Today is the forth International day of Mine awareness. I didn’t realize how deep this problem is until I read some official statistics about it. Let’s see. A handbook, issued by the UN in 2009 , says that by the end of 1990’s there were an estimated 15 to 20 thousand casualties caused by landmines or unexploded ordnance every year. After the signing of Landmines Convention in Ottawa, Canada in 1997, the number of those killed by landmines decreased. In 2007 were indentified 5,751 casualties from mines. More than 75 countries are affected of unexploded ordnance. This includes Afghanistan, Angola, Burundi, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Cambodia, Colombia, Iraq, Nepal and Sri Lanka. http://www.flickr.com/photos/un_photo/3332075880/ Over the years landmines changed from device of defense to offensive weapons. Landmine fields, once marked, are now left unrecorded. “Landmine and Cluster Munition Monitor Fact Sheet” , issued in March 2010, says that 61% of all recorded casualties were civilians, e
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