Tajikistan marks International Day Against Land Mines

DUSHANBE, April 4, Asia-Plus – Tajikistan today marks an International Day Against Landmine Threat. Jonmahmad Rajabov, director of the Tajik Mine Action Cell (TMAC), said that activities dedicated to the International Day Against Landmine Threat will be organized today at the engineer battalion, which is stationed in the Rudaki district.    According to him, representatives from […]

Nargis Hamroboyeva

DUSHANBE, April 4, Asia-Plus – Tajikistan today marks an International Day Against Landmine Threat.

Jonmahmad Rajabov, director of the Tajik Mine Action Cell (TMAC), said that activities dedicated to the International Day Against Landmine Threat will be organized today at the engineer battalion, which is stationed in the Rudaki district.   

According to him, representatives from the government and international organizations will attend the event in the Rudaki district.  

According to TMAC director, 600 Tajik nationals have become victims of landmine explosions since 1992.  “More than 300 of them were killed and others were injured and became disabled for life,” the TMAC director said.  He noted that almost a half of them had become victims of landmines laid by Uzbek authorities on some stretches of the Tajik-Uzbek border.

“Tajikistan cannot start demining operation along Tajikistan’s common border with Uzbekistan because a process of delimitation and demarcation of the border between the two countries has not been yet completed,” Rajabov stressed. 

The TMAC director noted that under the project launched to tackle Tajikistan’s deadly landmine crisis, demining teams have cleared 500,000 square meters of land and detected and neutralized more than 3,000 landmines and unexploded ordnances (UXOs), which were a legacy of the country’s civil war in the Nineties, over the past five years.   

Specialists from the TMAC believe thousands of landmines and other explosive devices still remain scattered over an area of some 25 million square meters.  

Over the past several years, with support of the government of Tajikistan and international organizations more than $8 million have been provided to carry out mine action.  “In order to complete the program by 2010 we need much more funds,” Rajabov said.  

Some 300 anti-personnel mines that were stockpiled in ammunition dumps of the Tajik ministry of defense (MoD) were destroyed at the Lohour training ground in 2004.  

Tajikistan signed the Convention on the Prohibition on the Use, Stockpiling, Production and Transfer of Antipersonnel Mines and on their Destruction (the Ottawa Convention) in 2000. All signatory states undertook to ensure the destruction of all anti-personnel land mines they possess, as soon as possible but no later than 10 years after signing the convention. In the case of Tajikistan, this means that the country should be mine-free by 2010.

Join us on social media!

Article translations:

Related Article

Tenisi
Оби зулол
Оби зулол

Most Read

Коммерсбонк Точикистон

Recent Articles

Ensuring Safe and Clean Air: A Global Priority

In recent years, the importance of safe and clean air has become a focal point for governments, environmental agencies, and health organizations worldwide. With...

“Hit with fists on the lower back and abdomen.” A teacher from Nurobod, claiming he was beaten by a student’s brother, details the attack

According to him, he is being threatened with murder, and law enforcement agencies have not yet detained the attacker.

International internet starts coming back in Iran after long shutdown 

Western media reports says Iranians ​isolated by a long...

Tajikistan listed among countries with low generative AI usage

Among the Central Asian countries, Kazakhstan has the highest rate.

Prices in Tajikistan rise almost 2% in January-April: apples, fuel, and utilities become particularly more expensive

In April, inflation was 0.6%: food products became more expensive, non-food products increased in price comparatively less, and tariffs for paid services remained unchanged.

Drought in Central Asia becoming a chronic threat, IWMI expert warns

The temperature in the region is rising faster than the global average.

Emomali Rahmon congratulates Tajikistanis on Eid al-Adha and calls for thrift

The President reminded that Idi Qurbon is not a wedding but a religious ceremony that should take place without ostentatious luxury.

Gazpromneft – Tajikistan launches the “Welcome Skidka” program for corporate customers

New clients - legal entities and individual entrepreneurs - can take advantage of special conditions until the end of the current year.

In Dushanbe, 28 sellers fined for unjustified price increases

On the eve of Idi Qurbon, inspections are being conducted at the capital's retail outlets.