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Kosovo, Landmine Monitor Report 2006

Kosovo

Key developments since May 2005: In 2005, demining operations cleared more than 4.3 square kilometers of land, a 10 percent increase on productivity in 2004, destroying 719 antipersonnel mines, 30 antivehicle mines, 977 cluster bomblets and 1,378 other items of UXO. In December 2005, Handicap International ended its demining activities in Kosovo after six years of operations. By the end of 2005, 15 dangerous areas still required clearance; of these, three contained a mine threat and the remaining 12 were contaminated with cluster bomblets. There were also 53 areas requiring a technical survey and possibly also clearance. At least one of the demining operators is convinced that this understates the residual contamination, and planned an assessment mission for mid-July 2006 to define the remaining threat from cluster munitions and landmines. In 2005, 11 new casualties were recorded, a decrease from 2004; all were caused by cluster bomblets or other unexploded ordnance, and most were the result of tampering.

Background

Kosovo is a province of Serbia and Montenegro (formerly the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, FRY), but has a predominantly ethnic-Albanian population. Conflict between Yugoslav armed forces and the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) led to a NATO bombing campaign against the FRY and Serbian forces in Kosovo. Since June 1999, the province has been under the administration of the United Nations Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK). The KLA disbanded in September 1999, but several other ethnic-Albanian armed groups emerged. On 24 October 2005, the UN Security Council agreed to start negotiations on the future status of Kosovo.

The situation in Kosovo remains volatile with occasional acts of violence, directed mainly against the remaining Serbian minority. In July 2005, an unknown group detonated three bombs simultaneously at UNMIK headquarters, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe headquarters and a government building, all in Pristina. There has also been an increase in attacks on UN personnel, with a large number of car bombs placed under UN and police vehicles.[1]

Use

There were no reported cases of landmine use during 2005 or early 2006, despite the continuing unrest in Kosovo.[2] The last reported use of antipersonnel mines occurred in 2002 and of antivehicle mines in 2003.[3] In previous years, mines were used in attacks against the remaining Serbian minority in Kosovo, and against Serbian military and police forces on the province’s border with southern Serbia.

In May 2005, the internationally-staffed Kosovo Protection Force (KFOR) reported finding 13 antitank mines in an unused house.[4] There were no other discoveries or seizures of antipersonnel mines in 2005 or in early 2006.[5] Weapons possession is a criminal offense for all Kosovo residents except those holding UNMIK authorization, with penal sanctions for violations.[6]

Landmine and UXO Problem

Kosovo was affected by landmines and unexploded ordnance (UXO) following the conflict between the Serbian authorities and ethnic Albanian fighters that erupted in the late 1980s, and subsequently, the war between the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and NATO in 1999. During 2005, a review of contamination concluded that the residual threat was mainly from UXO, such as hand-grenades and cluster bomblets, with only a limited risk from antipersonnel mines.[7]

UNMIK continues to find cluster bomblets on the surface of areas not previously considered affected during the UN-managed mine action program (1999-2001), such as in Dulje Pass, Banjica and Gjocaj. These are mountainous areas covered with dense woodland away from population centers, frequented by illegal woodcutters and smugglers crossing into the province from Albania.[8] It was also believed that a number of previously unknown mine/UXO-contaminated areas might be reported in 2006 as people continue to exploit the densely vegetated forests and mountain areas.[9]

Two main mine and UXO threats remain to be addressed in Kosovo.[10] Firstly, mined areas are being reported for which no minefield records are available. These areas, which are mainly along the Kosovo-Albania border and in areas of strategic military importance,[11] were discovered during 2005.[12] Secondly, there remain dozens[13] of cluster bombs and other UXO lying in dense vegetation within heavily forested areas, which were not part of the UN Mine Action Coordination Centre (MACC) clearance plan between 1999 and 2001.[14]

Mine Action Program

National Mine Action Authority: The Office of the Kosovo Protection Corps Coordinator (OKPCC) is responsible for mine action and all matters related to explosive ordnance disposal (EOD), under the direct authority of the Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General.[15] In the absence of a national mine action authority, the EOD Management Section of the OKPCC assumes this role. The EOD Management Section plans to transition to a national mine action authority as soon as the status of Kosovo is decided.[16] Accordingly, among the section’s objectives for 2006, were the employment and training of a national director to take on the managerial role over mine action.[17]

Mine Action Center: The EOD Management Section of the OKPCC is also responsible for coordinating all operational clearance and survey activity in Kosovo. UNMIK reports that throughout 2005, the EOD Management Section continued to coordinate the clearance operations of the Kosovo Protection Corps (KPC) EOD teams and demining NGOs working in Kosovo. This has been achieved by daily communication between the organizations involved in UXO and mine clearance, and by conducting site visits and inspections on a daily basis.[18]

Within the EOD section, the post of quality assurance (QA) officer was downsized after the last incumbent’s contract ended in December 2005, due to personnel cuts within UNMIK, and the national staff QA assistant was promoted to deputy chief of EOD management.[19] The structure in early 2006 was: one international post (chief of EOD management), one deputy chief of EOD management and QA, one QA assistant, one MRE assistant and a victim assistance/public information assistant.[20]

UNMIK reported that throughout 2005, there was a continued exchange of technical information and advice between the EOD Management Section and KFOR. Regular updates of the Information Management System for Mine Action (IMSMA) database were said to have been provided to all KFOR units requesting them.[21] As of January 2006, IMSMA had not been handed over to the KPC, which was in the process of restructuring. When this is complete, it was intended that IMSMA training would be carried out and administration rights for the system would remain with the national authority.[22]

As of January 2006, there had been no new developments regarding the EOD section’s involvement with the South Eastern Europe Mine Action Coordination Council. The section had, however, maintained close liaison with the mine action center in Albania, as Kosovo shares a border with Albania, and minefields often straddle each side of this border.[23]

