|
Summary: Landmines are indiscriminate weapons that
kill and maim thousands of people each year and injure the environment by
leaving large tracts of land unusable. Adopted on September 18, 1997 and entered
into force on March 1, 1999, the Ottawa Treaty provides for the ban on the use,
production, transfer, and storage of anti-personnel landmines without exception.
Key Terms: The treaty calls for an unconditional
cessation of the use, production, transfer, and storage of anti-personnel mines.
It requires state parties to make implementation reports to the UN, to destroy
stockpiled mines within four years, and to destroy mines in the ground under
state parties control within 10 years.
Status: As of September 4, 2003, 150
signatories/accessions and 136 ratifications, accessions or approvals. Current
international regulations state that weapons are illegal if they do not
distinguish combatants from non-combatants or if they cause unnecessary
suffering. Under Article 15, the treaty was open for signature from 3 December
1997 until its entry into force, which was 1 March 1999. Now that the
treaty has entered into force, states may no longer sign it; rather they may
become bound without signature through a one step procedure known as accession.
According to Article 16 (2), the treaty is open for accession by any State that
has not signed.
U.S. Status: To date, the United
States has not joined the Mine Ban Treaty despite being a leader in demining and
victim assistance efforts. Former President Bill Clinton indicated that the
United States will join the Mine Ban Treaty in 2006 as long as U.S. efforts to
find "alternatives" to antipersonnel landmines are successful. On February 27,
2003, President Bush announced a new policy that rejects any notion that the US
will join the treaty, puts off the destruction of "persistent" landmines until
2010, and asserts that our military may use self-deactivating "smart" mines
indefinitely. These so-called "smart" mines cannot discriminate between the foot
of a soldier and that of a child, tend to be scattered by air and are thus
difficult to mark and map, pose tremendous challenges and costs for demining
teams, and threaten the lives and limbs of innocent civilians and US troops who
step on the weapons soon after they've been planted. Meanwhile, reportedly, the
US military hasn't used antipersonnel landmines since 1991.
Official website - Contains treaty text and official documents.
United
States Campaign to Ban Landmines - This website contains many resources on
the treaty, a listing of countries who have not signed it, and the U.S. policy
on the treaty.
Human Rights Watch on Bush Administration Policy - Strong critique of the
Bush Administration policy decision to reject the landmine treaty; contains
links to other resources.
|