Landmine Monitor 2006

Mine Action Funding

Gathering accurate and complete information on global mine action funding remains an elusive task. There is a lack of transparency on the part of many countries, and among those who do report, there is a great deal of variation in what is reported, the level of detail reported, and for what time period.[106 ]However, it is possible to provide an informative picture of the global funding situation.

For 2005, Landmine Monitor has identified US$376 million in mine action funding by more than 27 donors.[107 ] This is a decrease of $23 million, or 5.8 percent, from 2004.[108 ]The decrease in total global funding largely reflects big reductions in funding from the two most significant donors, the European Commission ($14.9 million decrease) and the United States ($14.6 million decrease). Of the 20 most significant donors, 10 provided less funding in 2005 than 2004. (See below).

This is the first time that global mine action funding has decreased meaningfully since 1992, when states first began to devote significant resources to mine action.[109 ]It is a matter of serious concern that global mine action funding fell markedly instead of increasing in 2005, the year after many Mine Ban Treaty States Parties made renewed commitments to mine action at the First Review Conference and in their collective endorsement of the Nairobi Action Plan. It is disconcerting that funding fell as many States Parties approach their 10-year treaty mandated deadlines for completion of mine clearance.

However, it should also be noted that the 2005 total of $376 million is the second highest annual total ever recorded, and is $37 million (10.9 percent) more than two years ago (2003). The decrease in 2005 comes on the heels of increases of 37 percent in 2002, 5 percent in 2003 and 18 percent in 2004.

Donor Contributions in 2005

The biggest contributors to global mine action in 2005 were the United States ($81.9 million), the European Commission ($51.5 million), Japan ($39.3 million), Norway ($36.5 million), the United Kingdom ($21.4 million), Germany ($21.1 million), Canada ($20.5 million) and the Netherlands ($19.3 million).

Of the 20 most significant donors, half increased their mine action contributions in 2005 in terms of national currency, and half provided less. Those with increases were: Slovakia (114 percent); France (103 percent); Australia (50 percent); Italy (44 percent); Germany (13 percent); United Kingdom (6.3 percent); Sweden (4.9 percent); Switzerland (2 percent); Norway (1.2 percent); and the Netherlands (0.2 percent).

Those with the decreases in terms of national currency were: New Zealand (65 percent); Ireland (32 percent); Belgium (30 percent); Austria (25 percent); European Commission (22 percent); Denmark (18 percent); US (15 percent); Canada (9 percent); Japan (7 percent); and Finland (2 percent).

Donors that increased their contribution by at least $1 million included: Slovakia ($3.7 million); Australia ($3.2 million); Germany ($2.4 million); Norway ($2 million); France ($1.9 million); Italy ($1.3 million); Switzerland ($1.2 million); and United Kingdom ($1 million).

Donors that decreased their contribution by at least $1 million included: European Commission ($14.9 million); US ($14.6 million); Japan ($3.5 million); Denmark ($2.4 million); Canada ($2.1 million); Belgium ($1.7 million); and New Zealand ($1.6 million). In terms of mine action funding on a per capita basis, the largest country donors were: Norway ($7.90 per capita); Iceland ($5.08 per capita); Luxembourg ($2.84 per capita); and Denmark ($2.09 per capita). Switzerland, Slovakia, Sweden, the Netherlands and Finland also had mine action contributions in excess of $1 per capita.

In terms of mine action funding as a percentage of gross national income (GNI), the largest country donors were: Slovakia (0.017 percent); Norway (0.013 percent); and Iceland (0.011 percent). These were the only three countries to contribute over one one-hundredth of their gross national income to mine action in 2005. The next largest donors on a GNI basis were Denmark, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Sweden, Finland, and Switzerland.

Additional Mine Action-Related Funding in 2005

The $376 million total for donor countries does not capture all global spending related to mine action in 2005. Other types of spending on and contributions to mine action that are not part of that total include research and development (R&D), some victim assistance funding and in-kind contributions, funding by NGOs and the private sector, UN peacekeeping funds, and funding by mine-affected countries of their own mine action programs.

As in past years, Landmine Monitor has not included funds for research and development into demining technologies and equipment in this total, and has instead listed available R&D funding separately; in 2005, R&D funding totaled at least $30 million (See R&D section below).

Funding for mine victim assistance programs is included where possible, but for some major donors, victim assistance funding cannot be separated out from other non-landmine-specific programs.

In some cases, donors do not report the monetary value of in-kind (as opposed to cash) contributions.

Mine action funding provided by NGOs and the private sector is not explicitly included, in part in order to avoid double counting when an NGO receives funds from a government donor. Landmine Monitor has not been able to gather extensive information on NGO and private sector funding, but some examples in 2005 include: Adopt-a-Minefield (USA) contributed $3.7 million for mine action in nine countries; the Diana, Princess of Wales Memorial Fund (UK) contributed over $3 million to mine action for three countries and two NGOs; Landmine Survivors Network (US) reported receiving private contributions totaling $800,000; the Humpty Dumpty Institute (US) raised $770,000 for mine clearance in Angola through the sale of surplus milk in a public-private partnership with the US Department of Agriculture’s Food Aid Program; and NGO members of ActionLandmine.de (Germany) contributed more than $300,000 to mine action.

Contributions from UN peacekeeping assessed budgets for mine action are not included in the global total. UNMAS reported securing over $24.3 million for mine action through UN peacekeeping funding in calendar year 2005; these funds primarily covered the costs of mine action conducted in conjunction with peacekeeping operations mandated by the Security Council in Burundi, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia/Eritrea, Lebanon and Sudan.[110]

Finally, and most importantly, the contributions to mine action by the mine-affected countries themselves are not part of the $376 million donor total. Many mine-affected countries do not make information available on their mine action expenditures, so that Landmine Monitor has not been able to develop an accurate global accounting. The total funding by mine-affected states amounts to tens of millions of dollars each year. Following are some examples of contributions by mine-affected countries in 2005, drawn from this year’s Landmine Monitor country reports; these eight mine-affected countries provided nearly $50 million in 2005.

  • Croatia provided KN192,769,625 ($32.4 million), or 57 percent of its total mine action expenditures. Croatia’s 2005 contribution comes to more than 0.09 percent of its gross national income, or more than five times the highest international donor contribution measured as a percentage of GNI.
  • In Bosnia and Herzegovina, national sources (including the Council of Ministers, entity governments and cantons) provided KM17,753,131 ($11.3 million), about 44 percent of its total mine action expenditures, an increase from 30 percent in 2004; this continued the trend of increasing national contributions since 2002.
  • Mozambique provided 52.9 billion Meticais ($2.3 million), compared to 178 billion Meticais ($7.9 million) in 2004; contributions were partly in-kind and tax-exemptions.
  • Azerbaijan contributed AZM3,498,623,400 ($740,120), an increase from $255,000 in 2004.
  • Chile provided $680,217 for the National Demining Commission budget, compared to $154,086 in 2004.
  • Thailand contributed Baht 18.21 million ($452,400) to the national mine action center, less than half the Baht 38.21 million (about $950,000) provided the previous fiscal year.[111]
  • Chad provided $367,790 for national mine action in 2005.[112 ]
  • The Colombian government approved COP571 million (about $213,400) for the national mine action program for the period July 2005 to June 2006, compared to COP2.5 billion (about $934,100) for the period July 2004 to June 2005.

In addition, in 2006, Jordan reported that it contributes $3.5 million annually to its national demining program. In 2005, Lebanon reported that it makes an annual contribution of in-kind and other support to mine action valued at approximately $4 million. In 2005, Cyprus estimated that it provides €170,000 ($211,000) annually for mine clearance and stockpile destruction. In 2004, the Nicaraguan Minister of Defense reported that Nicaragua provides 16 million Córdobas (about $1 million) each year to the member institutions of the National Demining Committee.

Mine-affected States Parties to the Mine Ban Treaty previously reported national mine action contributions totaling $190 million from 1997-2003, and for 2004 Landmine Monitor identified about $57.5 million in contributions from the seven states with available information, including $4 million by Ethiopia and $3.5 million by Yemen.

Funding, Cooperation, and the Mine Ban Treaty

Article 6 of the Mine Ban Treaty contains mine action cooperation obligations for States Parties. Furthermore, under the Nairobi Action Plan 2005-2009, States Parties agreed they will ensure the sustainability of their commitments, including providing where possible multi-year funding to facilitate long-term planning of mine action and victim assistance programs (Action #45); they agreed, where relevant, to urge the UN, regional organizations, and the World Bank, regional development banks and financial institutions to support States Parties requiring assistance in fulfilling their treaty obligations (Action #48); and they agreed to pursue efforts to identify new and non-traditional sources of support, technical, material or financial (Action #50).[113]

Donor Funding Policy and the Mine Ban Treaty

Some donor states stipulate specifically that their mine action funding should be directed with strong preference to States Parties to the Mine Ban Treaty. Donor states which have expressed this as a policy position include Canada, Germany and the Netherlands. The EC lists “proven commitment of non-States Parties to mine action and the principles of the Mine Ban Treaty” as funding criteria, rather than State Party status, but the EC has also indicated that adherence to the Mine Ban Treaty influences its decision on mine action funding.

Donor Coordination

Several donor bodies exist which facilitate the coordination of mine action resources. The Mine Action Support Group (MASG), chaired by Switzerland in 2005 and by the US in 2006, consists of 27 donors. MASG usually meets three times a year and produces a regular newsletter which has contained some information regarding mine action funding. The Steering Committee on Mine Action, chaired by UNMAS’s director, includes representation by 24 donor states, and meets bi-annually. The Mine Ban Treaty’s Resource Mobilization Contact Group (RMCG), led by Norway, was established with the intention of securing sustainable funding and promoting cost-efficient and effective mine action. A prominent issue for the RMCG during the reporting period was identifying the specific needs of States Parties which require assistance to meet Article 5 mine clearance deadlines.

