In the last 20 years, 45 million anti-personnel mines were eliminated worldwide. The number of victims dropped from 20,000 to 5,000 annually.
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Still, thousands continue to live with the consequences of war. Their suffering is visible in countries like Afghanistan, Bosnia-Herzegovina and Cambodia, where orthopaedic centres have been built for the rehabilitation of amputees.
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The man who walks through minefields
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On a table in Thun military barracks, Sergeant Roman Wilhelm shows us two plastic boxes – two containers of death. Inside are different types of landmines: anti-personnel and anti-tank mines, ones made of plastic and metal, round ones and long ones. Some are designed to explode at the slightest pressure, others need a chemical reaction…
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“There is a vast difference between nuclear weapons and landmines. The former are weapons of the rich, the latter of the poor. Yet they also have something in common: they are weapons which cast the shadow of war also across peace.” With these words the 1997 Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to the International Campaign…
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