No mine action legislation or standards are currently in force in Kosovo. According to the chief of the EOD Section, this will not be possible until/unless Kosovo becomes an independent state after the current status talks are resolved. However, KPC uses a set of standing operating procedures that are written within the International Mine Action Standards (IMAS).[24]

Strategic Planning and Progress

In January 2006, there remained 15 dangerous areas requiring clearance by NGOs or the KPC; three contained a mine threat and the remaining 12 were contaminated with cluster bomblets.[25] There were also 53 areas re-designated as KPC tasks; these required, as a minimum, technical survey and possibly also clearance (depending on the survey findings).[26] The tasks are of a low priority, mainly in densely forested and mountainous areas away from any communities. UNMIK believes that the KPC can work on them “well into the future” after the demining NGOs have left Kosovo.[27]

In late 2005, the UN reported that if the required funding for demining NGOs to augment the national capacity in Kosovo were secured for 2006, there should be no further need for any donor funding beyond 2007, as two more years of consolidated clearance should see the EOD Management Section meet its objectives, which were:

  • To clear all the remaining dangerous areas;
  • To hand over remaining EOD response tasks to the national capacity;
  • To survey remaining suspicious and dangerous areas; and,
  • To create a national mine action authority within a Kosovo government ministry.[28]

In order to fulfill the objectives, the following support was required from NGOs to augment the national capacity: a technical survey team to conduct surveys of suspicious and dangerous areas and where possible clear small numbers of UXO and mines; and a mine and battle area clearance team to continue clearing the remaining dangerous areas known to contain a threat.[29]

Summary of Efforts to Comply with Article 5

The province of Kosovo is currently part of Serbia and Montenegro, although negotiations as to its future status were ongoing in early 2006. Under Article 5 of the Mine Ban Treaty, Serbia and Montenegro must destroy all antipersonnel mines in mined areas under its jurisdiction or control as soon as possible, but not later than 1 March 2014.[30]

Evaluations of Mine Action

Following the Praxis evaluation of mine action in Kosovo in 2001, the UN Mine Action Service (UNMAS) conducted biannual assessments in 2003 and in 2005.[31] From 25 to 28 September 2005, the Chief of Program Support Section at UNMAS visited the province with the Kosovo program officer at UNMAS. The objectives of the mission were to:

  • Review the capability of the KPC EOD teams to respond to the residual mine and UXO threat;
  • Determine the requirements for ongoing support/augmentation of this capacity; and,
  • Make recommendations on the EOD management and operational response systems.[32]

The UNMAS mission also visited Handicap International/KPC operations in the Dulje Pass, HALO Trust task sites in Goden and Banjica, the Mines Awareness Trust task site in Kabas, the Roehll task site in Dulje Pass, and EOD response locations in Samadraxha, Jasic and Velika Hoca.[33] The mission report identified a number of areas which required strengthening and recommended “additional Technical Survey training to bring all KPC teams up to an appropriate level of competence in this area.”[34] It also called on the OKPCC to “develop a plan that transitions the responsibility for long-term EOD management from the UN to an appropriately structured local capacity within the Department for Emergency Management.”[35]

Demining

In 2005, six organizations were engaged in demining in Kosovo: Handicap International (HI), HALO Trust, KPC, KFOR, Mines Awareness Trust (MAT) and Roehll, a commercial clearance company.

On 16 December 2005, Handicap International ended its demining activities in Kosovo after six years of operations, including four years of providing training and supervision to KPC mine action teams.[36] In 2006, the three remaining demining operators in Kosovo were the KPC EOD teams, HALO and Mines Awareness Trust.[37] All organizations conducting mine clearance also carry out community liaison in their areas of operation.[38]

Since its EOD teams were downsized during 2005, KFOR, in cooperation with the OKPCC, decided to pass to the KPC the responsibility for EOD response to call-outs.[39] According to the OKPCC EOD Management Section, the KPC has taken to the role very well and has performed with dedication and in a professional manner. The only negative point was that the EOD Management Section had lost two clearance teams to these EOD response duties, which had cut the section’s capacity slightly. There was a plan, however, to double the number of teams from seven to 14 during the course of 2006, if funding for new equipment were made available. Funding from the US Department of State for the replacement of critical demining equipment was provided during June and July; this equipment will be purchased by the Slovenian International Trust Fund for Demining and Mine Victims Assistance (ITF). Replacement equipment purchases funded by the US will total approximately $180,000 in 2006.[40]

It was also planned to increase the size of each team from 13 to 19 members in 2006.[41] This would create “two teams within a team. Each KPC EOD team can then be broken down into two teams of nine with one overall commander. The nine-person teams will consist of a team leader, six deminers and two medics. The teams can be broken down into two for small tasks or EOD response duties or work together as one large team for large tasks.”[42]

HALO and MAT were expected to have the same staffing in 2006 as in 2005. The EOD Management Section hoped that by the end of 2006, these two remaining international NGOs could disengage and the national director and national capacity would continue any residual clearance.[43]

In 2005, HI’s Phoenix Project trained the KPC in house clearance and booby-trap clearance, and ran a map-making course. The need for house and booby-trap clearance resulted from the ethnic violence of 2003, when some families returned to their homes to find them booby-trapped. The map-making course was required as the KPC is now responsible for making its own maps and diagrams to add to completion reports and EOD response call-out reports.[44]

Mine and UXO Survey

The MAT technical survey team was retained on contract by the EOD Management Section during 2005, with funding from the OKPCC budget. It was tasked to perform technical surveys on any reported suspicious or dangerous areas that remained or were newly reported by KFOR, KPC, the Kosovo Police Service or the public. As in previous years, the survey team either discredited or confirmed that the area contained a threat, and then carried out clearance of any mines, cluster bomblets or other UXO found. [45]