Integrating Mine Action Funding into Development Programming

In 2006, the Contact Group on Mine Action and Development was initiated by Canada to address issues regarding the mainstreaming of mine action into the development sector, complementary to the work of the RMCG. In 2005, two meetings were held on the topic of integrating mine action into development programming; these meetings were attended by the ICBL and other NGOs, as well as by States Parties. The First Informal Dialogue Meeting on Mainstreaming Mine Action in Development was co-sponsored by Canada and the GICHD in June 2005. Fourteen donor states, the European Commission and various international agencies attended. The Second Informal Dialogue Meeting on Linking Mine Action to Development was held 5-6 December 2005, after the Sixth Meeting of States Parties in Zagreb. The dialogues were linked to Actions #40 to #50 of the Nairobi Action Plan, addressing mine action in the context of development processes, “rather than to be solely labelled as an element of humanitarian assistance.”[114 ]

Proponents see the integration of mine action into development funding as a means of providing long-term stability for mine action funding, and of preventing any future decline in mine action contributions due to “donor fatigue,” by expanding the channels for funding within donor states own official development assistance agencies and by better utilizing other existing funding mechanisms such as the World Bank, regional development banks and trust fund facilities. Canada, the leading proponent among States Parties, has stated that integration of mine action into development programming need not be a single track solution, and that mine action can be integrated into development programs in addition to donors providing dedicated mine action funding.[115 ]

Some have expressed concerns about mainstreaming (or integrating). Ambassador Martin Dahinden, speaking as the outgoing director of the GICHD in 2004, warned that Article 6 of the Mine Ban Treaty, compelling States Parties to offer cooperation assistance, “would have a less prominent role” should mine action funding be integrated into broader development spending.[116 ]Others have noted the approach may inadvertently jeopardize the security of mine action resources, make mine action operators compete for limited international aid resources distributed according to often-changing geopolitical interests, and diminish the significant influence that civil society has had in promoting substantial mine action funding. A report for UNDP by the International Peace Research Institute (PRIO) in Norway concluded “that there is little mine action expertise in development departments and vice versa a lack of development expertise within mine action management.”[117 ]

Although many States Parties mention development in statements regarding their funding policies, there has not been substantial movement toward implementation of the development integration approach. Following are some of the views expressed and actions taken by States Parties.

The Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) is putting in place an approach that will promote integration of mine action in its regular programs. The Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade is working to include mine action into its peace and security programming. Within the department, the Mine Action Unit is pursuing the integration of mine action into humanitarian, development and civil society programming frameworks in affected countries. CIDA has promoted development mainstreaming at meetings of States Parties to the Mine Ban Treaty.[118]

The UK’s Department for International Development (DfID) planned a review in mid-2006 of its mine action funding policy; this was expected to recommend continued integration of mine action into broader development programs and the security sector, in line with DfID’s policy change in 2004.[119 ]

The Netherlands expects to mainstream mine action into peace-building and security/stability sectors, rather than development.[120]

Funding Channels

A considerable portion of mine action funding reported by donors is channeled through third-party funding mechanisms. In 2005, trust funds reported receiving at least $113.4 million in mine action funding, representing the equivalent of 30 percent of the total donor reported contributions. Trust funds can provide coordination between donors and implementing agencies and can use multiple funding sources to sustain ongoing programs.

  • The UN Voluntary Trust Fund for Assistance in Mine Action (VTF), operated by UNMAS, received total donor contributions of about $50 million including core and multi-year funding in 2005. Funding was received for mine action in six countries in 2005: Afghanistan, Burundi, Democratic Republic of Congo, Eritrea, Lebanon and Sudan. UNMAS was also active in securing peacekeeping funding for mine action from the UN.
  • The UNDP Thematic Trust Fund for Crisis Prevention and Recovery reported receiving contributions totaling about $33.7 million for mine action in 14 countries in 2005. UNDP also funds its mine action programs through locally administered cost-sharing agreements and trust funds with UNDP country offices. 
  • The UN Development Group (UNDG) Iraq Trust Fund is part of the International Reconstruction Fund Facility for Iraq. In 2005, the UNDG Iraq Trust Fund received $1 million in mine action funding from the Republic of Korea. In February 2006, Greece contributed €1.9 million ($2.4 million) to mine action in Iraq through the fund.
  • In 2006, the UN Trust Fund for Human Security (UNTFHS) began to direct funding to mine action for the first time since its inception in 1999, channeling more than $1.7 million to mine action in Sudan. UNTFHS is currently a single donor trust fund that receives contributions exclusively from Japan.[121 ]
  • The International Trust Fund for Demining and Mine Victims Assistance (ITF) based in Slovenia received $27.8 million from 13 governments, the EC, UNDP, local authorities, government agencies, and private donors in 2005. Funding was directed to mine action in southeastern Europe and the Caucasus, principally Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Serbia and Montenegro and its province of Kosovo, as well as Azerbaijan. The ITF has an arrangement whereby the US provides matching funds for donations to mine action in southeastern Europe.
  • The NATO Partnership for Peace (PfP) Trust Fund assists NATO partner countries to fulfill their stockpile destruction obligations under the Mine Ban Treaty. In 2005, the Partnership for Peace Trust Fund reported receiving a total of €854,000 (over $1 million) from five countries for antipersonnel mine stockpile destruction in Serbia and Montenegro.[122 ]

Funding as reported by donors often differs from that reported by trust funds due to a number of factors, including varying fiscal years. In 2005, trust funds reported contributions by at least three donors which were not identified from direct donor reporting: Andorra, $25,522 to the UN VTF for core funding; Portugal, $16,000 to the UN VTF for Sudan; and Hungary, €40,000 ($49,796) to NATO PfP for Serbia and Montenegro.

Mine Action Donors

Unless otherwise noted, figures are in US dollars.[123 ]Totals include victim assistance funding where this is known, and do not include funds for research and development, which is identified separately where known.

Donor Mine Action Funding by Year

1992-2005
$2.9 billion
2005
$376 million
2004
$399 million
2003
$339 million
2002
$324 million
2001
$237 million
2000
$243 million
1999
$219 million
1998
$187 million (incl. an estimated $9 m.)
1997
$139 million (incl. an estimated $35 m.)
1996
$132 million (incl. an estimated $34 m.)
1992-95
$258 million (incl. an estimated $41 m.)

 

The 1992-2005 total includes $50 million contributed by United Arab Emirates to Lebanon 2002-2004, but individual year totals are not known.

Donor Mine Action Funding 1992-2005: $2.9 billion

United States
$708.3 million
European Commission
$422.6 million
Norway
$255.6 million
Japan
$217.3 million
United Kingdom
$175.3 million
Canada
$148.1 million
Germany
$144 million
Netherlands
$133.9 million
Sweden
$126.6 million
Denmark
$109.8 million
Switzerland
$79.9 million
Australia
$75.1 million
Italy
$56.5 million
Finland
$52 million
United Arab Emirates
$50 million
Belgium
$31.5 million
France
$28.6 million
Ireland
$16.3 million
Austria
$16.2 million
New Zealand
$12.4 million
Slovakia
$10.9 million
Spain
$10.1 million
Greece
$9.6 million
Other countries
$32.5 million

 

The total of $32.5 million for other countries includes China ($6.2 million), Luxembourg ($5.9 million), South Korea ($5.2 million), Slovenia ($3.8 million), Saudi Arabia ($3 million), Iceland ($2.8 million), Czech Republic ($2.1 million), Poland ($2 million), and $1.5 million for other donors including Brazil, Hungary, Liechtenstein, Monaco, Portugal, South Africa, and others for lesser amounts.

Donor Mine Action Funding for 2005: $376 million[124]

United States
$81.9 million
European Commission
$51.5 million
Japan
$39.3 million
Norway
$36.5 million
United Kingdom
$21.4 million
Germany
$21.1 million
Canada
$20.5 million
Netherlands
$19.3 million
Switzerland
$12.1 million
Sweden
$11.7 million
Denmark
$11.3 million
Australia
$8.9 million
Slovakia
$7.2 million
Finland
$5.9 million
Italy
$4.5 million
Belgium
$4 million
France
$3.8 million
Austria
$2.2 million
Ireland
$2.2 million
Poland
$2 million
Spain
$1.9 million
Iceland
$1.5 million
Czech Republic
$1.4 million
Luxembourg
$1.3 million
South Korea
$1.1 million
New Zealand
$0.9 million
Slovenia
$0.4 million

 

Mine action funding was reported by the European Commission and 18 of the 25 European Union member states, which taken together totaled $187 million of funding identified by Landmine Monitor.[125]

Mine Action Funding per capita in 2005[126]

Norway
$7.90
Iceland
$5.08
Luxembourg
$2.84
Denmark
$2.09
Switzerland
$1.63
Slovakia
$1.34
Sweden
$1.30
Netherlands
$1.18
Finland
$1.12
Canada
$0.64
Ireland
$0.53
Australia
$0.44
Belgium
$0.38
United Kingdom
$0.36
Japan
$0.31
United States
$0.28
Austria
$0.27
Germany
$0.26
New Zealand
$0.22
Slovenia
$0.19
Czech Republic
$0.14
Italy
$0.08
France
$0.06
Poland
$0.05
Spain
$0.04
South Korea
$0.02

 

Mine Action Funding in 2005 as a percentage of Gross National Income[127]

Slovakia
0.0168%
Norway
0.0133%
Iceland
0.0110%
Denmark
0.0044%
Luxembourg
0.0043%
Netherlands
0.0032%
Sweden
0.0032%
Finland
0.0030%
Switzerland
0.0030%
Canada
0.0019%
Australia
0.0014%
Ireland
0.0013%
Czech Republic
0.0013%
Slovenia
0.0011%
Belgium
0.0011%
United Kingdom
0.0009%
New Zealand
0.0008%
Japan
0.0008%
Germany
0.0007%
Poland
0.0007%
Austria
0.0007%
United States
0.0006%
Italy
0.0003%
France
0.0002%
Spain
0.0002%
South Korea
0.0001%

 

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA — $708.3 million

2005
$81.9 million
2004
$96.5 million
2003
$80.6 million
2002
$73.8 million
2001
$69.2 million
2000
$82.4 million
1999
$63.1 million
1998
$44.9 million
1997
$30.8 million
1996
$29.8 million
1995
$29.2 million
1994
$15.9 million
1993
$10.2 million
  • Figures do not include mine victim assistance funding; funding for war victims programs totaled an additional $14.4 million in fiscal year 2005.
  • R&D totaled an additional $13.15 million in fiscal year 2005, $12.8 million in fiscal year 2004, and $146 million for fiscal years 1995-2005.
  • See United States country report for more details of US mine action funding.

EUROPEAN COMMISSION — $422.6 million

2005
$51.5 million (€41.3 million)[128]
2004
$66.4 million (€53.4 million)[129]
2003
$64.5 million (€57 million)
2002
$38.7 million (€40.7 million)
2001
$23.5 million (€26.1 million)
2000
$14.3 million (€15.9 million)
1999
$15.5 million (€17.3 million)
1998
$21.4 million (€23.8 million)
1992-1997
$126.8 million (€141.2 million)
  • Figures do not include additional mine action funding by individual European Union Member States.
  • EC R&D funding totaled an additional €1,090,000 ($1,356,941) in 2005, €460,000 ($572,148) in 2004, and €51 million from 1992-2005.

The European Commission allocated some €41,337,001 ($51,460,332) to mine action in 2005. This was a significant decrease from €53.4 million ($66.4 million) in 2004. In 2005, the EC provided mine action funding to 17 countries, compared to 21 countries in 2004. The total for 2005 includes allocations of multi-year funding, some of which was to be dispersed in 2006. The total also includes an allocation of €3 million ($3.7 million) for a tender for stockpile destruction in Belarus which had not been dispersed as of June 2006. Countries receiving EC funding in 2005 but not 2004 included Albania, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Burundi, Chile, Ecuador and Peru. Those receiving EC funding in 2004 but not 2005 included Bosnia and Herzegovina, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kyrgyzstan, Mozambique, Somalia/Somaliland and Tajikistan.

