United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research (UNIDIR) - Press Conference: Cluster Munitions Monitor 2024
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United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research (UNIDIR) - Press Conference: Cluster Munitions Monitor 2024

Speakers: 

·        Charles Bechara, ICBL-CMC Communications and Media Manager

·        Mary Wareham, Cluster Munition Monitor 2024 Ban Policy Editor

·        Katrin Atkins, Cluster Munition Monitor 2024 Impact Team Senior Researcher

·        Loren Persi, Cluster Munition Monitor 2024 Impact Team Lead 

Teleprompter
Ladies and gentlemen
Good afternoon.
On behalf of the United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research
in collaboration
with International Campaign
to Ban Landmines and Cluster Munitions Coalition,
I want to welcome you all to this afternoon Global launch
of the Cluster Munition Monitor 2024 Report
My name is Fifi Edo
and I'm a senior researcher
for UN IE
Conventional Arms and Ammunitions programme.
It's an honour to chair this year's lunch event
on behalf of Unida.
The United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research
is pleased to have enjoyed long and close collaboration
with the International Campaign to Ban Landmines
and Cluster Munition Coalition over the years,
hosting numerous launches of respective campaign launches
and annual landmine monitor and cluster
munition monitor reports.
Cluster munitions are weapons that are delivered from aircraft
or fired in artillery, rockets,
missiles and mortars.
They open into the air to despair dozens
and sometimes hundreds of submunitions over a wide area.
Their impact can be devastating
and when used in populated areas,
can be very devastating.
Moreover,
many submissions fail to detonate
as designed
and pose existential threats
long after the conflict had ended.
Adopted
16 years ago
in May 2008
The Convention on Cluster Munitions is currently in good standing
with 100 and 12 state parties.
UN.
Retreats
The UN Secretary General's 4th April 2004 call for countries
that have not yet
joined or fully implemented. The convention.
Cluster Munition Monitor 2024
is the 15th annual report of the Cluster Munition Coalition.
It tracks
efforts to eradicate cluster munitions
by all countries, regardless of whether they have joined the convention.
The report is based on independent
and impartial research.
Cluster Munition Monitor 2024
shows how once again civilians are primary victims
of cluster munitions
at both the time of attack
and afterwards from remnants.
The report also documents how non
banning cluster munitions is at risk of being undermined,
including by new use, production
and transfer of states. Outside the convention
this week,
the C, MC and UN I
would attend the 12 meeting of state parties
to the Convention on Cluster Munitions under the presidency of Mexico.
This meeting offers a timely opportunity
to express grave concerns over humanitarian impacts
resulting from repeated and well documented use
of cluster munitions in recent years,
particularly in Ukraine.
I will now hand over
to four distinguished civil society experts who
have been centrally involved in producing this year's
monetary reports.
First, we have
Mary
Wilham Deputy Crisis Conflict,
an arms director at Human Rights Watch
who established the Landmine Monitor Initiative in 1998.
She will present a report findings relating to new use, production
and transfer, as well as progress in stockpile destruction.
Second Speaker
is Catherine Atkins,
editor for reporting on Mine Action
and trained the mining experts.
Catherine would present highlights
from the monitor's reporting on class
ammunition contamination and efforts to reduce
that impact through clearance and risk education.
Third Speaker will be Lauren
Percy
Landmine and Cluster Munitions Monitor Impacts Team lead.
Lauren
has edited
the Casualty and Victims Assistance Session of every
Cluster Munition Monitor report since its inception.
In 2010,
Laurie will present a report Findings relating
to the human impact of cluster munitions,
including cluster munitions casualties
and victim assistance.
Finally, we have Charles
Chera, communication and media manager at the Cluster Munitions Coalition.
Charles will briefly go over the main
resources and materials and expectations for conventional
meetings for for the conventions meeting of
state parties starting tomorrow in Geneva.
I think Charles will be taking the
first.
Uh,
And then I also want to acknowledge in the room the presence of
Tama
Ganek, director of Geneva based International Campaign to Ban Landmines
and also
Cluster Munition Coalition and
Burrow,
project manager for the Monitor.
They will stand by to answer any further questions as we come up.
So, Charles, you have the floor.
Thank you.
Thank you all for being here today. As, uh, Doctor Eduardo
mentioned. This is the 15th annual Monitor report.
The report covers the calendar year of
2023 with additional information included Where possible,
Up to August 2024.
Physical copies of the report are available at the front of the room
and,
uh, the online version can be accessed as well
via the link on our presentation.
The report is now available on the monitor's new website,
which we launched earlier this year.
The website has been redesigned to make accessing information
much more user friendly and easy for everyone, including journalists.
As you log in to the page
of the monitor report, you'll be able to see
the maps and other tools that you find useful for your reporting at
the same time,
individual country profiles providing detailed accounts and specific findings
related to the different topics covered in the report
now can be accessed directly from the landing page of the website
and we are still in the process of uploading these country profiles
as we speak.
I would like to extend our gratitude to
the continued financial support from government funders
whose names are displayed on the screen.