The survey team conducted more than 150 individual technical surveys in 2005, of which 83 identified an explosive threat, 65 were discredited as having no “significant threat whatsoever,” and 11 tasks were handed back to the EOD Management Section as either incorrectly reported or were hoax reports.[46]

From 1 February 2006, MAT was funded by UNMAS for nine months to continue technical surveys and to conduct clearance. MAT’s main task in 2006 was to survey and clear some of the 15 remaining clearance tasks and 53 KPC tasks. MAT’s technical survey team was operational as of 27 February 2006. According to the chief of the EOD Management Section, “at the end of October there should be no need for any more NGOs in Kosovo and the remaining tasks will be handed to the KPC to clear at their own pace.”[47]

MAT also had UK funding for a small team to train the KPC in technical survey during 2006. On 1 February, MAT started by monitoring KPC EOD teams’ refresher training. The nine-month project had two parts: to assist and monitor KPC EOD yearly refresher training, and, from 10 April 2006, to train all seven KPC EOD teams in technical survey skills.[48]

From 1 April 2006, MAT was also funded by the Kosovo Consolidated Budget for a six-month period to enhance the technical survey capacity. The main aim of this second survey team, which became operational as of 10 April 2006, was to help KPC EOD teams on difficult manual mine clearance and battle area clearance survey tasks.[49]

In 2005, HALO’s survey team was tasked to perform outstanding survey tasks reported by KFOR, the Kosovo Police Service or members of the public during 2005. In some cases the technical survey team discredited the area as containing no explosive threat, but in other cases identified a threat from mines, cluster bomblets or other UXO; these were to be added to the list of 15 dangerous areas being worked on.[50] A total of 36 tasks were technically surveyed by HALO in 2005; 27 require battle area clearance and nine require manual clearance. A total of eight antipersonnel mines and 109 submunitions were found by the team during the surveys.[51] Where a surface threat from cluster bomblets was discovered, the survey team would clear the immediate threat and then conduct area reduction to identify the area that would require future sub-surface clearance. The technical survey team was also capable of clearing limited numbers of mines and delineating the mined area for future clearance.[52]

Based on its experience working in Kosovo, HALO is convinced that claims by the OKPCC that there are only 15 known dangerous areas and 51 suspect areas requiring technical survey are incorrect. HALO reported plans to conduct a survey in mid-July 2006 with other agencies to define the remaining threat from cluster munitions and landmines[53 ] “Without such a re-survey and transparent review of all task dossiers to establish which partially or surface-only ‘cleared areas’ from 2000 and 2001 still need sub-surface clearance, HALO fears that another premature exit date may be set by UNMAS for the departure of international clearance agencies. This would result in further unnecessary civilian deaths while the...KPC addressed the remaining problem over the next five to ten years.”[54]

HALO also believes that, “between 130 and 140 contaminated areas still exist with an average of three more reported each month. The national clearance capacity is not able to address this scale of problem.”[55]

UNMAS has taken a different view. In May 2006, it reported that: “Since 2002 there have been 14 newly reported Suspected Hazardous Areas. All of these areas have now been either cleared or discredited. The last such report occurred in late 2004.... There is currently an extremely limited and manageable threat posed by landmines and CBUs [cluster bomb units] in Kosovo, and this will be even further reduced by the end of 2006 when the current and planned tasks are completed.... Such threat as remains may easily be dealt with, and eventually eliminated, by a “report and response” system and capability that is able to respond to requests for clearance by dispatching a suitable team to investigate, and clear if necessary.... Although it is not possible to completely rule out further incidents, landmine and CBU related casualties through accidental contacts have been reduced to very low levels in Kosovo. Further clearance and survey efforts during 2006 will add to this situation and there are no economic or developmental blockages caused by the actual or suspected presence of landmines or CBUs.”[56]

As a consequence, UNMAS advised the KPC coordinator that, “UNMAS believes that as a result of the current and planned clearance activities in 2006, as well as training activities being conducted this year, the KPC explosive ordnance disposal teams will be capable of addressing the residual landmine and UXO threat in Kosovo from 2007 and beyond. As a result, UNMAS does not intend to continue funding support for international mine action organizations operating in Kosovo next year.”[57]

HALO pointed out that it disagreed with UNMAS in 2001 and again in 2004-2005 about the residual mine and submunition threat in Kosovo, including UNMAS’s description that Kosovo has no greater threat than post-World War II Europe. The total of 749 landmines and 977 cluster bomblets cleared in 2005 is more than “residual.” HALO cleared three times more than the KPC in 2005; by mid-June 2006, HALO had cleared another 537 mines and 650 bomblets. It therefore seemed illogical to HALO that the OKPCC did not want HALO to continue working in Kosovo after 2006. HALO also said that that the OKPCC continues to deny open access to all the task dossiers so that HALO can review how many tasks since 1999 received only surface clearance instead of surface and sub-surface clearance.[58]

Mine and ERW Clearance

The plan for 2005 was to clear as many as possible of the dangerous areas that remained, turn any priority tasks where only a sub-surface threat remained into EOD response tasks, and survey any outstanding suspicious areas reported by members of the public, to either verify or discredit them. With ongoing clearance, the target for 2005 was to reduce the number of dangerous areas to just over 20, which would then be addressed in the 2006 clearance plan.[59] The chief of the EOD Management Section notes that the target for 2005 was exceeded as there were only 15 dangerous areas at the start of 2006; these were being addressed as of April 2006.[60]

In 2005, demining operations cleared more than 4.3 square kilometers of land, destroying in the process 719 antipersonnel mines, 30 antivehicle mines, 977 cluster bomblets and 1,378 other items of UXO.[61]

Area (square meters) Cleared and Mines and UXO Destroyed in Kosovo in 2005[62]

Operator
Clearance
Antipersonnel mines
Antivehicle mines
Cluster bomblets
UXO
KPC EOD
1,706,670
207
2
126
203
HI
222,990
24
0
215
4
HALO
917,270
374
2
395
18
MAT
1,264,078
70
1
155
187
Roehll
207,958
0
0
57
2
KFOR
--
44
25
29
964
Total
4,318,966
719
30
977
1,378

Note: KFOR only conducts EOD response so does not report clearance figures in square meters.

