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9 - ICRC Regional Seminar for States of the Southern Africa Development Community (SADC), Harare, Zimbabwe, 21–23 April 1997

from PART 3 - THE OTTAWA PROCESS FROM REGIONAL INITIATIVES TO AN INTERNATIONAL PROHIBITION OF ANTI-PERSONNEL MINES

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 December 2009

Louis Maresca
Affiliation:
International Committee of the Red Cross
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Summary

Organized by the ICRC in cooperation with the Organization of African Unity and the Republic of Zimbabwe

To further the developing momentum in the region towards a total ban on anti-personnel mines, the ICRC convened a meeting of defence and foreign affairs of ficials from the 12 SADC countries to discuss the military utility and humanitarian costs of anti-personnel mines. The findings of the military study commissioned by the ICRC and entitled Anti-personnel Landmines: Friend or Foe? were examined critically in light of the southern African experience. The seminar ended with an unequivocal call for an end to the landmine plague, and the participants unanimously endorsed the objective of a total prohibition of anti-personnel mines, including by their own governments.

Anti-personnel Mines: What Future for Southern Africa?

Final Declaration of Participants

(representing: Angola, Botswana, Lesotho, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Swaziland, Tanzania, Zambia, Zimbabwe)

Harare, 23 April 1997

Defence and foreign affairs of ficials from all 12 States of the Southern Africa Development Community gathered in Harare to consider the human, social and economic costs of anti-personnel mines in Southern Africa and throughout the world. Participants examined the military effectiveness of these weapons, the practical difficulties of their actual use and mine clearance. The seminar sought to develop recommendations for a common response in Southern Africa to the humanitarian crisis caused by landmines. The following statement was adopted by the participants.

Participants in the seminar “Anti-personnel Landmines: What Future for Southern Africa?” agree that:

  1. the global scourge of landmines, which kill and injure some 2,000 persons per month, most of whom are civilians, is unacceptable and must be stopped. Mines indiscriminately kill and maim civilians and combatants alike, and continue to do so long after conflicts end, which is a cause ofg rave concern;

  2. […]

Type
Chapter
Information
The Banning of Anti-Personnel Landmines
The Legal Contribution of the International Committee of the Red Cross 1955–1999
, pp. 519 - 521
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2000

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