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The Mt. Pleasant Legion (Royal Canadian Legion Branch #177) marked
their 60th anniversary on March 11th, 2005 by announcing the funding
of a landmine clearance project. The $60,000 project will support
demining operations in Afghanistan for a period of 8 weeks clearing
an estimated 60,000 m2 (15 acres) of land in the area of Kabul in
the Central Region.
The area of Kabul, Afghanistan was selected because of the present
danger of landmines to the Canadian soldiers currently serving in
Operation Athena. This danger was made very clear when a landmine
killed Sgt. Short and Cpl. Beerenfenger in October 2003.
This project is undertaken through Adopt-A-Minefield, a global
campaign to clear landmines and assist landmine survivors with partners
in Canada, the USA, the UK and Sweden. Working in concert in this
project are the United Nations Development Programme, the United
Nations Office of Project Services, and the Afghanistan Mine Action
Centre. The project will fund the work of a thirty person team from
the Afghan Technical Consultants. The team will work in the area,
but be available to respond to emergencies as they occur, giving
them the flexibility they need now more than ever.
According to the UN, Afghanistan is one of the top three most-mined
countries on the planet. While most of the landmines and UXO's in
Afghanistan were laid during the Soviet occupation, during Taliban
rule and US-led bombardment, both conventional and guerrilla forces
used landmines extensively to defend military positions, force populations
off land, block access routes and harass opponents by causing economic
and social disruption. About 200,000 civilians have died and 400,000
have been disabled in mine incidents in Afghanistan. Afghanistan
is infested with 10 million anti-personnel mines ready to explode
the moment anyone steps on them or touches them.
Afghan Technical Consultants (ATC) was founded in 1989 and is one
of the largest and leading mine clearance organizations currently
operating in Afghanistan. ATC began with only one 24-man team and
11 administrative and support staff to clear high priority areas
from mines and UXO. Within one year, ATC expanded to include 750
additional staff. ATC has continued to grow since then, and now
employs nearly 1300 Afghans.
The Canadian Landmine Foundation, a managing partner in Adopt-A-Minefield,
has been working with the Mt. Pleasant Legion to identify a meaningful
way to demonstrate the Legion's continuing efforts to serve the
community and the world.
For more information contact:
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