Accumulated Mine/UXO Clearance June 1999 to end 2005

Year
Clearance
Antipersonnel mines
Antivehicle mines
Cluster bomblets
UXO
June 1999-2001
32,224,107
19,457
5,515
15,940
13,896
2002
203,360
9
0
206
29
2003
799,242
161
59
423
2,381
2004
3,942,580
910
15
772
2,554
2005
4,318,966
719
30
977
1,378
Total
41,488,255
21,256
5,619
18,318
20,238

All types of land were said to have been cleared, from pasture to dense forest and mountain sides. Tasks were prioritized based on the closeness of the threat to communities or areas, such as forests and grazing land, from which the population makes a living. All of the clearance was done by manual deminers; in 2005 machines and mine detecting dogs were not used by any of the clearance teams working in Kosovo.[63]

In 2005, KPC EOD teams revisited the cluster munition site at Qafe Prushit. The teams also cleared over half a square kilometer of land around Pristina airport. Each team spent three weeks at a time in the Dulje Pass improving their demining skills alongside an experienced team from Handicap International.[64]

All known mined areas in the Dulje Pass were reported to have been cleared during 2005 by HI and the KPC. According to UNMIK, there were four dangerous areas containing cluster bomblets remaining in Dulje Pass that were due to be cleared in 2006.[65] HALO battle area clearance teams were initially deployed to sites in Gjocaj and Banjica to continue sub-surface clearance of large cluster bomblet-contaminated sites. The teams used large loop detectors in open ground and Schonstadt metal locators loaned from the EOD Management Section for the densely forested locations.[66]

HALO also had two outstanding antipersonnel mine clearance tasks close to the Albanian border at Koshare and Goden. The Koshare task had previously been worked on by MAT. At the end of 2004, MAT had cleared more than 150 antipersonnel mines from the site before snow stopped operations. HALO took over the site in April 2005 and continued until its completion in November 2005. The antipersonnel mine clearance task in Goden was taken over from DanChurchAid in late 2004; HALO worked on it for most of 2005 until its completion in late November.[67]

During 2005, HALO destroyed 791 explosive devices from gardens, fields, tracks and schools in Kosovo. More than half of the items were removed from sites not recorded as dangerous areas by the OKPCC EOD Management Section.[68]

In 2005, the MAT technical survey team worked on several suspected mined areas and located and removed mines that were fairly close to outlying communities. One task of particular note was to confirm or discredit reports of cluster munitions on the surface in a mountainous range close to the Montenegro border. In order to reach this site, the survey team had to hire mules from a nearby village and transport all detection equipment and explosives overland.[69]

The MAT technical survey team worked on EOD response (Quick Response Team, QRT) during the winter period and completed 12 EOD tasks, mostly in the southwest of the province. The team also conducted one manual mine clearance task during this period. Distinct from other agencies, MAT’s QRT also responded to evening and nighttime calls. During these tasks, MAT’s EOD team destroyed 11 items of UXO.[70] The chief of the EOD Management Section notes that because the KPC EOD response teams only work an eight-hour day, MAT was funded and tasked to conduct any EOD response tasks after hours so that there was in fact a “24/7” EOD response being provided.[71]

The German Ministry of Foreign Affairs made funding available through the International Trust Fund for Demining and Mine Victims Assistance (ITF) for a commercial UXO and mine clearance company in 2005 to work on a project in the Dulje Pass; Germany said the funding had to go to German clearance organizations on a list of approved contractors.[72] The Roehll company arrived in Kosovo in August; it cleared three dangerous areas contaminated with cluster bomblets and UXO.[73]

The EOD Management Section’s QA inspectors carried out daily visits to the KPC and NGO task sites throughout 2005.[74] Quality assurance is conducted internally by KPC and NGO team leaders who have to check a certain amount of each person’s clearance per day.

There were no demining injuries or deaths in Kosovo in 2005. All deminers in Kosovo are insured through local companies.[75]

Other Risk Reduction Measures

Marking and fencing of newly discovered contaminated areas continued in 2005. The chief of the EOD Management Section reports, “at the end of each demining season we physically mark any known dangerous areas and warn the public. This usually takes place in November before the heavy snowfalls.”[76] However, as in previous years, marking and fencing materials are either removed by the public or stolen. “We also conduct community liaison in contaminated areas so at least the people living in the communities know what areas are dangerous.”[77]

Mine Risk Education

Mine risk education (MRE) was implemented by the OKPCC and by the Kosovo branch of the Red Cross supported by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). In 2005, a total of 22,631 people received MRE messages directly.[78] KPC and KFOR also carried out MRE in the course of their duties. The basic message in Kosovo is “Don’t touch anything suspicious!” and “Report suspect items to KPC, KFOR or the Police.” According to the OKPCC, 76 percent of all accidents in Kosovo since 2002 have been caused by people touching or tampering with mines and UXO.[79]

The OKPCC EOD Management Section coordinates all MRE activities in Kosovo; it continued to hold monthly coordination meetings with all relevant MRE actors in 2005. All MRE activities are said to accord with IMAS.[80]

