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Munitions

Sally Ramage | 13.04.2007 08:25 | World

UK has not ratified the Protocol

CLUSTER MUNITIONS ISSUE
By
Sally Ramage


The hot issue of the day is cluster munitions and the indiscriminate damage that they cause. So let’s discuss cluster munitions for a moment and when we understand the crux of the issue, we must activate ourselves to spread awareness of the subject and lobby Parliament to ratify the cluster munitions Protocol which the UK government signed but has not yet ratified. We must act urgently because this cluster munitions Protocol, even though signed by many countries, cannot become binding international law until it is ratified by all the countries that signed this Protocol V.

What’s this Protocol all about, then? Protocol V makes a country responsible for clearing all explosive remnants of war in territory under its control and to provide warnings, risk education and other measures to protect civilian populations. If the UK uses weapons that leave behind explosive remnants, as cluster munitions do, the UK must provide assistance for clearance, even if the territory in question is not under UK control.

What does this all mean and how does it affect the UK government?
Well, we manufacture cluster munitions in this country and we use it in other countries and we sell it to other countries. Who knows if our own manufactured cluster munitions have not killed some of our own soldiers?

Why should the UK government be ashamed of itself for not yet ratifying this Protocol V?

Because to date many other countries have ratified the Protocol- in fact, the countries showing willing in this respect are Albania, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, El Salvador, Finland, France, Germany, Holy See, India, Ireland, Liberia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Nicaragua, Norway, Sierra Leone, Slovakia, Sweden, Switzerland, Tajikstan and Ukraine, but not the United Kingdom (nor the United States for that matter!)

Why else are we disgraced by not yet ratifying this Protocol?

Because there are remnants of cluster munitions still around the world, putting people at risk of losing their limbs. “World War 2” cluster munitions’ remnants were found in Russia, Belarus, Chile, and the Eritrean/Ethopian border, Kenya, Namibia, Serbia and Montenegro.The UK Armed Forces say they do keep records of munitions used during combat operations and that their data is available to all! Really? The UK is known to have used L20A1 munitions which contain 49 sub-munitions, equipped with self-destruct mechanism, yet, unexploded L20A1 were found in some post-conflict environments.

Also, the UK, together with the Royal Army of Oman and its other allies Jordan and Iran, used cluster munitions in the Dhofar region between 1964 and 1975 during an internal conflict between the Government of Oman and the Communist Separatist group, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Oman (PFLO). We are ashamed and rightly so.
Please let’s do something about it as we think about related dreadful facts-
90% of casualties of cluster munitions in Iraq were men and boys, 94% in Lebanon, 88% in Afghanistan, 86% in Cambodia, 87% in Chad and 70% in Guinea Bassau. This tells us that the innocent who are maimed by cluster munitions are men, children and women.
ENDS

Sally Ramage

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20.09.2007 02:18

Britain accused on cluster bombs
The UK government has been accused of trying to reclassify two kinds of cluster bombs so they can still be used after a proposed global ban begins.
Landmine Action said the government wanted to make use of its current stocks of the controversial bombs which open up to scatter smaller bombs.
The government says its position was backed by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).
However the ICRC says this has never been discussed with them by Britain.
This comes as three churches in Britain call for a complete ban on the use of "indiscriminate" and "terrible" cluster bombs by UK forces.
In a joint statement, the Baptist Union of Great Britain, the Methodist Church and the United Reform Church also pressed Foreign Secretary David Miliband to actively support an international treaty to ban such weapons.
Moral high ground
The campaign group Landmine Action says the government's position calls into question Britain's desire to hold the moral high ground on this issue, claimed in March when it announced it was the first major power to scrap cluster bombs voluntarily.
There is an international consensus growing around the idea of banning cluster bombs.
These have been particularly harmful to children in the Balkans as well as Afghanistan and Iraq, because they tend to pick them up after conflicts, setting off the explosion.
A ban is being considered through the CCW (conventional weapons) negotiations at the UN, as well as the separate Oslo process.
As the serious negotiations begin this winter, Landmine Action questions why Britain is trying to hold on to two kinds of munitions.
As recently as last November, an air-launched rocket, the CR7/M261, was included in a list of cluster bombs issued by the Ministry of Defence. But in a parliamentary answer in July, Defence Minister Bob Ainsworth said this "does not fall within the UK's understanding of a cluster munition".
The reasons given were firstly that it is "directly" fired, in that it can be targeted accurately, and secondly that it has too few sub-munitions, or "bomblets", to use a less technical word.
Simon Conway, director of Landmine Action, says if this was a cluster bomb last November, then it still is.
Neither of the government's points are internationally accepted definitions that would exclude this rocket from a ban.
With 19 rockets carried in each pod, and two pods to a helicopter, one strike could deliver more than 340 bomblets.
'Improving reliability'
Mr Conway said: "It's a con. I think it's an attempt to try to secure a short-term advantage.
"Because we have got these things on the shelf we want to hold onto them, and that is very damaging. It has all the characteristics of a cluster munition.
"It's delivered by rocket as many are. The rocket breaks open in the air, and large numbers of these small sub-munitions fall down out of the air and saturate an area that might cover several football fields.'
The Ministry of Defence said: "The UK is committed to improving reliability of all munitions, including cluster munitions, with the aim of achieving lower failure rates and leaving less unexploded ordnance."
A spokesman said there was no international agreement as to what constitutes a cluster munition, and as Britain's assessment had evolved, so it had concluded that the CRV7/M261 "should not be classed as cluster munitions".
This view was also currently shared by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), it said.
Self-destruct mechanism
But Peter Herby, the head of the arms/mines unit at the ICRC, one of the most widely respected organisations in the world, said the ICRC had never discussed this issue with Britain.
He said the ICRC was not the arbiter of the definition of cluster munitions, now the subject of international negotiations.
The other cluster bomb that Britain wants to keep in its arsenal is the M85.
The government argues this is a "smart" cluster bomb, because it has a self-destruct mechanism if the initial trigger fails to work.
But Landmine Action says the self-destruct mechanism too often fails.
The ground of southern Lebanon is littered with unexploded M85 bomblets, dropped by Israel last year.
Diana campaign
Simon Conway says: "The UK government is claiming that if you put a self-destruct on, then that makes it smart. No-one else is saying that.
"This is basically the UK government trying to keep hold of a few of the weapons systems that it's got by playing fast and free with definitions.'
Research by Landmine Action even suggests the auto-destruct system can make these bomblets more unsafe, because it provides an extra trigger to detonate the device if it is picked up.
Ten years ago today, in the weeks after the death of anti-mine campaigner Princess Diana, the international deal to ban anti-personnel mines was agreed in Oslo.
Campaigners demanding momentum now on the road to ban cluster bombs fear the signal sent from Britain will weaken international resolve on this issue.

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