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Ooops. You mean laws only apply to the law-abiding?

Fancy that.  And, oddly enough, about the only people who gave up their mines were people who... didn't need them.  Kinda like gun buy-backs.

From Strategy Page today (all rights reserved, used with permission):
Lawyers Unable To Eliminate The Enemy Below
by James Dunnigan
September 12, 2010

The Taliban in Afghanistan have joined a growing list of outlaw organizations that are ignoring the 1999 Ottawa Convention to ban landmines. The Taliban are manufacturing landmines in primitive workshops, and using them against Afghan and foreign soldiers, as well as Afghan civilians who refuse to support the Islamic terrorist group.
Despite the 1999 treaty, landmines are still causing over 5,000 casualties a year worldwide. About twenty percent of the victims are killed, and 90 percent of them are males. This is largely because men are more likely to be out in the bush, or working farmlands that still contain mines. A third of the casualties are security personnel (police and soldiers.) This is because in many countries, rebels and criminals are still using landmines, either factory made ones from countries that did not sign the Ottawa Convention, or locally made mines.

Landmines are simple to make, and workshops are often set up to do it. There's no shortage of mines out there, despite the fact that, in the first few years after the 1999 Ottawa Convention was signed, over 25 million landmines, in the arsenals of over fifty nations, were destroyed. But these nations were not users. For those who want landmines, they find a way to obtain and use them. The Taliban are the latest group to demonstrate this. Leftist rebel group FARC, in Colombia has been making their own mines for years now, as have Islamic and communist rebels in the Philippines.

The 1999 Ottawa Convention was supposed to have reduced land mine casualties among civilians. It hasn't worked, because the largest manufacturers of land mines, Russia and China, refused to sign. Chinese land mines are still available on the international arms black market. China is believed to have a stockpile of over a hundred million land mines (mostly anti-personnel). The old ones are often sold before they become worthless. But even these mines, which go for $5-10 each, are too expensive for many of the criminal organizations that buy them. In Colombia, leftist rebels are losing their four decade war to establish a socialist dictatorship. So they have been using more land mines against soldiers and police, as well as civilian populations they want to control. This was how land mines were widely used in Afghanistan and Cambodia. In Colombia, the rebels find it cheaper to build their own landmines. Labor is cheap, as are the components. Thus land mines, competitive with the factory built ones from China, can be built for less than three dollars each. You can find all the technical data you need on the Internet.

Anti-vehicle mines are increasingly popular, and are particularly common in poor countries where there are still a lot of dirt roads, traveled by buses and trucks carrying dozens of passengers each. While these mines are usually intended for military vehicles, mines can't tell the difference. As a result, in this year or next, Colombia or Afghanistan will have the largest number of annual mine casualties in the world.
 

14 Comments

Taliban 'land mines' . . . aka IEDs.

The US and ROK didn't sign the treaty, either.  But then again, all of those mines live in a pretty defined belt along the 38th parallel.
 
*pop* *pop* *poppity-pop-pop-pop*

The sound of tiny little Lib heads popping because they can't blame the US for selling ChiCom mines to dirtbags.

Won't stop them from *trying* to do it, though...
 
"*pop* *pop* *poppity-pop-pop-pop*"

You forgot the *pus and ooze*.....that's what comes out last after you pop zits, right?  Besides, they aren't worried about a few landmines, Mr. DeBille.  They've got bigger deals going down.
 
Sly, geez, it's early in the day for "pus and ooze" ainnit?
 
It's never too early in the day to pop *liberal* zit-heads -- I mean, seriously, it's not like waiting for 1201 for that first beer. (1000 for Da Prezident of this club, of course)  Besides, *they* were the ones who said they were going to "drain the swamp".....
0>;~}
 
Sly, I hadn't even gotten to my 5th cuppa joe yet...
 

At 1117 you still hadn't had your fifth cuppa java!?  And you call yourself a government employee.
*slow shake of head*
What is the world coming to?
0>;~}

 
Well, lessee - it was *10:17* for the comment in question.

And no, other than fiscal servitude under the lash of the IRS, I am *not* a gov't employee. 

I'm an Ebil Contractor.

Do please try to keep that straight.
 
Well who woulda thunk it- Sly's link to Fox news originally had those F-15s labelled 'Raptors'; it has since been corrected to 'Eagles'. Someone is on the ball out there....
 
John,

As for the number of cups of coffee consumed I suppose it makes a difference what size of cup you're talking about: www.flickr.com/photos/29772283@N00/4987671426/
 
I have a comment stuck in moderation limbo. I put a link to a big cup of coffee and I had hoped it would appear by now but it still seems to be lost in the aether somewhere.


 
I'm an Ebil Contractor.

Hey, Erbil's only an hour north -- by F-16 or Iraqi taxicab!

Oh. *Ebil*.

Never mind...

 
Sometimes I think evil thoughts, 'specially when it's late at night and I've been drinking (like now) and I think that we have something like 200 golf curses in this county, and as far as I know,  there aren't any anti-personnel mines planted in any of them. I ask y'all, is that right? Hey, the golfers are too lazy to walk, and ride the carts instead. We could get some of their tires, and make the game more sporting.
 
That's oogie.