The OKPCC’s MRE assistant visited communities and individuals to conduct “on the spot MRE” when incidents were reported by the police, KPC or KFOR. The assistant also provided monthly landmine and UXO safety briefings to all incoming UNMIK and other personnel; threat assessment briefings to KFOR were also delivered. The MRE assistant provided MRE/community liaison refresher training to the HALO and MAT teams. [81]

The Red Cross of Kosovo continued to carry out the Kosovo-wide MRE program handed over by the ICRC in 2004. The campaign targets children aged 12-16 years, at-risk groups and Red Cross volunteers. In total 12,202 people (11,734 children and 468 adults) attended MRE sessions, and exhibitions were organized in schools.[82] Red Cross field offices arranged MRE sessions for adult at-risk groups, such as hunters and fishermen, and held regular meetings with MRE volunteers to gather information about areas affected by mines/UXO. The Red Cross had seven field offices covering 26 of the 30 municipalities, and 60 to 65 volunteers who serve as a link between communities and the field offices.[83] Red Cross MRE personnel received refresher training in 2005.[84]

KPC teams delivered MRE messages to primary and secondary schools, including distribution of notebooks, T-shirts, calendars, diaries and posters.[85] From 20 May to 30 June 2005, the EOD Management Section invited children and youth in all primary and secondary schools to an MRE drawing competition.[86] Training of KPC MRE teams was completed in early 2004, with each of the six KPC Protectorate Zones having at least one team to visit schools regularly. The seven KPC EOD teams share four community liaison staff; OKPCC monitors and supports community liaison.

The most popular and effective means for disseminating MRE to the public is through television, radio and print media, according to information from MRE coordination meetings.[87] During 2005, a half-page color advertisement was placed in all daily newspapers in Kosovo and published daily for a week at a time. The most popular radio stations aired MRE messages and TV spots were shown on the three most popular TV stations in Kosovo.[88]

OKPCC sees a need to continue MRE in order to maintain the declining incidence of mine/UXO casualties and as long as formerly unknown areas of contamination are reported.[89]

Funding and Assistance

Landmine Monitor identified six donors which contributed a total of at least $1,895,252 for mine action in Kosovo in 2005, an increase from approximately $1,578,059 donated by three countries in 2004.[90] Donors reporting funding in 2005 were:

  • Belgium: €150,000 ($186,735) as value of in-kind contribution (three EOD experts with KFOR);[91]
  • Germany: €150,000 ($186,735) of its 2005 contribution to ITF was earmarked to Roehll (mine clearance) and HI;[92]
  • Netherlands: €766,108 ($953,728) to HALO for mine clearance and MRE;[93]
  • Spain: €177,600 ($221,094) for equipment, explosives and UXO risk education;[94]
  • UK: £153,000 ($278,460) to HI for training of KPC;[95]
  • US: $68,500 through ITF, consisting of $38,500 to UNMIK for MRE, and $30,000 for the training of nurses and rehabilitation workers.[96]

According to a media report, UK funding for the KPC training program was due to end in 2005, but a further £114,000 (about $207,480) was pledged for specialist mine survey training in 2006.[97]

Landmine/UXO Casualties[98]

No landmine casualties were reported in 2005. However, there were 11 new UXO/CBU casualties in six incidents, including three killed and eight injured. All the casualties were male and at least five were children; none were deminers engaged in mine action.[99] This represents a decrease from the 14 civilian mine/UXO/CBU casualties (one killed and 13 injured) recorded by OKPCC in 2004.[100]

Three children were killed and two injured when a hand grenade they were tampering with exploded. All but one of the incidents were also due to deliberate UXO tampering. Of the eight people who were seriously injured, four had received MRE and were aware that tampering with UXO was dangerous. Collecting UXO amongst scrap metal for economic reasons was not the cause of any casualties in 2005. Two of the incidents happened in the border areas with Albania.[101]

The EOD Management Section, in cooperation with the Institute of Public Health, investigates all mine/UXO/CBU incidents in Kosovo and the victim assistance/public information assistant interviews the survivors or family members after each incident is reported.[102]

Survivor Assistance

There are no programs in Kosovo specifically developed to assist people with disabilities, including mine survivors.[103] The main services offered are community-based and developed by NGOs, but they target children from 3 to 18 years of age.[104] While there is some cooperation between organizations working with mine survivors in Kosovo, this has not led to specific survivor assistance programs.[105] Decision-making and financing of the social welfare system is centralized, although decentralization of the social welfare system to the local level is foreseen in Kosovo. Among the main challenges to survivor assistance are the unresolved status of people with disabilities, and the lack of adequate public health, social welfare, rehabilitation, vocational training and education services. Service provision is further hampered by the lack of statistics regarding the total number of survivors, their social status, type and severity of injury, as well as an assessment of their rehabilitation and reintegration needs.[106]

Disabled people’s organizations advocate that the government take financial responsibility for community-based services, which have been wholly dependent on international donors. As the international community is gradually withdrawing from Kosovo, these services are at risk.[107]

The EOD Management Section’s victim assistance/public information assistant worked in close cooperation with the Ministry of Labor and Social Welfare and the Institute of Public Health during 2005 to identify and register UXO/mine casualties, and to inform survivors how and where to address their needs.[108]

Kosovo has an extensive network of medical support, although the standard of facilities can vary widely. The Qendra University Hospital in Pristina is the only hospital capable of handling major trauma cases. KFOR units provide an evacuation capability and immediate medical attention. However, public facilities reportedly cannot meet the demand for services.[109]

