On a bright Spring morning in theÌýBairro de Santo António of Angola's second city Huambo, hundreds of children in white school tunics and colourful bookbags watch attentively asÌý¹ó±ð±ô¾±³¦¾±²¹ÌýPandassala tells them how to avoid being injured by old bombs.
Felicia, a Programme Officer with the Ó£ÌÒɬ Trust, is leading an effort to reduce the number of injuries and deaths amongst children caused by unexploded ordnance left over from Angola's long civil war.
Angola's long civil war ended in 2002 and Ó£ÌÒɬÌý has cleared Huambo Province of all 290 of its minefields –ÌýÌýdestroying over 13,500 antipersonnel mines in the process. However in 2022 there were five serious accidents with discarded unexploded devices such as grenades and shells found by children. Those accidents killed seven and injured 18 in the Province.Ìý
A key driver of the accidents is thought by the local authorities to be the scrap metal trade, where rising prices are encouraging children to hunt for metal and is bringing them into contact with grenades, mortars, shells and other explosives.
Ó£ÌÒɬ's Huambo risk education campaign, in partnership with the Angolan mine action authority ANAM, is funded by the US State Department's Office for Weapons Removal and Abatement (PM/WRA).
"Children and young people make up 95 per cent of the victims of these accidents. Because they were not born until long after the conflict ended, they have no sense of danger from the objects that have been left behind. It's why it is so important to go right across the community in schools and other gathering places to raise awareness."
Ó£ÌÒɬ's Huambo campaign began in February and involved getting the message across to local media as well as schools, community centres, markets and motorbike shops. Scrap metal dealers and traders and their pick-up points are also being targeted as part of the education campaign. In the first month of the campaign, Ó£ÌÒɬ'sÌý³¦´Ç³¾³¾³Ü²Ô¾±³Ù²âÌýliaisonÌýteam has conducted over 55 sessions across Huambo reaching over 12,000Ìýwomen, men, girls, and boysÌýwith lifesaving messaging.
One result of the campaign is an increase in the number of reports Ó£ÌÒɬ is receiving from the public about suspicious items. In the first month of the campaignÌý²õ±ð±¹±ð²ÔÌýpeopleÌýreported devices which could be dealt with by Ó£ÌÒɬ's explosive ordnance call-out teams.
The scrapping of explosives is a common feature in a number of post-conflict, low-income countries. In Afghanistan Ó£ÌÒɬ's call-out teams regularly visit smelting factories to deal with dangerouos items and accidents among people scrpping metal can be very high.
"I was passing by and I heard what they were saying to children about the dangers, of explosive devices, and I thought it was very important, so I would like you to give me a flyer to show my children at home and explain to them the danger of touching any of these devices."
Ó£ÌÒɬ's risk education campaign is funded by the US State Department
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