NORWAY — $255.6 million

2005
$36.5 million (NOK235 million)[130]
2004
$34.3 million (NOK231.2 million)
2003
$28.6 million (NOK202.4 million)
2002
$25.4 million (NOK202.9 million)
2001
$20 million (NOK176.9 million)
2000
$19.5 million (NOK178.6 million)
1999
$21.5 million (NOK185 million)
1998
$24 million
1997
$16.7 million (NOK125 million)
1996
$13.5 million (NOK101 million)
1995
$11.6 million (NOK87 million)
1994
$4.0 million (NOK30 million)
  • Additionally, R&D totaled NOK3,983,375 ($618,421) in 2005, and NOK2,250,000 ($333,833) in 2004; previous Norwegian expenditures on R&D are not known.

Norway provided NOK235,020,163 ($36,487,015) in 2005, its highest funding contribution to date. Norway contributed mine action funding to 18 countries in 2005, compared to 16 countries in 2004. Victim assistance support totaled at least NOK40,227,963 ($6,245,414) in 2005, slightly less than in 2004.

JAPAN — $217.3 million

2005
$39.3 million (¥4,323 million)[131]
2004
$42.8 million (¥4,630 million)
2003
$13 million (¥1,590 million)
2002
$49.7 million (¥5,537 million)
2001
$7.5 million (¥802 million)
2000
$12.7 million (¥1,480 million)
1999
$16 million (¥1,904 million)
1998
$6.3 million (¥722 million)
Pre-1998
approx. $30 million
  • R&D totaled ¥811 million ($7.4 million) in 2005,[132 ]¥795 million ($7.35 million) in 2004, and ¥2,366 million ($21 million) from 1999 to 2005.

In 2005, Japan contributed ¥4,323 million ($39.26 million), less than the ¥4,630 million ($42.8 million) contributed in 2004.[133 ]Almost half of Japan’s 2005 mine action funding, ¥2,100 million ($19 million), was allocated to Sudan. In 2005, Japan provided victim assistance funding of ¥112,825,790 ($1,024,664) or 2.6 percent of total spending, an increase from ¥53.3 million in 2004.

UNITED KINGDOM[134 ]— $175.3 million

2005-2006
$21.4 million (£11.8 million)
2004-2005
$20.4 million (£11.1million)
2003-2004
$20 million (£12.3 million)
2002-2003
$18.5 million (£12.5 million)
2001-2002
$15.4 million (£10.7 million)
2000-2001
$21.5 million (£15 million)
1999-2000
$20.4 million (£13.6 million)
1998-1999
$6.5 million (£4.6 million)
1997-1998
$6.6 million (£4.6 million)
1996
$6.3 million
1995
$6.9 million
1994
$6.3 million
1993
$5.1 million
  • Figures do not include victim assistance funding.
  • Additionally, R&D totaled £1,777,563 ($3,235,165) in 2005-2006, £1.2 million ($2.2 million) in 2004-2005, and £8.9 million ($14.6 million) from 1999-2000 to 2005-2006.

UK funding of £11,758,747 ($21,400,920) in fiscal year 2005-2006 represented an increase from an upwardly adjusted 2004-2005 total of £11,137,178 ($20,414,447). In 2005-2006, the DfID reported mine action funding for 10 states, Somaliland and seven organizations totaling £9,225,924 (16,791,182). The UK Ministry of Defence provided £2,379,823 ($4,331,278) to the International Mine Action Training Centre (IMATC) in Kenya, and the Handicap International Phoenix project in Kosovo received £153,000 ($278,460) through the Global Conflict Prevention Pool. The UK continued its funding support for UNMAS and UNICEF, but did not report core funding to UNDP in 2005-2006.

CANADA — $148.1 million[135 ]

2005
$20.5 million (C$24.8 million)[136]
2004
$22.6 million (C$29.5 million)
2003
$22.5 million (C$30.8 million)
2002
$15.1 million (C$22.3 million)
2001
$15.5 million (C$24 million)
2000
$11.9 million (C$17.7 million)
1999
$15.2 million (C$23.5 million)
1998
$9.5 million
1997
$3.0 million (C$4.6 million)
1996
$4.0 million (C$6 million)
1995
$1.5 million (C$2.2 million)
1994
$2.9 million (C$4.4 million)
1993
$2.2 million (C$3.4 million)
1989
$1.7 million (C$2.5 million)
  • Additionally, R&D totaled C$3.4 million ($2.8 million) in 2005, C$3.1 million ($2.4 million) in 2004, and US$16.3 million from 1998-2005.

Canada provided C$24,799,163 ($20,469,800) in fiscal year 2005-2006, a decrease from C$29.5 million ($22.6 million) the previous year. Canada provided funding to 31 countries and areas (five less than the previous year), as well as regional bodies, UN agencies, NGOs, ICRC and GICHD. Canada increased support to mine clearance from $3.5 million to $6.4 million, but decreased funding for victim assistance from $2 million to $1.6 million and for mine risk education from $1.1 million to about $562,000.

GERMANY — $144 million

2005
$21.1 million (€17 million)[137]
2004
$18.7 million (€15 million)
2003
$22.1 million (€19.5 million)
2002
$19.4 million (€20.4 million)
2001
$12.3 million (DM26.8 million, €13.7 million)
2000
$14.5 million (DM27.6 million)
1999
$11.4 million (DM21.7 million)
1998
$10.1 million
1997
$4.9 million
1996
$7.9 million
1995
$0.8 million
1994
$0.5 million
1993
$0.3 million
  • R&D: no funding was identified in 2005; 2004: €102,989 ($128,098); figures not available for 2000-2003; 1993-1999: $5.1 million.

Germany’s funding for mine action totaled €16,972,295 ($21,128,810) in 2005, an increase from €15 million ($18.7 million) in 2004. In 2005, Germany provided funding to 20 countries and regions, two more than in 2004. Those receiving funding in 2005 but not in 2004 included Bosnia and Herzegovina, Colombia, Democratic Republic of Congo, Jordan, Somalia/Somaliland, and Uganda. Countries receiving funding in 2004 but not in 2005 included Burundi and Egypt. Germany funded UNICEF activities in the Caucasus in both years. The vast majority of German mine action funding was directed to mine clearance. In May 2006, Germany stated that it no longer funds research and development activities and, in preference, focuses funding on mine clearance.[138]

THE NETHERLANDS — $133.9 million[139]

2005
$19.3 million (€15.5 million)[140]
2004
$19.3 million (€15.5 million)
2003
$12.1 million
2002
$16 million
2001
$13.9 million (Dfl 32 million, €15.5 million)
2000
$14.2 million (Dfl 35.4 million)
1999
$8.9 million (Dfl 23 million)
1998
$9.3 million
1997
$10.2 million
1996
$10.7 million

The Netherlands contributed €15,521,772 ($19,323,054) to mine action in 2005, a comparable amount to €15,494,919 ($19.3 million) in 2004. In 2005, the Netherlands provided funding to 10 countries, as well as Abkhazia, Kosovo, Nagorno-Karabakh and Somaliland. Activities labeled as mine clearance/mine risk education received €11,812,619 or 76 percent of total funding; capacity-building €2,758,002 or 18 percent; advocacy €277,203 or about 2 percent; and victim assistance received €542,893 or about 3 percent, with the remaining €131,555 going to activities including MRE. The annual mine action budget of €12.6 million ($15.7 million) for 2005 was overspent. The Netherlands expects funding to be at the level of €12.6 million for the coming few years.

SWEDEN — $126.6 million

2005
$11.7 million (SEK87.6 million)[141 ]disbursed
2004
$11.4 million (SEK83.5 million) disbursed
2003
$12.7 million (SEK102.9 million) disbursed
2002
$7.3 million (SEK71 million) disbursed
2001
$9.8 million (SEK100.9 million) disbursed
2000
$11.8 million (SEK107.9 million) disbursed
1999
$9.8 million (SEK83.3 million) disbursed
1998
$16.6 million (SEK129.5 million) allocated
1997
$11.9 million allocated
1996
$10.4 million allocated
1995
$5.1 million allocated
1994
$2.6 million allocated
1990-93
$5.5 million allocated
  • Figures do not include victim assistance funding.
  • Sweden has in the past funded a number of R&D programs (approximately $24 million in 1994-1999 and $1.7 million in 2003), but the total value for 2005 is not known.

In 2005, Sweden’s mine action contribution totaled SEK87,554,890 ($11,719,300), an increase from SEK83.5 million ($11.4 million) in 2004. Sweden provided mine action funding to three countries in 2005 that had not received funding in 2004: Bosnia and Herzegovina, Democratic Republic of Congo and the Philippines. Sweden did not fund mine action in Mozambique in 2005, and decreased funding for Cambodia (from SEK12 million to SEK3.8 million) and Nicaragua (from SEK6.6 million to SEK3.2 million). Sweden continued its support to UNMAS in 2005.

DENMARK — $109.8 million

2005
$11.3 million (DKK67.7 million)[142 ]
2004
$13.7 million (DKK82.3 million)
2003
$11.9 million (DKK78.6 million)
2002
$10.6 million (DKK83.5 million)
2001
$14.4 million (DKK119.4 million)
2000
$13.4 million (DKK106.7 million)
1999
$7 million (DKK49.9 million)
1998
$6.2 million (DKK44.3 million)
1997
$5.4 million (DKK38.6 million)
1996
$8 million (DKK57 million)
1995
$2.3 million
1994
$2.0 million
1993
$1.7 million
1992
$1.9 million
  • Figures for 1992-1995 do not include bilateral contributions.
  • Denmark reported providing funding of DKK250,000 ($41,699) to the Nordic Demining Research Forum for research and development in 2005.[143 ]It has funded other R&D programs in the past, but the value is not known.
  • See Denmark country report for more details on mine action funding.

SWITZERLAND — $79.9 million

2005
$12.1 million[144 ](CHF15.1 million)
2004
$10.9 million (CHF14.8 million)
2003
$8.8 million
2002
$8.3 million
2001
$9.8 million
2000
$7.4 million
1999
$5.7 million
1998
unknown
1997
$4.0 million
1996
$2.6 million
1995
$4.1 million
1994
$3.5 million
1993
$2.7 million
  • The totals since 2000 include significant funds for the Geneva International Centre for Humanitarian Demining (GICHD), most of which could be counted as R&D funding, but Landmine Monitor has not identified specific R&D amounts. Swiss funding for the GICHD totaled $6.4 million in 2005, $6.1 million in 2004, $5.23 million in 2003, $4.35 million in 2002, $3.3 million in 2001, and $2.3 million in 2000, totaling some $27.7 million from 2000-2005.

