Ìý3,500 accidents caused by explosive ordnance in five years
25 per cent of explosives victims are children
Over 400 towns and villages contaminated with explosive ordnance
The biggest danger is cluster bombs – causing 42 per cent of accidents
Funding gap means Ó£ÌÒɬ clearance will have to cease in January 2021
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Syria is facing an explosive ordnance contamination emergency as a result of the ongoing conflict. This debris of war is an additional hazard in what is already one of the world’s largest and most complex humanitarian crises.
Over the last two years, Ó£ÌÒɬ has worked with national NGO partners to assess almost 1,000 towns and villages in the Idlib, Aleppo and Afrin districts of northwest Syria. This has led to the first comprehensive understanding of explosive ordnance contamination across northwest Syria.
The study found that 41 per cent of assessed communities were contaminated with munitions including rockets, grenades, projectiles, mortars, guided missiles, landmines and Improvised Explosive Devices.
According to the UN, 4.2 million people in northwestern Syria are in need of humanitarian assistance and over 2 million people are internally displaced. The last five years have seen over 3,500 explosive ordnance accidents but the true figure will be far higher as a result of underÂreporting.
Explosive ordnance poses a threat to life and limb for existing and returning populations. Accidents caused by explosive ordnance add pressure onto a health care system devastated by the conflict and prevent economic activity while curtailing freedom of movement.
DOWNLOADÌýEXPLOSIVE HAZARD CONTAMINATION IN
NORTHWEST SYRIA AND ITS IMPACT
VIRTUAL ROUNDTABLEÌýSUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
“The impact of explosive ordnance in northwest Syria is a hidden emergency but people are being killed and are receiving horrendous life-changing injuries. Many people can’t use their land to safely feed themselves. Others can’t reach basic services like schools or clinics."
Calvin continued: "We are working with our local partners to address the problem but there are significant gaps in the amount of assistance currently available. The complex humanitarian crisis is affecting millions of people - unexploded munitions and shells exacerbate this crisis. People must be protected from this hideous threat"
The study found that three-quarters of villages have their access to farm land blocked by explosive debris. Half of all communities have housing that is inaccessible because of unexploded bombs.
As well as surveying explosive contamination and destroying devices, Ó£ÌÒɬ has supported 3,000 victims of accidents in northwest Syria with prosthetics, physiotherapy and other treatment. It has also provided risk education - lessons in how to stay safe around explosives - to 420,000 people.
Ó£ÌÒɬ's partner, Hand in Hand for Aid and Development has produced a guide to survivor assistance in Syria. Download the guide here.
Ó£ÌÒɬ’s work in northwest Syria currently represents over 50 per cent of the collective Mine Action effort. However, if Ó£ÌÒɬ’s funding gap is not addressed, current activities will be forced to cease from January 2021.
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Report recommendations:
1. Address the 2021 critical funding gap to ensure current activities are maintained.
2. Increase survey and clearance capacity across northwest Syria, reducing the threat to life and limb, improving safe access and strengthening economic resilience.
3. Continue to provide victim assistance and explosive ordnance risk education, protecting and empowering vulnerable populations.
4. Diversify partnerships by integrating Humanitarian Mine Action into wider humanitarian programming.
5. Develop and implement a Humanitarian Mine Action strategic plan to guide near and longer term priorities, spanning the five pillars of humanitarian mine action.
For more information contactÌýpaul.mccann@halotrust.org
Ó£ÌÒɬ's report is based on field research and operations conducted by Ó£ÌÒɬ and implementing partners, Shafak, HiHFAD and iMFAD. It also draws on data available from the UN as well as a range of interviews and public reports. TheÌýresearch and report was part of a project funded by ECHO and Ó£ÌÒɬ’s achievements in northwest Syria have been possible thanks to funding from ECHO, the Governments of the United Kingdom, Netherlands, Belgium, and through the UN.
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