Facilities for physical rehabilitation are reportedly poor, there is limited or no capacity to provide occupational therapy, and there are no concrete plans to train occupational therapists.[110] The Qendra National Ortho-Prosthetic Center is the only facility for the production and fitting of lower limb prostheses; there are no facilities for the production of upper limb prostheses.[111] Only the provision and fitting of lower limb prostheses is free, as are the first 10-12 days of rehabilitation; after that, rehabilitation costs €19 ($24) per day.[112] All upper limb prostheses are made in Skopje (Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia), and prices range from €1,000 to €2,000 ($1,250-$2,500). Eye prostheses are made in Skopje and Zagreb, Croatia; the cost is €900 ($1,120). With an average national income at €170 to €200 ($211-$249) per month and families eligible for social welfare receiving approximately €60 ($75) per month, the cost of optional prostheses is prohibitive.[113]

In 2005, the Qendra center received no applications from mine survivors; it produced 126 prostheses, 798 orthoses and 1,041 orthopedic shoes; 60 prostheses were repaired.[114] One of the two senior technicians whose training was sponsored by HI graduated in July 2005; the second technician was due to graduate in May 2006.[115] HI handed over full responsibility for the center to the Ministry of Health in May 2004, and in 2005 HI ceased management advice to the center. The Qendra center had to reduce its activities due to a lack of financial support; in 2005, the Ministry of Health supported only the costs of prosthetic production materials and salaries for approximately 30 workers.[116]

HI continued to support the establishment of a three-year degree course in physiotherapy at the University of Pristina. From the 85 students enrolled in 2003/2004, 70 had graduated as of February 2006; 52 new students were enrolled.[117]

Mine/UXO survivors also receive assistance through the ITF at the Slovenian Institute for Rehabilitation in Ljubljana, which has a specialist rehabilitation unit for mine survivors. In 2005, one landmine survivor from Kosovo received rehabilitation services at the institute.[118]

Both peer-to-peer and professional psychosocial support is available in Kosovo. There are eight vocational training centers supported by the Ministry of Labor and Social Welfare in Pristina, Ferizaj, Gjilan, Gllogovc, Mitrovica, Peja, Podujevo and Prizren. However, these centers do not specifically target people with disabilities. Job placement programs for people with disabilities do not exist but, reportedly, they have good chances of employment in banks, ministries and schools.[119] A strategy for vocational training was under development by the Department of Labor of the Ministry of Labor and Social Welfare, but disabled people’s organizations had not been included in the process.[120]

The EOD Management Section’s victim assistance/public information assistant is a mine survivor, as is the MRE assistant employed by the Mines Awareness Trust.[121]

HandiKos, a local disability NGO with offices in 26 municipalities and 12 community centers throughout Kosovo, provides physical rehabilitation, psychosocial support, vocational training, lobbying, and advocacy for the rights of people with disabilities, including mine survivors. HandiKos collaborated with the Ministry of Labor and Social Welfare in some areas; it hosts the ministry’s vocational training center in Pristina. HandiKos has been dependent on international funding; in case this does not continue in the future, it believed that full responsibility for the services and the licensing of service providers should be transferred to the government.[122]

During 2005, the Jesuit Refugee Service (JRS) continued to work with young mine survivors, but had to reduce its activities due to decreased funding. In 2005, the program provided medical support, materials, and psychosocial assistance to 63 mine survivors, including visits to two new survivors.[123] JRS stated that one of the greatest difficulties faced by mine survivors is that upper limb prostheses and eye prostheses are not available within Kosovo. In July 2005, JRS organized a 10-day summer-camp in Ohrid, Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, for 24 young landmine survivors.[124]

Other providers of vocational training for people with disabilities include Oxfam and World Vision.[125]

Disability Policy and Practice[126]

Kosovo has legislation that provides all people who sustained injuries between November 1998 and June 1999, including mine survivors, with a small monthly stipend. However, there is no provision in the legislation for those suffering injuries from mines, UXO or CBU after this date. Mine survivors receive a small pension from the Ministry of Labor and Social Welfare depending on their level of incapacity (to be eligible for the pension, the level of incapacity has to be more than 40 percent). In January 2004, a law initiating a disability pension scheme was approved by parliament. Generally, social benefits in Kosovo are inadequate for a reasonable standard of living.[127]

In December 2000, UNMIK established a task force on disability with the primary aim of developing a comprehensive disability strategy for Kosovo. As of March 2006, the Comprehensive Disability Policy Framework had not been approved or implemented.[128]


