Mines, Unexploded Ordnance a Daily Menace for Afghanistan's Children

Children gather around a crater after Afghan deminers from the Halo Trust detonated an anti-tank mine in Ghazni province. Wakil KOHSAR / AFP
Children gather around a crater after Afghan deminers from the Halo Trust detonated an anti-tank mine in Ghazni province. Wakil KOHSAR / AFP
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Mines, Unexploded Ordnance a Daily Menace for Afghanistan's Children

Children gather around a crater after Afghan deminers from the Halo Trust detonated an anti-tank mine in Ghazni province. Wakil KOHSAR / AFP
Children gather around a crater after Afghan deminers from the Halo Trust detonated an anti-tank mine in Ghazni province. Wakil KOHSAR / AFP

The black mushroom cloud had barely faded in Ghazni province before kids clustered around the edge of the crater created by the mine, one of the devices that kills a child every other day in Afghanistan.
Afghans have been able to return to fields, schools and roads since the Taliban authorities ended their insurgency and ousted the Western-backed government in 2021, said AFP.
But with new freedom of movement comes the danger of remnants left behind after 40 years of successive conflicts.
Nearly 900 people were killed or wounded by leftover munitions from January 2023 to April this year alone, most of them children, according to UN figures.
The anti-tank mine had been 100 meters from Qach Qala village, south of the provincial capital Ghazni, since the Soviet invasion from 1979 to 1989.
Deminers from the British organization Halo Trust cautiously unearthed then detonated it, the explosion echoing three kilometers (nearly two miles) around.
But before it was set off, a Taliban member roared up to the deminers on his motorcycle.
“Give me that mine!" he demanded. "I'll keep it safe at home. We can use it later when Afghanistan is occupied again."
The mine couldn't be "so dangerous since it hadn't exploded all these years", he insisted, before being pushed back by the deminers.
The Taliban government "is very supportive of demining in this country and wants to conduct clearance as far as it possibly can", said Nick Pond, head of the Mine Action Section of UNAMA, the United Nations mission in Afghanistan.
Demining began in Afghanistan as early as 1988 but, over decades of wars, the country has been re-infested with mines and ordnance.
"It is almost impossible at the moment to predict what the scale of current contamination is," Pond told AFP.
Eighty-two percent of those killed or wounded by the remnant weapons since January 2023 were children, with half of cases involving children playing.
The village of Nokordak, nestled in a bucolic valley, lost two children in late April.
Surrounded by her small children, Shawoo told of how her 14-year-old son Javid was killed by unexploded ordnance.
"He threw a stone at it. He hit it once, then a second time. The third time, the device exploded."
The boy died almost instantly.
The same explosion killed Javid's friend Sakhi Dad, also 14.
"People said there were explosive ordnances around, but nothing like this had ever happened in the village before," said Sakhi Dad's 18-year-old brother, Mohammad Zakir, a lost look in his eyes.
"No one had come to the village to warn the children of the danger."
'Lack of funds'
In Patanaye village, 50 kilometers away, 13-year-old Sayed showed his wounded hand and foot, still in bandages after the explosion in late April that killed his brother Taha, 11, as they were tending their sheep.
"Three, four times I pulled it from his hands. I was shouting at him but he kicked me and hit it on a rock," Sayed told AFP.
These kinds of accidents are all too common, said their father Siraj Ahmad.
Tomorrow, "someone else's son could be killed or handicapped for the rest of their life", he said.
Zabto Mayar, Halo's explosive ordnance disposal officer, said "lack of funds" was a major challenge their work.
So deminers work painstakingly plot by plot, depending on donations.
"The mine action workforce was once 15,500 people around 2011. It is currently 3,000," said Pond.
Other global conflicts have pulled funding away, while Afghanistan has also seen donors pull back after the Taliban takeover, their government unrecognized by any other country.
Mistaken for gold
But Mohammad Hassan, headmaster of a small school in the Deh Qazi hamlet, is still counting on the deminers.
"Even the schoolyard is dangerous for the children because it is not cleared of mines," he said.
"We can't even plant trees here. If we dig, if we bring a tractor or machines to work here, it is really dangerous," he said.
Children in a classroom listened to a lesson aimed at preventing such accidents, the wall plastered with charts of mines or ordnance of all shapes and colors.
"Six months ago on a walk with my friends, we saw a rocket and we immediately told the village elders and they informed the deminers," said 12-year-old Jamil Hasan.
Mines and ordnance can look like playthings to children, said Pond.
The Soviet-era butterfly mine (PFM-1), for example, with its winged shape, "is very attractive to pick up", he said.
Children are also drawn to the "beautiful and modern colors" used in munitions, said Halo unit commander Sayed Hassan Mayar.
Some colors are also deceiving, such as golden-topped ammunition that can look like precious metal to people hunting for scrap to sell in the impoverished country.
"The children usually think it might be gold, and they hit it with a stone or a hammer to take the top part," Pond said.
Danger from remnants of war is also omnipresent for deminers. Halo lost two of their number in early May.
"Sometimes when I go defusing mines, I call my family and tell them I love them, just in case anything happens," said Zabto Mayar.



