Forty people were injured or killed by landmines and other unexploded
ordnance (UXO) in the first two months of 2014, a figure nearly twice
as high as that recorded in the same period last year, a recent report
from the Cambodian Mine Action Centre shows.In its report, CMAC recorded six deaths and 34 injuries in January
and February this year, a 90 per cent increase in casualties from the
first two months of 2013, which saw two people killed and 19 injured.
Heng Ratana, director-general of CMAC, ascribed the increase in
casualties to recent explosions each involving multiple victims, noting
that the number of actual explosions in the two-month period remained
roughly the same. According to Ratana, incidents mostly – and
increasingly – injured children.
“They collect the explosives and play with them,” he said.Last month, two children were injured along with their aunt when they stepped ona landmine in Banteay Mean-chey province, near the Thai border. In
February, three children were killed when they tampered with an
unexploded 60-millimetre rocket that they found near their village in
Kampong Chhnang province while herding cattle.
Cambodia’s UXO was left behind after decades of war, and the
Kingdom’s northwestern provinces – such as Battambang, Oddar Meanchey,
Banteay Meanchey and Preah Vihear – remain the country’s most dangerous
areas for UXO, according to the Cambodia Mine Victims Information
System.
No comments:
Post a Comment