Switzerland provided CHF15,094,000 ($12,114,937) in 2005, an increase from CHF14.8 million ($10.9 million) in 2004. The 2005 total included CHF8 million ($6.4 million) for the GICHD and CHF7,094,000 ($5.7 million) for other mine action activities; non-GICHD spending totaled CHF6.7 million ($4.8 million) in 2004. In 2005, Switzerland contributed mine action funding to 13 countries, two less than in 2004. Countries receiving funding in 2005 which did not receive contributions in 2004 were Bosnia and Herzegovina, Democratic Republic of Congo, Iraq and Vietnam. Those receiving funds in 2004 but not 2005 included Albania, Chad, Georgia, Somalia and Yemen. The 2005 total includes an estimate of CHF2 million ($1,605,265) for in-kind contributions of nine Ministry of Defense staff for mine action activities in Afghanistan, Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Chad, Eritrea, Lebanon and Sri Lanka, as well as staff and equipment in Sudan. Switzerland reported victim assistance funding of CHF1,125,000 ($902,962), including CHF300,000 ($240,790) as “victim assistance—support to MBT.”

AUSTRALIA — $75.1 million

2005-2006
$8.9 million (A$11.7 million)[145]
2004-2005
$5.7 million (A$7.8 million)[146]
2003-2004
$5.5 million (A$8.2 million)
2002-2003
$7.8 million (A$14.5 million)
2001-2002
$6.6 million (A$12.9 million)
2000-2001
$7.3 million (A$12.6 million)
1999-2000
$7.9 million (A$12.4 million)
1998-1999
$6.8 million (A$11.1 million)
1997-1998
$7.3 million (A$9.9 million)
1996-1997
$5.8 million (A$7.5 million)
1995-1996
$5.5 million (A$7.5 million)
  • Australia has funded a number of R&D programs in the past, but the total value is not known.

Australia contributed A$11,666,422 ($8,897,980) to mine action for its fiscal year July 2005-June 2006, an increase of some 50 percent from the A$7,756,101 ($5.7 million) provided in 2004-2005, and the largest amount in three years. Australia has pledged mine action funding of A$75 million for the period 2005-2009, with priority for heavily mine-affected countries in the Asia-Pacific region. In FY 2005-2006, Australian contributions were directed to seven countries, compared to three the previous year, with Afghanistan, Burma, Laos and Sudan receiving support, in addition to Cambodia, Sri Lanka and Vietnam. Victim assistance activities received A$3,244,192 ($2,474,345) in 2005-2006, including significant contributions to ICRC for the Special Appeal for Mine Action 2006 and the Special Fund for The Disabled 2006.

ITALY — $56.5 million

2005
$4.5 million (€3.6 million)[147]
2004
$3.2 million (€2.5 million)
2003
$5.8 million (€5.1 million)
2002
$8.7 million (€9.9 million)
2001
$5.1 million (L11.2 billion, €5.6 million)
2000
$1.6 million (L4.3 billion, €1.7 million)
1999
$5.1 million (L13.9 billion, €4.8 million)
1998
$12 million (L20 billion)
1995-97
$10.5 million (L18 billion)
  • Italy has also funded a number of R&D programs, but the total value is not known.

Italy contributed €3,583,600 ($4,461,224) to mine action activities in 2005, a greater amount than €2,539,500 ($3,158,630) in 2004. Italy provided funding to fewer countries, six in 2005 compared to nine in 2004. Iraq and Mozambique received funding from Italy in 2005, but not in 2004. Countries which did not receive contributions in 2005 but had the previous year were Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, Croatia, Eritrea and Tajikistan. Italy also continued to contribute to mine action in the Americas with funding to the OAS in 2005. Funding for Sudan increased to €1,522,500 ($1,895,360) in 2005 from €200,000 ($248,760) in 2004.[148]

FINLAND — $52 million

2005
$5.9 million (€4.7million)[149]
2004
$6 million (€4.8 million)
2003
$6.3 million (€5.6 million)
2002
$4.5 million (€4.8 million)
2001
$4.5 million (€5 million)
2000
$4.8 million
1999
$5.7 million
1998
$6.6 million
1997
$4.5 million
1996
$1.3 million
1995
$0.7 million
1991-94
$1.3 million
  • See Finland country report for more details of Finland’s mine action funding.

UNITED ARAB EMIRATES — $50 million

The United Arab Emirates has reported that it provided $50 million to mine action in Lebanon from 2002-2004 under Operation Emirates Solidarity.[150 ]The precise year-by-year breakdown of expenditures is not available. The UAE dispersed $3,332,751 for Lebanon through the UN Voluntary Trust Fund in 2002-2005, including $310,000 for follow-up activities to the Operation Emirates Solidarity in 2005; presumably this is also part of the multi-year allocation of $50 million.[151]

BELGIUM — $31.5 million

2005
$4 million (€3.2 million)[152]
2004
$5.7 million (€4.6 million)
2003
$6.2 million (€5.5 million)
2002
$3.6 million (€3.8 million)
2001
$2.1 million (€2.2 million)
2000
$2.5 million (BEF111 million)
1999
$2.3 million (BEF93 million)
1994-1998
$5.1 million
  • R&D totaled €456,314 ($568,065) in 2005, €1,090,215 ($1.36 million) in 2004, and $9.8 million from 1994-2005. In addition, multi-year R&D funding of €905,960 ($1,127,830) was contributed by the regional Flanders Government in 2005 for the APOPO project.

Belgium contributed €3,201,918 ($3,986,068), to mine action activities in 2005, including significant in-kind contributions. Belgium contributed €4,547,878 ($5,656,651) in 2004. In 2005, Belgium provided mine action funding and assistance to 10 countries and Kosovo, twice as many countries as the previous year. Countries receiving funding and assistance in 2005 but not in 2004 included Angola, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Burundi, Indonesia, Iraq and Liberia. Funding for ICRC was not reported for 2005, but totaled €2 million ($2.5 million) or 35 percent of total funding in 2004, which more than accounts for the 30 percent decrease in total funding for 2005.

FRANCE — $28.6 million

2005
$3.8 million (€3.1 million)[153]
2004
$1.9 million (€1.5 million)
2003
$2.5 million (€2.2 million)
2002
$3.6 million (€3.8 million)
2001
$2.7 million (€3 million)
2000
$1.2 million
1999
$0.9 million
1995-98
$12 million
  • R&D spending was not reported for 2005. In 2004, R&D contributions totaled €1.4 million ($2.2 million).

France reported mine action funding of €3,055,000 ($3,803,170) in 2005.[154 ]This was more than double the 2004 total of €1,523,845 (about $1.9 million). Funding was provided to six countries in 2005 (compared to 15 countries in 2004): Albania, Angola, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Mozambique and Yemen. Funding to victim assistance totaled €820,000 ($1,020,818) in 2005, or some 27 percent of total funding. France has reported that it contributes between 17 and 25 percent of EC funding to mine action projects through various channels.[155 ]

IRELAND — $16.3 million

2005
$2.2 million (€ 1.7 million)[156]
2004
$3 million (€2.4 million)
2003
$2.3 million (€2 million)
2002
$1.6 million (€1.7 million)
2001
$2 million (€2.2 million)
2000
$1.1 million
1999
$1.5 million
1994-1998
$2.6 million

Ireland contributed €1,740,000 ($2,166,126) for mine action in 2005, compared to €2,427,000 ($3,018,703) in 2004. In 2005, Ireland provided funding to four countries: Afghanistan, Angola, Eritrea and Somalia. Victim assistance funding of €200,000 ($248,980) was provided to Angola in 2005; no victim assistance funding was given in 2004.

AUSTRIA — $16.2 million

2005
$2.2 million (€1.8 million) [157]
2004
$3 million (€2.4 million)
2003
$0.9 million (€0.8 million)
2002
$2 million (€2.1 million)
2001
$0.9 million (ATS13.7 million)
2000
$2 million (ATS30 million)
1999
$1 million (ATS15 million)
1994-1998
$4.2 million

Austria provided €1,766,752 ($2,199,430) in 2005. This was a decrease from €2.4 million ($3 million) in 2004, which marked the highest level for Austrian mine action funding. Austrian contributions benefited seven countries in 2005, as in 2004. The only countries to receive funding from Austria in both 2005 and 2004 were Croatia and Mozambique. Countries to receive funding in 2005 but not in 2004 included Bosnia and Herzegovina, Nicaragua, Serbia and Montenegro and Sri Lanka. Victim assistance contributions included funding to ICRC and to a regional program for East Africa. Austria has reported that in addition to bilateral mine action funding, it provides approximately 2.2 percent of overall EC development aid expenditures, which include mine action contributions.[158]

NEW ZEALAND — $12.4 million

2005/06
$0.9 million (NZ$1.3 million)[159]
2004/05
$2.5 million (NZ$3.7 million)
2003/04
$1.1 million (NZ$1.6 million)
2002/03
$0.8 million (NZ$1.4 million)
2001/02
$0.7 million (NZ$1.7 million)
2000/01
$1.1 million (NZ$2.3 million)
1999/00
$0.8 million (NZ$1.6 million)
1998/99
$0.5 million (NZ$0.9 million)
1992-1998
$4 million (NZ$6.9 million)
  • New Zealand has funded R&D programs, but annual totals are not available.

New Zealand reported contributions totaling NZ$1,290,723 ($909,831) for mine action activities during its fiscal year July 2005-June 2006, a decrease from NZ$3,736,922 ($2.48 million) in 2004-2006, which was New Zealand’s largest contribution ever. In addition to countries funded in 2004, funding was provided to Nepal and Sudan in 2005.

SLOVAKIA— 10.9 million

2005
$7.2 (SKK218.5 million)
2004
$3.5 (SKK101.9 million)
1996-2002
$230,000

Slovakia reported contributing SKK218.5 million ($7.2 million) as the value of in-kind contributions of the Slovak Armed Forces in demining operations in Afghanistan and Iraq in 2005; in 2004, it reported SKK101.9 million ($3.5 million) in in-kind contributions to those two countries.[160]

Other Mine Action Donors:

Spain provided €1,533,648 ($1,909,238) in 2005, including in-kind clearance contributions in Afghanistan, Iraq and Kosovo, and training at its International Demining Training Center. Funding also included contributions from Spanish regional administrations to mine action in Colombia. Spain contributed €978,494 ($1.2 million) in 2004.[161 ]Estimated total mine action funding is $10.1 million.[162]

Greece did not report mine action funding in 2005. Previous mine action funding totaled $9.6 million 2001-2004. In February 2006, Greece contributed €1.9 million ($2.4 million) for mine action in Iraq to the UNDG Iraq Trust Fund of the International Reconstruction Fund Facility for Iraq (IRFFI) for demining operations; the funds had been pledged in July 2005.[163 ]

Luxembourg provided €1,081,931 ($1,346,896) for mine action in 2005. Funding benefited six countries. In 2004, $773,186 in funding was reported. R&D was not reported for 2005, but totaled €2,500 ($3,110) in 2004.[164 ]Total mine action funding is $5.9 million.