Gaza High School Students Miss Final Exams as War Rages

 Destroyed buildings are pictured in Gaza, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, as seen near the Gaza coast, June 25, 2024. (Reuters)
Destroyed buildings are pictured in Gaza, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, as seen near the Gaza coast, June 25, 2024. (Reuters)
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Gaza High School Students Miss Final Exams as War Rages

 Destroyed buildings are pictured in Gaza, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, as seen near the Gaza coast, June 25, 2024. (Reuters)
Destroyed buildings are pictured in Gaza, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, as seen near the Gaza coast, June 25, 2024. (Reuters)

Majd Hamad, 18, dreams of becoming a doctor but the war in Gaza has left his textbooks buried under rubble amid relentless Israeli bombardment and has forced him, along with thousands of other young Palestinians, to miss his final high school exams.

"I was displaced from my house, and there were many books in there. I was hoping to get high grades (to get into university), but my house was destroyed and my books remain under the rubble," said Hamad.

Ironically, Hamad and his family are now living in a classroom at a school designated as a shelter after being forced early in the war to flee their home in Beit Hanoun in the northern Gaza Strip and move to Khan Younis in the south.

"I'm sad that I missed this school year. Sad because I would have been taking exams in this classroom where I currently live. I was hoping to get high grades and to graduate from this class and become a doctor," Hamad told Reuters.

"The war has destroyed many of our dreams, destroyed the dreams of many young people who were aiming high. It has left us with no energy or morale," said Hamad.

Palestinian officials say it is the first time in decades that high school exams are going ahead this month without the participation of students in Gaza.

Some 40,000 high school students in Gaza would normally be taking their final exams this month. A further 10,000 are doing so in the Israeli-occupied West Bank and the diaspora, and they would usually all take the exams at the same time.

Life for Hamad and his family, as for most of Gaza's 2.3 million residents, has instead become a daily struggle to survive amid Israel's military onslaught, the spread of hunger and shortages of basis items. He spends his days collecting water to drink and cleaning the classroom that is now home.

'BOOKS, NOT BOMBS'

Gaza's Education Ministry said in a statement that 450 high school students had been killed since the war erupted last October. Other Palestinian data showed more than 350 teachers and academics have been killed, while all 12 of Gaza's higher education institutions have been destroyed or damaged.

The current war began on Oct. 7 when fighters from Hamas, the group which has been running Gaza, attacked Israel, killing 1,200 people and taking 250 hostages, according to Israeli tallies.

The ensuing Israeli offensive has so far killed more than 37,600 Palestinians, Gaza health officials say, and laid waste to most of the tiny, densely-populated enclave.

An estimated 1,090 Gaza high school students will sit exams on Saturday in Cairo after they and their families managed to cross into Egypt before Israeli forces shut the border in May.

"Books, not bombs" read a banner held by one high school student during a gathering in Gaza last Saturday.

Back in Khan Younis, Hamad's mother Noha said they had hoped the war would end quickly and that he could return to his studies.

"But the war has gone on for a long time, it's destroyed us... I imagined that Majd would graduate from this class and (eventually) become a doctor. He would graduate and we would be happy for him, but this class has now become a shelter for us," she said.