OSCE Office co-organizes conference on Central Asia mine action cooperation

DUSHANBE, November 17, 2009, Asia-Plus  — A conference on cooperation to address landmine and mine-related challenges in Central Asia opened in Dushanbe today. Organized by the OSCE Office in Tajikistan and the International Trust Fund (ITF), the conference has brought together representatives of Central Asia’s states as well as Afghanistan and the European Union.    […]

Rasoul Shodon

DUSHANBE, November 17, 2009, Asia-Plus  — A conference on cooperation to address landmine and mine-related challenges in Central Asia opened in Dushanbe today.

Organized by the OSCE Office in Tajikistan and the International Trust Fund (ITF), the conference has brought together representatives of Central Asia’s states as well as Afghanistan and the European Union.   

“Tajikistan has already taken considerable steps towards clearing mine-contaminated zones within its territory. However, dealing with the contentious issue of mined border areas within the Ferghana Valley region may require a multilateral approach,” said Ambassador Ivar Vikki, the Head of the OSCE Office in Tajikistan. “The OSCE, with its regional presence, is ideally suited to supporting Central Asian states to develop a framework for cooperation on mine clearance challenges.”

The Central Asian region faces a number of mine threats, including from Soviet-era minefields, border area mine belts placed after the break up of the Soviet Union and minefields resulting from internal conflicts.

Speaking at the conference, the First Deputy Foreign Minister of Tajikistan, Abdullo Yuldoshev, noted that the main objective of the conference was in promoting establishment of dialogue between the Central Asian countries in addressing mine clearance challenges.

“Regional cooperation initiated by the International Trust Fund for the Western Balkan countries contaminated with landmines proved to be a successful impetus in clearing contaminated areas of bilateral and multilateral concern, and we hope that a similar initiative could support Central Asian mine action,” said Jernej Cimpersek, the Deputy Head of Slovenian Permanent Mission to the OSCE in Vienna, who co-chaired the conference.

Since 2003, the OSCE Office in Tajikistan, at the request of the Tajik Government, has assisted the country to address the humanitarian threat posed by landmines. Clearing landmines makes more land available for agriculture and reforestation and also helps to improve cross-border co­operation and monitoring.

The Conference on Facilitating Central Asia Regional Cooperation in Mine Action is part of an OSCE multi-phase project to facilitate regional co-operation in mine clearance activities.

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