USA: President Obama urged to join Mine Ban Treaty
04 May 2012

The letter coincides with the Lend Your Leg campaign, an initiative to raise awareness about landmine clearance and landmine survivors linked with the United Nations April 4th International Day for Mine Awareness. (Jesuit Refugee Service)
Accession to the Mine Ban Treaty continues to enjoy exceptionably broad civil society support here in the United States.

Washington DC, 4 May 2012 — Leaders from 76 nongovernmental organisations including Jesuit Refugee Service USA delivered a letter to President Obama urging the US to relinquish antipersonnel landmines and join the 1997 Mine Ban Treaty without further delay.

The letter follows a request made in 2010 by many of these same leaders asking the President to ensure that the landmine policy review announced by the White House in late 2009 would be timely, inclusive, and aimed at speedy accession to the treaty. Jesuit Refugee Service USA Director, Fr Michael Evans SJ, signed on behalf of JRS USA.

The US has not used antipersonnel mines since 1991 (in the first Gulf War), has not exported them since 1992, has not produced them since 1997 and is the biggest donor to mine clearance programmes around the world. However, it still retains 10.4 million stockpiled antipersonnel mines for potential future use and remains an outlier from this widely supported treaty.

"Accession to the Mine Ban Treaty continues to enjoy exceptionably broad civil society support here in the United States", said Zach Hudson, the Coordinator of the US Campaign to Ban Landmines (USCBL).

"As this continued dialogue with the President indicates, a vast number of prominent nongovernmental organisations — many of whom have seen firsthand the devastating impact of landmines in the communities in which they work – unquestionably support the total prohibition of this weapon and its lethal effect on civilians".

Since the Obama administration initiated a comprehensive inter-agency review of its landmine policy in December 2009, the administration has received letters of support for the Mine Ban Treaty from 68 Senators, 16 Nobel Peace Prize Laureates, key NATO allies, retired senior military personnel, dozens of NGO leaders, victims of US landmines, and countless concerned Americans.

In total, 161 countries are signatories to the Mine Ban Treaty, including every member of NATO [except the US], as well as every member of the European Union, and other key US allies such as Afghanistan and Iraq. The US is one of only 37 countries in the world that have not joined the Mine Ban Treaty and the only country in the Western Hemisphere aside from Cuba that has not joined.

The letter coincides with the Lend Your Leg campaign, an initiative to raise awareness about landmine clearance and landmine survivors linked with the United Nations April fourth International Day for Mine Awareness. Lend Your Leg 2012 was launched on 1 March – the 13th anniversary of the Mine Ban Treaty – by landmine survivors from all over the world joined by UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon. Since then United Nations officials, politicians, celebrities, journalists and ordinary people everywhere have pledged to "lend their legs" to speak out against this indiscriminate weapon which continues to blight people's lives every day.





Press Contact Information
James Stapleton
international.communications@jrs.net
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