[1] Email from Steven Saunders, Chief, EOD Management Section, Office of the Kosovo Protection Corps Coordinator (OKPCC), UNMIK, 30 January 2006.
[2] Interview with Ahmet Sallova, Deputy Chief, EOD Management Section, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 21 March 2006.
[3] See Landmine Monitor Report 2003, p. 748; Landmine Monitor Report 2005, p. 955.
[4] Email from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 30 January 2006.
[5] Interview with Ahmet Sallova, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 21 March 2006.
[6] See Landmine Monitor Report 2002, p. 822.
[7] “UNMIK OKPCC EOD Management Section Annual Report 2005,” UNMIK, Pristina, 18 January 2006, p. 2.
[8] Email from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 30 January 2006.
[9] Email from Ahmet Sallova, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 9 March 2006.
[10] Email from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 30 January 2006.
[11] Ibid.
[12] Email from Ahmet Sallova, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 9 March 2006.
[13] The number is not in the hundreds or thousands. Email from Ahmet Sallova, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 9 March 2006.
[14] UN, “2006Portfolio of Mine Action Projects,” New York, p. 457.
[15] See Landmine Monitor Report 2005, p. 956.
[16] Email from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 30 January 2006. See Evaluations of Mine Action section for a UNMAS recommendation on transition to national ownership.
[17] Email from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 30 January 2006.
[18] “UNMIK OKPCC EOD Management Section Annual Report 2005,” UNMIK, Pristina, 18 January 2006, p. 1.
[19] Email from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 25 April 2006.
[20] Ibid, 30 January 2006.
[21] “UNMIK OKPCC EOD Management Section Annual Report 2005,” UNMIK, Pristina, 18 January 2006, p. 2.
[22] Email from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 30 January 2006.
[23] Ibid.
[24] Email from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 25 April 2006.
[25] Email from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 30 January 2006; “UNMIK OKPCC EOD Management Section Annual Report 2005,” UNMIK, Pristina, 18 January 2006, p. 10.
[26] Email from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 30 January 2006.
[27] “UNMIK OKPCC EOD Management Section Annual Report 2005,” UNMIK, Pristina, 18 January 2006, p. 2.
[28] UN, “2006 Portfolio of Mine Action Projects,” New York, p. 458.
[29] Ibid.
[30] See the report on Serbia and Montenegro in this edition of the Landmine Monitor Report.
[31] Email from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 25 April 2006.
[32] UNMAS, “UNMAS Mission Report, Kosovo, 25-28 September 2005,” 13 October 2005, p. 1.
[33] Ibid.
[34] Ibid, pp. 3, 6.
[35] Ibid, p. 5.
[36] Email from Stéphanie Pillet, Assistant to the Mine Action Desk Officer, Mines Department, HI, 28 February 2006.
[37] Interview with Ahmet Sallova, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 21 March 2006.
[38] Interview with Rajmonda Thaqi, Mine Risk Education Assistant, EOD Management Section, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 21 March 2006.
[39] Email from Ahmet Sallova, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 9 March 2006.
[40] Email from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 25 April 2006; email from H. Murphey McCloy Jr., Senior Demining Advisor, US Department of State, 7 July 2006.
[41] Email from Ahmet Sallova, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 9 March 2006.
[42] Email from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 25 April 2006.
[43] Ibid, 30 January 2006.
[44] “UNMIK OKPCC EOD Management Section Annual Report 2005,” UNMIK, Pristina, 18 January 2006, p. 7.
[45] Ibid, p. 9.
[46] Ibid.
[47] Email from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 25 April 2006.
[48] Email from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 30 January 2006; email from Mika Toivonen, Program Manager, MAT, Kosovo, 23 February 2006.
[49] Email from Mika Toivonen, MAT, Kosovo, 9 June 2006.
[50] Email from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 25 April 2006.
[51] Email from Matthew Hovell, Caucasus and Balkans Desk Officer, HALO Trust, 1 June 2006.
[52] “UNMIK OKPCC EOD Management Section Annual Report 2005,” UNMIK, Pristina, 18 January 2006, p. 8.
[53 ] Telephone interview with Matthew Hovell, HALO, 23 June 2006.
[54] “Kosovo,” HALO Trust website, www.halotrust.org, accessed 7 May 2006.
[55] Ibid.
[56] “UNMAS Report on the Landmine and Cluster Bomb Threat in Kosovo 2006, Situation Analysis and Evaluation of the Kosovo Protection Corps Capacity to Address the Problem,” UNMAS, New York, 14 May 2006, pp. 2, 6-7.
[57] Letter from the Director of UNMAS to Maj. Gen. Chris Steirn, CBE, KPC Coordinator, New York, 14 May 2006.
[58] Email from Guy Willoughby, Director, HALO, 23 June 2006.
[59] UN, “2006 Portfolio of Mine Action Projects,” New York, p. 457.
[60] Email from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 25 April 2006.
[61] Ibid, 30 January 2006.
[62] “UNMIK OKPCC EOD Management Section Annual Report 2005,” UNMIK, Pristina, 18 January 2006, Annex D: “Clearance statistics by organization.” HALO informed Landmine Monitor that it cleared 20, not 18, UXO in 2005. Email from Matthew Hovell, HALO, 1 June 2006.
[63] Email from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 30 January 2006.
[64] “UNMIK OKPCC EOD Management Section Annual Report 2005,” UNMIK, Pristina, 18 January 2006, p. 6.
[65] Email from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 30 January 2006.
[66] “UNMIK OKPCC EOD Management Section Annual Report 2005,” UNMIK, Pristina, 18 January 2006, p. 8.
[67] Ibid.
[68] Email from Matthew Hovell, HALO, 21 June 2006.
[69] “UNMIK OKPCC EOD Management Section Annual Report 2005,” UNMIK, Pristina, 18 January 2006, p. 9.
[70] Email from Mika Toivonen, MAT, Kosovo, 23 February 2006.
[71] Email from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 25 April 2006.
[72] Ibid.
[73] “UNMIK OKPCC EOD Management Section Annual Report 2005,” UNMIK, Pristina, 18 January 2006, p. 11; ITF, “Annual Report 2005,” p. 39.