The Republic of Korea contributed $1,050,000 to mine action in 2005, including $1 million for Iraq. $3.1 million was contributed in 2004. Total mine action funding is $5.2 million.[165]

Slovenia reported contributing $384,498 in 2005, including $374,153 through the ITF and contributions to the GICHD. Slovenia provided $433,861 through ITF in 2004.[166 ]Total mine action funding is $3.8 million.

Iceland allocated $1,500,000 in 2005 for prosthetics, specialists, treatment, and training to the Prosthetic Limbs and Rehabilitation Center in Dohuk, Iraq.[167 ]Total mine action funding is $2.8 million 1997-2005.

The Czech Republic contributed CZK32,886,000 ($1,370,794) for mine action activities in 2005, a significant increase from $189,234 in 2004. The bulk of the funds were reported as an in-kind contribution of military mine clearance in Afghanistan. Funding was also provided to four other countries. Estimated total mine funding is $2.1 million.

Poland estimated its in-kind assistance to mine action in 2005 as totaling €1.6 million ($1.99 million). Polish deminers (137 in total) were engaged in peacekeeping and stabilization missions abroad in Afghanistan, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Syria, and Kosovo.[168 ]

Research and Development Projects Reported by Donors

In 2005, nine countries reported spending about $30 million on R&D related to mine action, including $2.1 million for the Geneva International Centre for Humanitarian Demining. The biggest expenditures were by the United States ($13.2 million), Japan ($7.4 million), United Kingdom ($3.2 million) and Canada ($2.8 million). Other countries are also believed to have devoted funds to mine action R&D, but did not make information available.

Belgium allocated €456,314 ($568,065) to R&D for six projects, including multi-sensor mine signature detection, the International Test and Evaluation Program for Humanitarian Demining (ITEP), demining software development, and in-kind assistance for demining technology evaluations in Angola.[169]

The Belgian regional government of Flanders provided funding to APOPO of €905,960 ($1,127,830) for R&D and deployment of rats as biosensors, for the period 2005-2007. The total Flanders contribution to APOPO from 2003-2007 was €1,296,432 ($1,613,928), including €150,000 ($186,735) for 2004 not previously reported by Landmine Monitor.[170 ]

Canada allocated C$3,153,849 ($2,603,260) to the Canadian Centre for Mine Action Technology (CCMAT) for unspecified research and development projects.[171]

Denmark reported funding of DKK250,000 ($41,699) to the Nordic Demining Research Forum.[172]

The EC reported €350,000 ($435,715) in funding to the European Committee for Standardisation for R&D standardization activities in the field of humanitarian mine action.[173 ]

Japan reported R&D funding totaling ¥811,000,000 ($7,365,362), including ¥716,000,000 ($6,502,588) though the Japan Science and Technology Agency for research programs in explosives sensor technology, and an additional ¥95,000,000 ($862,774) to the New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization for research including the improvement of detectors and machinery for use in shrubby areas, and portable demining machines.[174]

Norway provided NOK150,000 ($23,288) to the Norwegian Defence Research Establishment (FFI) for activities of the Nordic Demining Research Forum, and NOK33,375 ($5,181) to UNI Consult AS for consultancy on Nodeco/Minecat 230.[175 ]

The UK DfID provided R&D funding of £1,477,563 ($2,689,165) in fiscal year 2005-2006. DISARMCO was provided with £206,335 ($375,530) for its mine incinerator project, Dragon, which has been entirely funded by DfID.[176 ] ERA was funded with £867,615 ($1,579,059) to develop and test Minehound, a dual sensor mine detector.[177 ] Funding of £301,807 ($549,289) was provided to ITEP/QinetiQ for knowledge, research and advice, and BARIC received £101,806 ($185,287) for demining advice.[178]

The US Department of Defense spent $13.15 million on humanitarian demining R&D projects in fiscal year 2005, including the evaluation of prototype demining systems. The US also participates in ITEP to improve existing technologies.[179]

Donors also provided contributions to the GICHD identified as R&D funding. R&D type activities undertaken by GICHD may include research activities into mechanical clearance and biosensor technologies, and the development and distribution of software and information management/data mining products such as the Information Management System for Mine Action (IMSMA).

The following donors reported funding totaling $2,116,202 to GICHD for R&D in 2005:

  • Canada: C$230,440 ($190,211), consisting of C$11,342 ($9,362) as a general R&D contribution, and C$219,098 ($180,849) for a GICHD technology officer;[180 ]
  • Denmark: DKK300,000 ($50,039) as a general contribution of R&D funding;[181]
  • EC: €740,000 ($921,226) for R&D, information and coordination;[182]
  • Norway: NOK3,800,000 ($589,952) for R&D including mechanical mine action systems;[183]
  • UK: £300,000 ($546,000) for GICHD core support for research and knowledge.[184]

In addition, Switzerland provided the GICHD with CHF8 million ($6.4 million) in 2005, and a total of some $27.7 million from 2000-2005. Landmine Monitor has included these amounts as part of Switzerland’s general mine action funding, rather than R&D, because it has not been possible to consistently distinguish the R&D components.

States and Victim Assistance

Precise, comprehensive and comparable figures on resources available for mine victim assistance in many countries are difficult to obtain. Some governments do not provide specific funding for victim assistance, but rather consider victim assistance as an integrated part of humanitarian mine action. Even among those governments which do provide some specific victim assistance funding allocations, often a number of victim assistance activities are reported together with other mine action activities and it is not possible to separate all amounts expended.

Despite the complications of identifying specific funding allocations, it is apparent that in many mine-affected countries the assistance available to address the needs of survivors is inadequate and additional outside assistance is needed to provide for the care and rehabilitation of mine survivors.

In the Zagreb Declaration from the Sixth Meeting of States Parties, governments affirmed a commitment that those in a position to do so should respond to the victim assistance priorities of the “24 States Parties with significant numbers of mine survivors.” States Parties also declared, “We recognize the urgency of fulfilling all our obligations under the Convention as well as our responsibilities... to landmine survivors.”[185 ] The wording might be interpreted to imply, incorrectly, that States Parties’ responsibilities to mine survivors are somehow separate from treaty obligations, however, the expression of urgency in the statement is pertinent.

Sustained support to victim assistance activities by all States Parties is needed, including both donor and mine-affected countries. States Parties at the First Review Conference reiterated the obligations in Article 6.3 of the Mine Ban Treaty, that “Each State in a position to do so shall provide assistance for the care and rehabilitation, and social and economic reintegration, of mine victims,” stating that this “constitutes a vital promise for hundreds of thousands” of mine survivors. In the Nairobi Action Plan, States Parties reasserted their collective commitment to providing external support for victim assistance. Action #36 calls on States Parties to “act upon their obligation under Article 6.3.”[186 ] While support for victim assistance has been increasing, more substantive action is required on the part of States Parties to fulfill these commitments.

Donor Mine Victim Assistance Funding 2005[187]

 
2005
2004
Total since 1999
Australia
$2,474,346
$1,943,452
$7,771,029
Austria
$310,525
$280,628
$1,865,172
Belgium
$1,349,243
$2,099,552
$6,842,645
Canada
$1,927,938
$1,804,429
$15,471,278
Czech Republic
$0
$15,944
$182,154
Denmark
$0
$0
$604,414
Finland
$659,797
$624,664
$3,889,925
France
$1,020,818
$318,042
$2,471,667
Germany
$16,669
$1,075,887
$11,123,752
Hungary
$0
$0
$33,910
Iceland
$1,500,000
$0
$1,500,000
Ireland
$248,980
$0
$2,699,936
Italy
$0
$0
$5,946,804
Japan
$1,024,665
$186,616
$7,342,748
Luxembourg
$62,245
$6,219
$2,876,487
Netherlands
$675,847
$435,330
$5,971,220
New Zealand
$240,109
$174,530
$927,225
Norway
$6,138,818
$4,737,173
$35,115,236
Poland
$0
$0
$25,364
Portugal
$0
$0
$285,946
Slovakia
$0
$0
$35,477
Slovenia
$66,856
$49,698
$751,414
South Africa
$0
$95,200
$247,987
Spain
$267,653
$0
$591,316
Sweden
$0
$0
$226,677
Switzerland
$662,173
$112,000
$2,309,083
United States of America
$18,530,130
$15,577,227
$91,308,892
Total
$37,176,812
$29,536,591
$208,417,758

In addition to resources provided by states, the European Commission reported funding for mine victim assistance in 2005. The total of funding attributable specifically to victim assistance is not known, however, the EC reported providing €799,684 ($995,527) to Handicap International for victim assistance in Angola. The EC also contributes funding to programs which include victim assistance components.

The identifiable victim assistance funding for 2005 was some $37.2 million, a significant increase of about 29 percent from $28.8 million in 2004. Donor states reported victim assistance funding to at least 22 countries, a decrease from at least 33 countries in 2004.

Several states contributed funding which had not done so in 2004. Many states increased their reported funding of victim assistance by more than 25 percent, including Australia, France, Japan, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway and Switzerland.

The greatest increase in dollar terms was made by the United States (an increase of $2.95 million from 2004). It should be noted that while the US contribution appears to be the largest, this includes the total contribution of the Leahy War Victims Fund (some $14.4 million, an increase of $2.47 million from 2004 funding), which supports programs for all victims of war; the percentage of funding that goes to support programs assisting landmine survivors is not available. Others with large dollar increases included Australia, France, Japan, Norway and Switzerland.

It is worth noting that the larger sums identified for victim assistance are influenced by improved methods of tracking financial support and may not represent significantly higher levels of funding in real terms. For example, in 2005 Iceland allocated $1,500,000 as in-kind assistance to the Prosthetic Limbs and Rehabilitation Center in northern Iraq, a specialist rehabilitation center that treats landmine survivors. Although the amount was identified as a contribution assisting mine survivors in Landmine Monitor 2006 reporting, it was not labeled as survivor assistance funding. Furthermore, due to States Parties’ greater awareness of victim assistance (highlighted though the VA 24 process), some of the reported increases are assumed to be the result of clearer reporting of existing victim assistance funding. Some similar contributions were likely to have been made in the past, but not earmarked as victim assistance spending.

Despite the reported increases, current levels of resources available for victim assistance continue to be inadequate for the needs of landmine survivors. Funding shortages were identified during the reporting period which impeded survivor assistance programs in several countries, including among the 24 States Parties with significant numbers of mine survivors. Countries with activities which assist survivors that experienced funding shortages included Cambodia, Croatia, Sudan, Tajikistan and Yemen.

