Reference :
V-P-ZW-E-00155
Date :
31/10/2013
Caption :
Gwaivhi village. A Gwaivhi villager shows what remains of his right leg after stepping on an anti-personnel mine while herding cattle in 2007. He was unaware that the area was infested with mines.
Confidentiality level :
public
Publication restrictions :
publication without restrictions
Description :
29-11-2013 Web Feature
More than 30 years after the cessation of fighting along the Zimbabwe/Mozambique border, families and communities living within the 210 square kilometres that make up the region daily suffer the scourge of anti-personnel mines. Since 1980, more than 1,500 people and 120,000 livestock have been killed and 2,000 people have been maimed by mines on the Zimbabwean side of the border. The ICRC and the Zimbabwe Mine Action Centre (ZIMAC) have been working together for the past two years to increase the amount of mine-risk education carried out in communities affected by anti-personnel mines.
ICRC’s work to reduce harm caused by anti-personnel mines in Zimbabwe:
The ICRC has been working with Zimbabwe Mine Action Centre (ZIMAC) to improve the safety, quality and pace of humanitarian demining in the 53-kilometre minefield from Crooks Corner to Sango Border Post in south-east Zimbabwe, on the border with Mozambique.
Since February 2012, 69 deminers have been trained on current international humanitarian mine action standards, and ICRC has also donated 50 sets of mine detection and protective equipment for the use of deminers.
In order to enhance ZIMAC’s ability to provide lifesaving medical services to deminers, 16 medics and one doctor have been trained on trauma response and five medical trauma kits have been donated by the ICRC.
The ICRC has facilitated training on mine risk education for eight ZIMAC staff and donated 5,000 children’s exercise books to schools giving guidance on how to identify and avoid anti-personnel mines.
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Original material :
digital
Resolution :
2848x4272
Orientation :
portrait
Colour/B&W :
colour