[74] Ibid, p. 2.
[75] Email from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 30 January 2006; see Landmine Monitor Report 2005,
p. 956.
[76] Email from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 25 April 2006.
[77] Ibid, 30 January 2006.
[78] Interview with Rajmonda Thaqi, OKPCC UNMIK, Pristina, 21 March 2006.
[79] Emails from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, 30 January and 18 April 2006; interview with Rajmonda Thaqi, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 21 March 2006.
[80] Ibid.
[81] “UNMIK OKPCC EOD Management Section Annual Report 2005,” UNMIK, 18 January 2006, p. 3; interview with Rajmonda Thaqi, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 21 March 2006.
[82] Email from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, 30 January 2006; interview with Zekije Muriqi, Communication Coordinator, Red Cross of Kosovo, Pristina, 21 March 2006.
[83] Interview with Zekije Muriqi, Red Cross of Kosovo, 21 March 2006.
[84] Email from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, 30 January 2006; interview with Rajmonda Thaqi, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 21 March 2006.
[85] “UNMIK OKPCC EOD Management Section Annual Report 2005,” UNMIK, 18 January 2006, p. 3; interview with Rajmonda Thaqi, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 21 March 2006.
[86] Email from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 30 January 2006.
[87] “UNMIK OKPCC EOD Management Section Annual Report 2005,” UNMIK, 18 January 2006, p. 3; interview with Rajmonda Thaqi, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 21 March 2006.
[88] “UNMIK OKPCC EOD Management Section Annual Report 2005,” UNMIK, 18 January 2006, p. 4.
[89] UNMAS, “Country Fact File: Serbia and Montenegro (Kosovo),” www.mineaction.org, accessed 2 June 2006.
[90] See Landmine Monitor Report 2005, p. 961.
[91] Belgium Article 7 Report, Form J, 26 April 2006; email from Dominique Jones, Ministry of Defence, 17 May 2006. Average exchange rate for 2005: €1 = US$1.2449, used throughout this report. US Federal Reserve, “List of Exchange Rates (Annual),” 3 January 2006.
[92] Germany reported contributing a total of €600,000 ($746,940) to ITF for mine clearance in Serbia and Montenegro in 2005. ITF, “Second Donation of Federal Republic of Germany to ITF in year 2005,” 23 June 2005; ITF, “Annual Report 2005,” p. 39; email from Gregor Sančanin, Program Manager, ITF, 6 July 2006.
[93] Email from Ellen Schut, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 7 April 2006; email from Brechtje Paardekooper, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, 18 April 2006.
[94] Spain Article 7 Report, Form J, 27 April 2006; email from Luis Gómez Nogueira, Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Co-operation, 25 April 2006.
[95] Email from Debbie Clements, Ministry of Defence, 10 August 2005. Average exchange rate for 2005: £1 = US$1.820. US Federal Reserve, “List of Exchange Rates (Annual),” 3 January 2006.
[96] Email from H. Murphey McCloy Jr., Senior Demining Advisor, US Department of State, 7 July 2006; ITF, “Use of Donations by Countries in Year 2005,” in email from Iztok Hočevar, ITF, 11 May 2006; ITF, “Annual Report 2005,” p. 40.
[97] “Adam Ingram witnesses Balkans conflict prevention work,” M2 Presswire (UK), 18 April 2006.
[98] Unless stated otherwise, all information in this section is from UNMIK, “UNMIK OKPCC EOD Management Section Annual Report 2005,” Pristina, 18 January 2006, p. 5.
[99] Email from Steven Saunders, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 30 January 2006; interview with Bajram Krasniqi, Public Information Assistant, EOD Management Section, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 21 March 2006.
[100] See Landmine Monitor Report 2005, p. 962.
[101] Interview with Bajram Krasniqi, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 21 March 2006.
[102] See Landmine Monitor Report 2005, p. 962.
[103] Email to Landmine Monitor from Nexhat Shatri, Country Program Officer, HI, Pristina, 23 March 2006; email from Bajram Krasniqi, OKPCC, UNMIK, 24 March 2006.
[104] Email from Nexhat Shatri, HI, Pristina, 23 March 2006.
[105] Interview with Kastriot Dodaj, Program Manager, Jesuit Refugee Service, Pristina, 22 March 2006; email from Nexhat Shatri, HI, Pristina, 23 March 2006.
[106] Emails from Nexhat Shatri, HI, Pristina, 27 February and 23 March 2006.
[107] Email from Nexhat Shatri, HI, Pristina, 27 February 2006.
[108] “UNMIK OKPCC EOD Management Section Annual Report 2005,” UNMIK, Pristina, 18 January 2006, p. 4.
[109] See Landmine Monitor Report 2005, pp. 962-963.
[110] Interview with Nexhat Shatri, HI, Pristina, 21 March 2006.
[111] Interview with Bajram Krasniqi, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 21 March 2006; interview with Kastriot Dodaj, JRS, Pristina, 22 March 2006.
[112] Interview with Nexhat Shatri, HI, Pristina, 21 March 2006; interview with Kastriot Dodaj, JRS, Pristina, 22 March 2006.
[113] Interview with Kastriot Dodaj, JRS, Pristina, 22 March 2006.
[114] Email from Lirije Makolli, Qendra National Ortho-Prosthetic Center, Pristina, 27 February 2006.
[115] Email from Nexhat Shatri, HI, Pristina, 27 February 2006.
[116] Interview with Nexhat Shatri, HI, Pristina, 21 March 2006.
[117] Email from Nexhat Shatri, HI, Pristina, 27 February 2006; see Landmine Monitor Report 2005, p. 963.
[118] Interview with Bajram Krasniqi, OKPCC UNMIK, Pristina, 21 March 2006; www.mineawareness.org, accessed 27 April 2006.
[119] Interview with Nexhat Shatri, HI, Pristina, 21 March 2006.
[120] Email from Nexhat Shatri, HI, Pristina, 27 February 2006.
[121] Information provided by Rajmonda Thaqi, OKPCC, UNMIK, Pristina, 21 March 2006.
[122] Email from Nexhat Shatri, HI, Pristina, 27 February 2006.
[123] Interview with Kastriot Dodaj, JRS, Pristina, 22 March 2006.
[124] Email from Fr. Stjepan Kusan S. J., Regional Director, JRS, 31 January 2006; JRS, “Annual Report for Landmine Survivors Kosovo 2005,” Pristina, February 2006.
[125] See Landmine Monitor Report 2004, p. 1219.
[126] See Landmine Monitor Report 2005, p. 964; Landmine Monitor Report 2004, pp. 1219-1220.
[127] Interview with Kastriot Dodaj, JRS, Pristina, 22 March 2006.
[128] Ibid.