The overall level of funding contributed for survivor assistance has been failing to keep up with needs of the existing projects available to the growing number of landmine survivors requiring assistance. For example, when measured proportionately as a collective UN mine action pillar, only 27 percent of the total sum for all the victim assistance project appeals through the UN Portfolio of Mine Action Projects was received in 2005 ($4.7 million received of $17.5 million requested). In comparison, mine clearance projects received 75 percent of the total of their collective appeals in 2005 ($115 million received of $153 million requested). In 2005, victim assistance programs received only 2 percent of the total of funds received through Portfolio appeals ($4.7 million of a total $241 million). The UN Portfolio End-Year Review reports that these percentages are consistent with past trends.[188]

The continued lack of substantial long-term funding commitments to victim assistance is a matter of serious concern. Fluctuations in spending on victim assistance programs have impeded the work of implementing organizations, and resulted in reduced levels of services for mine survivors in some cases. Landmine Monitor reporting has shown that victim assistance programs are highly vulnerable to shifting funding allocations. Existing services have been terminated, and in some cases whole programs have been forced to close, suddenly leaving mine survivors without services when short-term funding has finished. Increased long-term funding is needed to enable organizations and survivor assistance programs time to build capacity and secure alternative funding sources. Furthermore, with long-term funding organizations can be held more accountable, which is beneficial for both program recipients and donors.

As in the past, some states (including Denmark, Sweden and the UK) did not provide any specific funding for victim assistance. Sweden and the UK take the view that landmine survivors are reached through bilateral development cooperation and other contributions. In 2006, Germany stated that it will fund victim assistance only in exceptional cases, and will concentrate funding on mine clearance.[189]

Experience has shown that unless funding is specifically targeted at facilities and programs that assist people with disabilities, including landmine survivors, it is likely that resources will be directed to other areas of public health or development concern, leaving the disabled population further disadvantaged. With respect to integration of victim assistance into broader development programming, the ICBL favors a twin-track approach that allocates funding to specific victim assistance programs, as well as incorporating victim assistance activities into existing and emerging development programs and the health sector.

Some States Parties have acknowledged the need for sustained commitments specific to assisting mine survivors and people with disabilities. Having committed to strengthening its support for survivor assistance over the next five years, Australia recognized that “survivor assistance has been one of the lesser funded areas in this convention and that a long term commitment to assisting landmine survivors is needed by both mine-affected countries and donors.”[190]

Equally, if not more important, than international donor funding are the contributions made by mine-affected states to victim assistance. However, information on their contributions is rarely available. The Yemeni government was reported to have contributed $108,000 to the Yemen Landmine Victim Assistance Program. In Croatia, the state was reported to have allocated KN155,000 ($26,059) for victim assistance in 2005. Landmine Monitor has recorded victim assistance contributions by Croatia totaling $76,356 since 2001.

Funding by mine-affected states to areas of the public health system which assist landmine survivors is also rarely reported. However, state facilities and services which address the needs of landmine victims are an essential part of ongoing survivor assistance. States Parties which provide resources to assist mine survivors through the health system, or have enacted legislation which commits funding for survivor assistance through state services, should report on those contributions. For example, Tajikistan has laws entitling mine survivors and other people with disabilities to assistance, including medical care and physical rehabilitation; in its most recent Article 7 report, Tajikistan recorded an allocation of $235,000 in 2005 for an orthopedic clinic which treats people with disabilities, 10-12 percent of whom were landmine survivors. Mine-affected States Parties should be encouraged to report with as much detail and clarity as possible on how funding through the state system is allocated to assist mine survivors. Such reporting would not only indicate the commitment of States Parties to fulfill Article 6.3 of the Mine Ban Treaty, it would also support the data collection processes necessary for providing appropriate assistance.

The $37.2 million in donor country contributions for victim assistance in 2005 is not fully representative of the total resources available to provide assistance to mine survivors. In addition to the contributions of mine-affected states noted above, other sources include numerous private donors and charitable foundations. Some examples in 2005 were: the Diana, Princess of Wales Memorial Fund (a UK-based charity) provided $1.7 million; Adopt-a-Minefield raised about $1.3 million; Landmine Survivors Network received $3.2 million (40 percent of its annual income) in contributions from private grants and individual donations (including funding from the Diana, Princess of Wales Memorial Fund).[191 ]Other examples of funding provided through various means, including individual donations, in-kind contributions and legacies, are found in various country reports.

Included in the information provided by states are contributions to the ICRC Special Appeal for Mine Action and the ICRC Special Fund for the Disabled.[192 ]In 2005, the ICRC Special Appeal for Mine Action received contributions for its physical rehabilitation programs totaling CHF17,800,000 ($14,286,861), compared to CHF15.8 million ($12.7 million) in 2004. The 2005 total included CHF5,224,000 ($4,192,953) from four countries (Belgium, Canada, Finland and Norway); CHF405,000 ($325,066) from national societies (Australia, Norway and United Arab Emirates); CHF955,000 ($766,514) from organizations including Rotary, Soroptimist International and others; and CHF11,216,000 ($9,002,328) from contributions to the annual emergency appeals.[193]

The ICRC Special Fund for the Disabled expended CHF4,308,000 ($3,457,741) on physical rehabilitation programs for people with disabilities, including landmine survivors in 2005, an increase from the CHF4,074,085 ($3,278,150) reported for 2004. In 2005, five countries (Canada, Liechtenstein, Norway, Switzerland, and the United States via the Leahy War Victims Fund) contributed CHF3,037,000 ($2,437,595); seven national societies (Germany, Ireland, Japan, Monaco, Norway, Switzerland and Turkey) provided CHF745,000 ($597,961); and private donors provided CHF255,000 ($204,671).

States also report contributions to victim assistance through the Slovenia-based International Trust Fund for Demining and Mine Victims Assistance. In 2005, the ITF expended $1,169,529 on victim assistance, or 4.2 percent of overall spending.[194 ] This represents an increase from $717,358 in 2004 (2.9 percent of overall spending), but is significantly less than the $2,684,100 (10.8 percent) expended in 2003. Expenditure for victim assistance remains far below the ITF target of 15 percent. In 2005, Norway, Slovenia and the United States contributed to victim assistance through the ITF, compared with four countries in 2004 and seven countries in 2003.[195]

Major Mine Action Recipients

Reliable information regarding major mine action recipients is even more difficult to obtain than for mine action donors. According to available information, the largest recipients of mine action funding over time have been Afghanistan ($515 million since 1991), Cambodia ($256 million since 1994), Iraq ($253 million since 1993), Mozambique ($214 million since 1993), Angola ($177 million since 1993), Bosnia and Herzegovina ($163 million since 1995), Kosovo ($93 million since 1999), Lebanon (estimated at greater than $86 million since 2000), Sudan ($80 million since 2001), and Laos ($69 million since 1994). Sudan was added to the list of largest recipients for the first time in this edition of Landmine Monitor. Funding for Sudan more than tripled in 2005 compared to 2004.

The top recipients of mine action funding in 2005 were Afghanistan ($66.8 million), Sudan ($48.4 million), Angola ($35.8), Iraq ($27.8), Cambodia ($23.9 million) and Sri Lanka ($19.1 million).

Only in Sudan did mine action funding increase greatly in 2005 (up $33.4 million). Other notable increases in 2005 were seen in Guinea-Bissau ($2.5 million), Albania ($2.3 million), Uganda ($1.5 million), Abkhazia ($1.3 million), Lebanon ($1.3 million) and Burundi ($1 million).

Drastic reductions in mine action funding occurred in Iraq (down $30.9 million, or 53 percent), Afghanistan ($25 million, or 27 percent), and Cambodia ($17.7 million, or 43 percent). Other countries with substantial decreases in 2005 included Sri Lanka ($4.6 million), Bosnia and Herzegovina ($2.7 million), Mozambique ($2 million), Jordan ($1.7 million), Tajikistan ($1.6 million) and Colombia ($1.2 million).

Top Mine Action Recipients in 2005

Afghanistan
$66.8 million
Sudan
$48.4 million
Angola
$35.8 million
Iraq
$27.8 million
Cambodia
$23.9 million
Sri Lanka
$19.1 million
Bosnia and Herzegovina
$15.0 million
Croatia
$9.1 million
Mozambique
$7.9 million
Laos
$7.0 million
Lebanon
$6.5 million
Vietnam
$5.8 million
Democratic Republic of Congo
$4.9 million
Eritrea
$4.9 million
Albania
$4.8 million
Azerbaijan
$4.1 million
Somaliland
$3.7 million
Nicaragua
$3.5 million
Guinea-Bissau
$3.5 million
Abkhazia
$3.3 million
Ethiopia
$2.6 million
Yemen
$2.5 million
Colombia
$2.3 million
Burundi
$2.1 million
Cyprus
$1.9 million
Kosovo
$1.9 million
Uganda
$1.7 million
Serbia and Montenegro
$1.7 million
Nagorno-Karabakh
$1.3 million
Chad
$1.2 million
Chechnya
$1.0 million

Summary of Major Mine Action Recipients Funding Findings

Abkhazia—HALO’s operations in Abkhazia received about $3.25 million in 2005. In 2004, HALO received less, about $2 million.

Afghanistan—Reports by donors indicate that 16 countries and the European Commission contributed $66.8 million for mine action in Afghanistan in 2005. This represents a decrease of some 27 percent from the $91.8 million provided by 16 countries and the EC in 2004.

Albania—Donors reported contributions totaling $5.32 million in 2005. In 2004, contributions totaling $3 million were reported.

Angola— In 2005, 17 countries and the EC reported contributing $35.8 million to mine action in Angola, a significant increase from the $28 million contributed in 2004.

Azerbaijan—From donor reports, Landmine Monitor estimated that Azerbaijan received international donations totaling $4.1 million for mine action in 2005, compared to $3.21 million in 2004.

Bosnia and Herzegovina—Fifteen countries reported contributing $15 million for mine action in BiH in 2005, much less than the $17.7 million in 2004.[196 ]Landmine Monitor estimated that some $26.8 million was contributed to mine action in BiH in 2005 from both national and international sources.

Burundi—Landmine Monitor estimated that a total of $2.12 million was contributed by three countries and the EC for mine action in Burundi in 2005, a large increase from 2004 ($1.1 million).

Cambodia—Fourteen countries reported contributing $23.9 million in 2005. This is a significant decrease from donor funding for 2004 ($41.7 million by 13 countries and the EC). The decrease primarily reflected Japan’s annual contribution falling from $18.7 million in 2004 to $4.5 million in 2005; the 2004 contribution had been a six-fold increase from 2003.

Chad—The only country to report funding for mine action in Chad in 2005 was the United States, which contributed $1.17 million. In 2004, four donor countries provided a total of $1.9 million.

Chechnya—In 2005, three countries reported providing $982,124 for mine action in Chechnya and surrounding regions, an increase from 2004 ($804,066 from three countries and the EC).

Colombia—Seven countries and the EC reported contributing $2.33 million to mine action in Colombia in 2005. This was a decrease of some 34 percent from the $3.53 million for 2004.

Croatia—Eight countries and the EC reported contributing $9.08 million, a reduction from $9.82 million in 2004.

Cyprus—The EC provided €1.5 million ($1.87 million) for demining in the buffer zone in 2005, as part of €4 million ($5 million) in mine action funding since 2004.

Democratic Republic of Congo—Eight countries and the EC reported contributing $4.86 million to mine action in the DRC in 2005. Five countries and the EC donated $4.46 million in 2004.

