More than 140 countries have signed the 1997 International Mine Ban Treaty. The United States is not one of them. “If
you want to build a church, you can’t. If you want to send your kids to
school, maybe next year. If you want to eat, sorry,” observed Paul
Dirdak, head of the United Methodist Committee on Relief, the church’s
relief agency. “Life stops until this gets done.” In
partnership with an internationally respected Mozambican mine clearance
company, ADP, United Methodists are making up to 12.8 acres of land a
day safe. Using a process that combines mechanical land clearance with
trained dogs and human de-miners, the United Methodist Committee on
Relief has accelerated a process that normally proceeds slowly.
Purchasing two specially adapted “armored tractors,” the relief agency
put de-mining teams into southern Mozambique that cleared more than 3
million square meters in 2003. All the de-miners involved were
Mozambican nationals. Dirdak
points out that while some U.S. military equipment manufactures hope to
refit tanks for de-mining activities, post-conflict countries in the
developing world will only allow non-military, modified agricultural
vehicles to remove mines. | The Republic of Mozambique. A UMNS graphic by Laura J. Latham | “They don’t want anything around that could be turned back into a weapon,” said Dirdak. He
also reports that no dogs have been injured in this work. In the years
that United Methodist Committee on Relief has been involved with
de-mining activities only one person on any of their teams has died a
landmine-related death. “This church wants to accelerate
the rate and safety of de-mining,” said Dirdak. “The United Methodist
Church is the only group doing this work without any government
involvement.” United
Methodist Bishop Heinrich Bolleter, whose area of responsibility
includes the Balkans, welcomes the news of UMCOR’s successes in
Mozambique. In Kosovo, unexploded landmines have often been found in
people’s back yards. “I
have experienced the great difficulties of these landmines in Bosnia,
Serbia and Kosovo,” said Bolleter, who is also attending the General
Conference. “If the church can help speed up the process of landmine
removal then we should do all we can. Landmines hinder the peace.” The
Rev. Jose Mapsanganhe, director of evangelism for the Southern
Mozambique Conference, encourages those who have supported this landmine
removal work to keep supporting it. “Part of our church’s mission is to help people develop a better standard of living,” he said. “Landmines stop us doing that.” *LaCamera is a correspondent for United Methodist News Service. News media contact: (412) 325-6080 during General Conference, April 27-May 7. After May 10: (615) 742-5470.
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