arch/ive/ief (2000 - 2005)

How West helped Kosovo
by Roland Marounek Tuesday October 30, 2001 at 10:28 AM
Roland.Marounek@chello.be

10-year-old boy has been killed and two others have been serously injured in Kosovo by a cluster bomb.

Date : Sat, 27 Oct 2001 12:55:48 +0200

Objet : How West helped Kosovo

Kosovo bombs kill boy

A 10-year-old boy has been killed and two others have been seriously injured
in Kosovo after walking into a field of cluster bombs.
It brings the number of deaths in the province from mines and unexploded
ordnance to more than 100 since the end of the war in June last year. [Twice
Rajcak...]

At the same time, it has emerged that demining teams have only recently been
given accurate details by Nato of cluster-bomb sites in the province.

The boy was killed near the town of Strpce in the south of the province on
Sunday, but details were only released on Monday evening.

The field were the accident happened was known as a cluster-bomb site but was
unmarked.

Risks

The risk of this kind of accidents has increased in the province since the
spring, as more people venture into the open countryside.

Cluster bombs, which were dropped by American and British planes during last
year's war, are particularly feared.

They make up over a third of all unexploded bombs and mines in the province.

Last autumn, the UN's Mine Action Co-ordination Centre in Pristina requested
detailed information of where the bombs were dropped.

While some details were given, the centre says essential information was left
out.

It argues that this prevented teams from thoroughly marking out cluster-bomb
sites.

Lobby for information
Ten months later, that information has now been handed over - but only after
intense lobbying from the UN.

Nato planes dropped almost 1,400 bombs in Kosovo, of which 10% are thought to
be lying unexploded.

UN officials say there has been a reluctance by K-For to take responsibility
for the problem.

While K-For soldiers mark out so-called essential danger areas, the vast
majority of demining work is carried out by charities.

[Not to talk about "Depleted" Uranium]

------ Fin du message transféré