Eritrea—In 2005, six donor countries reported contributing $4.85 million to mine action in Eritrea. Eight donor countries and the EC reported contributing a total of $4.95 million in 2004. Mine action funding to Eritrea has been decreasing since 2002.

Ethiopia—Six countries provided mine action funding totaling $2.6 million to Ethiopia in 2005. In 2004, funding totaled approximately $2.3 million.

Guinea-Bissau—Two countries reported providing $349,187 for mine action in Guinea-Bissau in 2005. In 2004, $998,771 was contributed by three donors.

Iraq—Fourteen donors reported providing a total of $27.8 million for mine action in Iraq in 2005, a decrease of more than half from the $58.7 million from 13 donors in 2004. US funding alone decreased $24 million.

Jordan—Three countries reported contributing $468,906 for mine action in Jordan in 2005, a sharp decrease from 2004 when international donors provided some $2.2 million.

Kosovo—Landmine Monitor identified six donors which contributed a total of at least $1.89 million for mine action in Kosovo in 2005, an increase from approximately $1.58 million by three countries in 2004.

Laos—Ten donor countries reported contributing a total of $7.2 million to mine action in Laos in 2005, a decrease from $8.13 million in 2004.

Mozambique—Twelve donor countries reported contributing a total of $10 million to mine action in Mozambique in 2005, a decrease from some $12 million donated by 14 countries and the EC in 2004.

Nagorno-Karabakh—The Netherlands reported providing €667,638 ($831,143) to HALO for mine clearance and MRE in Nagorno-Karabakh. HALO’s budget for 2005 was approximately $1.33 million.

Nicaragua—Landmine Monitor identified at least $3.5 million donated in 2005 for mine action in Nicaragua by six countries. In 2004, five donor countries reported donating about $4 million. It is difficult to clearly identify mine action funding for Nicaragua on an annual basis, because many donors designate funds for the Organization of American States’ Central America program and not Nicaragua specifically, and some provide multi-year funding.

Serbia and Montenegro—In 2005, two international donors provided approximately $1.7 million to mine action in Serbia and Montenegro (excluding stockpile destruction funding), the same amount as in 2004.

Somaliland—Six donor countries reported providing $3.73 million in mine action funding for activities in Somaliland (as distinct from Somalia) in 2005, compared to $4.11 million in 2004.

Sri Lanka—In 2005, 10 countries and the EC reported $19.05 million in funding for mine action in Sri Lanka, a decrease from $23.6 million contributed in 2004 by 12 countries and the EC.

Sudan—Landmine Monitor identified contributions in 2005 totaling $48.4 million for mine action in Sudan, from 14 governments and the EC. This was an increase of $33.4 million, more than three times the $14.97 million provided by twelve governments and the EC in 2004. Most notably, Japan contributed more than $19 million, compared to $1.2 million in 2004. Since 2001, mine action funding to Sudan has risen sharply each year: $2.2 million in 2001; $5.1 million in 2002; $9.5 million in 2003; $15 million in 2004; and $48.4 million in 2005.

Tajikistan—Landmine Monitor identified $924,168 in mine action funding by three donors in 2005, a significant decrease from the $2.5 million contributed by six donor countries and the EC in 2004.

Uganda—In 2005, five donors reported contributing a total $1.76 million for mine action in Uganda, a large increase compared with $228,539 reported by two donors in 2004.

Vietnam—In 2005, six countries reported providing $5.74 million for mine action in Vietnam, an increase from the $4.92 million provided by four countries in 2004.

Yemen—Six governments reported contributing approximately $2.46 million to mine action in Yemen in 2005, a decrease from $2.64 million in 2004.

 

[106] As of July 2006, only eight donor countries had reported their funding contributions on the UN Mine Action Investments database for 2005. Donor reporting to the UN database (accessible at www.mineactioninvestments.org) has declined over the last five years (18 in 2001, 11 in 2002, 10 in 2003, 12 in 2004, 8 in 2005). Fourteen States Parties reported mine action funding contributions for 2005 in Form J of their Article 7 transparency reports, but of these, only seven contained enough appropriate and detailed data to be useful for analysis. Some funding data was contained in CCW Amended Protocol II National Annual Reports. Other data was provided directly to Landmine Monitor by donors.

[107] In some cases, donors are not reporting on calendar year 2005. Among the countries reporting for different fiscal years are the US (October 2004-September 2005), Canada (April 2005-March 2006), UK (April 2005- April 2006) and Australia and New Zealand (July 2005-June 2006). As in the past, donor funding information for Japan has been disaggregated on a calendar year basis.

[108 ] Unlike the past three years when the increase in global mine action funding as expressed in US dollars was inflated by the declining value of the dollar, in 2005 the relative leveling of exchange rates against the US dollar means that the decrease this year was not much influenced by the dollar’s value. For example, the Euro increased in value by less than a 0.09 percent versus the dollar in 2005, compared to an increase of about 10 percent in 2004. For the Euro, Landmine Monitor has used these average rates: in 2005: €1 = US$1.2449; in 2004: €1=US$1.2438; in 2003: €1=US$1.13; in 2002: €1=US$0.95; and in 2001: €1=US$0.90. US Federal Reserve, “List of Exchange Rates (Annual),” 3 January 2006.

[109] Funding increased every year since 1992, except for 2001 when Landmine Monitor reported a reduction of $4 million while noting, “Given uncertainties and anomalies in gathering mine action data, this reduction is not statistically significant. Indeed it is at least partially attributable to fluctuating exchange rates with the US dollar.”

[110] UNMAS, “Annual Report 2005,” pp. 60, 64.

[111] For fiscal year 1 October 2005-30 September 2006. Average exchange for 2005: Baht 40.252 = US$1. US Federal Reserve, “Foreign Exchange Rates (Annual),” 3 January 2006; Landmine Monitor Report 2005, p. 570.

[112] However, the Chad government was reported to have failed to or delayed in delivering its pledged share of mine action funding in 2005, adversely affecting operations during the year. See report on Chad in this edition of Landmine Monitor.

[113] Final Report of the First Review Conference, APLC/CONF/2004/5, 9 February 2005, pp. 94-105.

[114] See www.gichd.ch/1067.0.html.

[115] Statement by Canada, Standing Committee on the General Status and Operation of the Convention, Geneva, 8 May 2006.

[116] Amb. Martin Dahinden, (former) Director, GICHD, “Humanitarian Demining at a Crossroads: a Farewell Lecture,” 1 July 2004.

[117] Kristian Berg Harpviken and Jan Isaksen, “Reclaiming the Fields of War: Mainstreaming Mine Action in Development,” PRIO- UNDP Report, 2004, p. 43.
[118] Email from Carly Volkes, DFAIT, 7 June 2006.

[119] Email from Andrew Willson, Conflict and Humanitarian Affairs Department, DfID, 4 July 2006.

[120] Email from Ellen Schut, Arms Control and Arms Export Policy Division, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 7 April 2006.

[121] Email from Mayumi Watabe, Human Security Unit, UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), 15 June 2006.

[122] Email from Anne Suotula, Staff Officer for Trust Funds, Political Affairs and Security Policy Division, NATO HQ, 6 July 2006.

[123] Figures for the years prior to 2005 are taken from Landmine Monitor Report 2005, with any corrections received for earlier years. For 2004, increased funding reported in corrected data by Australia and the UK offset decreased funding reported by the EC. In most but not all cases, the figures for earlier years are calculated at the exchange rates for those years.

[124] Average exchange rates for 2005, used throughout this report; €1 = US$1.2449, A$1 = US$0.7627, US$1 = NOK6.4412, £1 = US$1.820, US$1 = C$1.2115, US$1 = SEK7.4710, US$1 = DKK5.9953, NZ$1 = US$0.7049, US$1= ¥110.11. US Federal Reserve, “List of Exchange Rates (Annual),” 3 January 2006. Average exchange rate for 2005: US$1 = CHF1.2459. US Federal Reserve, “List of Exchange Rates (Annual),” 3 January 2006 used for CHF conversions other than FSD financial reporting. Currency conversions are rounded throughout, which may result in rounding-off addition differences.

[125] The EC reported the total of EU member state contributions and EC contributions as more than €147 million ($183 million). “EC contribution to Landmine Monitor 2006,” 30 June 2006.

[126] Per capita funding provides another perspective on mine action funding by donor countries. To calculate these figures, the 2005 country funding amounts were divided by that country’s population. Population numbers are from the World Bank, World Development Indicators Database, “Population 2005,” 1 July 2006, www.worldbank.org, accessed 1 July 2006. Not included in the country funding amounts, and therefore not reflected in the per capita figures, are contributions to European Union bodies subsequently dispensed as European Commission funding of mine action.

[127] Gross national income (GNI) was formerly known as gross national product (GNP). GNI figures are from the World Bank, World Development Indicators Database, “Total GNI 2005, Atlas method,” 1 July 2006, www.worldbank.org, accessed 1 July 2006.

[128] Emails from Laura Liguori, Security Policy Unit, Conventional Disarmament, EC, June-July 2006.

[129] This figure has been adjusted down by €4.09 million ($5.09 million) from the total in Landmine Monitor Report 2005 based on newly available information. EC, “Mine Actions in the World 2005,” p. 55; European Community’s Contribution to Landmine Monitor Report 2005, by email from Nicola Marcel, RELEX Unit 3a Security Policy, EC, 19 July 2005; emails from Laura Liguori, EC, June-July 2006.

[130] Email from Annette A. Landell-Mills, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 21 June 2006.

[131] Emails from Kitagawa Yasu, Japan Campaign to Ban Landmines (JCBL), March–May 2006, with translated information received by JCBL from the Humanitarian Assistance Division, Multilateral Cooperation Department, 11 May 2005 and Conventional Arms Division, Non-proliferation and Science Department, 11 April 2006.

[132] Email from Kitagawa Yasu, JCBL, with information from Nobuhisa Tsuchiya, Research Propelling Division, and Mr. Saito, Mechanical System Technology Development Division, NEDO JST, 11 July 2006.

[133] Email from Kitagawa Yasu, JCBL, 10 August 2005, with translation of Ministry of Foreign Affairs information sent to JCBL on 11 May 2005.

[134] Email from Andrew Willson, DfID, 20 March 2006; email from Debbie Clements, Directorate of Joint Commitments, Ministry of Defence, 10 August 2005; email from Lt. Col. Robin Swanson, Ministry of Defence, 22 May 2006. The 2004 figure is revised from the £8.3 million ($15.3 million) reported in Landmine Monitor Report 2005. The amount was increased £2,913,231 ($5,339,952) to reflect funding for the International Mine Action Training Centre in Kenya, but reduced £155,133 ($284,359) for programs subsequently identified as R&D. Average exchange rate for 2004: £1 = US$1.833, US Federal Reserve, “List of Exchange Rates (Annual),” 3 January 2005.

[135] Figures prior to 1998 only include CIDA funding.

[136] Mine Action Investments database; email from Carly Volkes, DFAIT, 7 June 2006.

[137] Article 7 Report, Form J, 27 April 2006; Mine Action Investments database.

[138] Statement to the Standing Committee on Mine Clearance, Mine Risk Education and Mine Action Technologies, Geneva, 10 May 2006.

[139] Figures prior to 1996 are not available.
[140] Email from Ellen Schut, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 7 April 2006; email from Brechtje Paardekooper, DMV/HH Humanitarian Aid Division, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 18 April 2006.

[141] Article 7 Report, Form J, 2 May 2006; emails from Sara Brandt-Hansen, Desk Officer, Department for Global Security, Ministry for Foreign Affairs, March-May 2006.

[142] Mine Action Investments database; email from Rita Helmich-Olesen, Humanitarian Assistance & NGO Cooperation, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 31 March 2006.

[143] Mine Action Investments database; email from Rita Helmich-Olesen, Humanitarian Assistance & NGO Cooperation, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 31 March 2006.

[144] Email from Rémy Friedmann, Political Division IV, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 28 April 2006.

[145] Email from Katheryn Bennett, AusAID, 30 June 2006.

[146] The amount for 2004 has been revised upward by A$509,516 ($375,259) from the A$7,246,585 ($5.3 million) cited in Landmine Monitor Report 2005 to include previously unreported amounts of A$500,000 ($368,250) for victim assistance in Cambodia and A$9,516 ($7,009) for mine detectors for Azerbaijan. Emails from Katheryn Bennett, AusAID, July 2006. Average exchange rate for 2004: A$1 = US$0.7365, US Federal Reserve, “List of Exchange Rates (Annual),” 3 January 2005.

[147] Emails from Manfredo Capozza, Humanitarian Demining Adviser, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, March 2006. Not included in this amount is $300,000 to UNICEF for MRE in Sudan as reported by UNMAO.

[148] The 2005 figure includes an amount of €1,280,000 ($1,593,472) to Sudan reported by the Italian Embassy in Khartoum, as well as €242,500 ($301,888) reported by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs for Sudan.

[149] Mine Action Investments database; email from Paula Sirkiä, Unit for Humanitarian Assistance, Ministry for Foreign Affairs, 16 March 2006.

[150] The UAE reported in the UN Mine Action Investment database that it had spent the $50 million from 2002-2004 as follows: $1,631,715 for Phase 1 (minefield reconnaissance and elimination of booby-traps); $24,766,000 for Phase 2 (clearance and elimination of mines and UXO); $6,199,000 for Phase 3 (clearance and elimination of UXO); $1,349,685 for purchasing demining machinery and other equipment; $3,342,800 as a contribution to the UN office in South Lebanon; $476,538 for film and media coverage of the project by Emirates Media Corp; and $12,234,262 for expenses of the UAE Armed Forces and other administrative expenses. Mine Action Investment database, www.mineaction.org, accessed 4 August 2005.

[151] UNMAS, “Annual Report 2005,” p. 61; National Demining Office, Lebanon Mine Action Program, “Annual Report 2005,” Annex A; MACC SL, “Annual Report 2005,” 14 February 2006; email from Christopher Clark, UN Chief Technical Advisor/Programme Manager, MACC SL, 22 May 2006.
[152] Article 7 Report, Form J, 26 April 2006; email from Dominique Jones, Conseiller, Ministry of Defense, 17 May 2006; email from Stan Brabant, Head, Policy Unit, Handicap International, 26 May 2006.

[153] Article 7 Report, Form J, 26 April 2006; CCW Amended Protocol II Article 13 Report, Form E, 6 October 2005; information from Olivier Sigaud, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in email from Timon Van Lidth, Handicap International, 29 June 2006. France included funding to CNEMA (National Commission for the Elimination of Anti-Personnel Mines) of €135,000 ($168,062) in its reporting for 2005; this funding has not been included in past reports.

[154] Article 7 Report, Form J, 26 April 2006; CCW Amended Protocol II Article 13 Report, Form E, 6 October 2005; information from Olivier Sigaud, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, in email from Timon Van Lidth, Handicap International, 29 June 2006.

[155] Ministry of Foreign Affairs, “Support for mine action - role in mine clearance and aid to victims,” available at, www.diplomatie.gouv.fr, accessed 4 July 2006. France has stated that it will present more detailed information regarding its financial contributions to mine action through the EC at the Seventh Meeting of States Parties in Geneva in 2006. Statement by Amb. François Rivasseau, Permanent Representative to the Disarmament Conference, Standing Committee on Mine Clearance, Mine Risk Education and Mine Action Technologies, Geneva, 10 May 2006.

[156] Article 7 Report, Form J, 21 April 2006; emails from Therese Healy, Disarmament and Non-Proliferation Section, Political Division, Department of Foreign Affairs, May 2006.

[157] Article 7 Report, Form J, 27 April 2006; email from Alexander Kmentt, Deputy Director, Department for Disarmament, Arms Control and Non-Proliferation, Federal Ministry for Foreign Affairs, 27 April 2006.

[158] Email from Alexander Kmentt, Federal Ministry for Foreign Affairs, 4 May 2006.

[159] Email from Helen Fawthorpe, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 6 June 2006; email from Megan McCoy, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 6 June 2006.

[160] Article 7 Report, Form J, dated 4 May 2006; email from Henrik Markus, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 16 May 2006. Average exchange rate for 2005: SKK0.033 = US$1. Landmine Monitor estimate based on information from www.oanda.com/convert/fxhistory.

[161] Article 7 Report, Form J, 27 April 2006; email from Luis Gómez Nogueira, Sub-department for International Disarmament, Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Co-operation, 25 April 2006.

[162] This is an estimate, as Spanish funding of mine action has not been reported fully in all years. See Landmine Monitor Report 2004, p. 748.

[163] IRFFI, “Pledges made to IRFFI and Iraqi reconstruction at the Expanded Donor Meeting of IRFFI,” 18 July 2005; UN Development Group Iraq Trust Fund, “Newsletter,” January 2006, p. 1.

[164] Email from François Berg, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Luxembourg, 30 March 2006.

[165] Response to Landmine Monitor from the Permanent Mission of the ROK to the UN in New York, 9 May 2006.

[166] Emails from Irina Gorsic, Counsellor, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, June 2006.

[167] Embassy of Iceland in Washington DC, “Iceland Contributes 1,5 Million USD to a Prosthetics Project in Northern Iraq,” Information Sheet 08/05, 28 April 2005. This amount was not reported specifically as a mine action contribution by Iceland.

[168] Letters from Tadeusz Chomicki, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 22 March and 8 May 2006.

[169] Article 7 Report, Form J, 26 April 2006.

[170] “Cooperation between Flanders and Mozambique,” (in Flemish), p. 2, Flanders Official website, www.flanders.be, accessed 3 June 2006; Geert Bourgeois, Flemish Minister of Administrative Affairs, Foreign Policy, Media and Tourism, “Answer to Question No. 42 from Sabine Poleyn from 13 January 2006,” (in Flemish), Flanders Parliament Website, (no date), available at www.vlaamsparlement.be, accessed 3 June 2006.

[171] Email from Carly Volkes, DFAIT, 7 June 2006.

[172] Mine Action Investments database; email from Rita Helmich-Olesen, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 31 March 2006.

[173] Emails from Laura Liguori, EC, June-July 2006.

[174] Email from Kitagawa Yasu, JCBL, with information from Nobuhisa Tsuchiya, Research Propelling Division, and Mr. Saito, NEDO JST, 11 July 2006.

[175] Email from Annette A. Landell-Mills, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 21 June 2006.

[176] DfID, “DFID funded project develops groundbreaking anti-landmine device,” 5 April 2005, www.dfid.gov.uk, accessed 5 July 2006; Cranfield University, “Cranfield leads development of next generation anti-land mine device,” 29 March 2005.

[177] ERA, “Successful trials for ERA’s revolutionary mine detector,” (no date), www.era.co.uk, accessed December 2005.

[178] Emails from Andrew Willson, DfID, 20 March and 4 July 2006.

[179] Office of the Secretary of Defense, “Research and Development Descriptive Summary, Humanitarian Demining, PE: 0603920D8Z,” February 2006, p. 291.

[180] Email from Carly Volkes, DFAIT, 7 June 2006.

[181] Email from Rita Helmich-Olesen, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 31 March 2006.

[182] Emails from Laura Liguori, EC, June-July 2006.

[183] Email from Annette A. Landell-Mills, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 21 June 2006.

[184] Email from Andrew Willson, DfID, 20 March 2006.

[185] “The Zagreb Declaration,” (Unofficial Version), Part III, 8, 2 December 2005.

[186] Final Report of the First Review Conference, APLC/CONF/2004/5, 9 February 2005, p. 27.

[187] All amounts are expressed in US dollars. This data was collated following an analysis by Landmine Monitor of Form J attachments to Article 7 reports, and other data provided to Landmine Monitor. Some of the figures for 2004 have changed since Landmine Monitor Report 2005, as new information became available, and the 2004 total has been adjusted to include only international donor contributions. Full details are available on request.

[188] UNMAS, “2005 Portfolio End-Year Review,” p. 6, www.mineaction.org, accessed 20 May 2005.

[189] Statement by Amb. Bernard Brassack, Permanent Representative of Germany to the Conference on Disarmament, Standing Committee on Mine Clearance, Mine Risk Education and Mine Action Technologies, Geneva, 10 May 2006.

[190] Statement by Australia, “Survivor Assistance,” Standing Committee on Victim Assistance and Socio-Economic Reintegration, Geneva, 9 May 2006.

[191] LSN, “Annual Report 2005,” p. 25.

[192] It should be noted that ICRC financial accounts are based on a calendar year whereas some donors have different fiscal years. For the purposes of funding analysis, the contributions are reflected in the year in which they were received by the ICRC.

[193] ICRC Special Appeal Mine Action 2004.  Landmine Monitor analysis of KPMG Fides Peat, “Assistance for Mine Victims, Geneva: Auditor's report on supplementary information on the Special Appeal, Statement of contributions and expenditure, Financial Statements 2004,” Appendix II and III, Geneva, 14 July 2005. Average exchange rate for 2004: US$1 = CHF1.2428, used for CHF amounts not contributed by the Swiss Government at a set rate. US Federal Reserve, “List of Exchange Rates (Annual),” 3 January 2005.

[194] Email from Luka Buhin, Project Manager, ITF, 30 May 2006; ITF “Annual Report 2005,” p 18. In ITF’s annual report for 2005, the total is slightly different ($1,140,809.46, or 4.12 percent) as one victim assistance project was incorrectly counted as MRE.

[195] Email from Luka Buhin, ITF, 30 May 2006; email from Iztok Hočevar, Head of International Relations Department, ITF, 18 July 2006.

[196] Last year Landmine Monitor estimated $18.8 million in mine action contributions for 2004, but that total included contributions by SFOR, UNDP and various international organizations in addition to donor governments and the EC.