And at the same time,
I would like also to note that this is not
the only news on cluster munitions for this week.
There will be further developments
during the Convention on Cluster Munitions Meeting of States parties,
which is scheduled to start tomorrow and continue until Friday.
Therefore,
I invite you to cover all the major events
and developments that will come out from these meetings,
especially Lithuania's decision
to withdraw from the convention.
The Cluster Munition Coalition will be organising a panel
discussion during these meetings on Thursday at 10 a.m.
during which we will revisit the humanitarian
consequences of cluster munitions and their technical failures
which led to their prohibition in 2008.
Lastly, please keep an eye out for our sister publication,
the landmine Monitor report
scheduled for release on November 20th
2024
just a few days before the Mine Ban Treaty Review conference in Cambodia.
Thank you, and I will now pass it over to Mary. We
thank you very much.
Giles,
as Dr
I
Ail from UN,
noted the Convention on Class Dimunition is in good standing,
with 112 countries that are party to it and another
12 countries that have signed but not yet ratified.
Uh, we do, however,
note that there has been little progress towards new
countries joining the convention over the last year.
This last country to to join was South Sudan in August of 2023.
There have been very few steps to join by some
of the major countries that remain outside of the convention,
such as the United States, China
and Russia.
That's a shame,
because the Convention on Cluster Munitions
provides a vital framework for ending the
immediate and the long term harm and suffering caused by these abhorrent weapons.
We urge all countries to join the convention if they're serious about
protecting civilians from these weapons in the face of rising conflict.
We are deeply dismayed by the formal withdrawal from the convention by Lithuania,
which deposited its instrument of withdrawal of the United Nations on Friday.
And it will now take six months for that to go
into effect unless Lithuania suspends the process and revisits the decision,
which is what the Class Dimunition coalition urges Lithuania to do.
This is a stain on Lithuania's otherwise excellent reputation
and humanitarian disarmament, and it ignores the ah, the risk to civilians.
The class dimunition Monitor report details uh continued
use of class diminutions in three countries in
Ukraine by Russian forces as well as by
Ukrainian forces throughout 2023 and into this year.
Up until this very day,
new use of cluster munitions has also been recorded in Syria,
where cluster munitions have been used repeatedly for more
than a decade since 2012 by government forces.
And there's also new use of Class di munitions in Myanmar.
It's important for us to note that there are no reports or allegations
of any use of class dimunition by any state party to the Convention
on Class Dimunition, and that has been the case since the convention was adopted.
18 countries have ceased production, uh,
as a result of joining the Convention on Cluster munitions.
Uh, with one exception, Argentina, which still has not signed
yet.
17 countries still produce these weapons or reserve the right to do so,
and none of them are states parties to the convention.
Over the course of the last year,
we decided to add Myanmar to the list of countries who produce cluster munitions.
And that's after uh
after research showed that Kasa
Industries, the Myanmar State
industry production facility,
has been making a rudimentary cluster munition that has dropped from the
air and it has been using these in attacks around the country.
Myanmar's mission to the UN did not deny those attacks,
but denied that the weapon is indeed a cluster munition.
We have a separate slide this year on
transfer of Class di munitions because unfortunately,
transfers are on the rise.
Between July of last year and April of this year,
the United States approved five transfers of class dimunition to Ukraine.
The types of class di munitions are delivered by artillery projectiles
and by ballistic missiles.
We a RT a German media outlet. Uh, last month, uh,
detailed how some of the US class diminish have been pulled off a US base in Germany
and have been transited through Germany
and Poland and on to Ukraine.
This raises serious questions under the prohibition on
assistance in the Convention on Class Di Munitions,
which prohibits any assistance with banned activities.
Ukraine might have also acquired cluster munitions
from other countries in the reporting period.
But that's quite hard to track because those
countries have been denying the transfer of cluster munitions
the last point. I want point that I wanted to make concerns stockpile distraction.
All of the state parties that are members of
the Convention on Class Dimunition have now completed the destruction
of their stockpiles. Uh,
and that means nearly 1.5 million,
uh, class di munitions have been destroyed and nearly 100 and 79
million submunitions
uh, Peru delivered this result in December.
Uh, when it, uh
when it completed the distraction of its stockpile.
And also last September, we heard from Bulgaria, Slovakia and South Africa,
who had also destroyed their stocks of class dimunition.
Does this mean that all stocks of
class dimunition held worldwide have been destroyed?
Absolutely not.
The United States, Russia, China continued to
stockpile class dimunition and to and in the
case of the United States to transfer them
to Ukraine.
So there is still work to be done
to ensure that this convention reaches its full potential
in protecting civilians and and and stemming
the human suffering caused by cluster munitions.
Thank you,
Thank you.
I'm going to briefly talk about contamination and also the
response to contamination of land release clearance and risk education.
There is not a lot of change in terms of contaminated countries and
contaminated state parties. We record 27 states or other areas this year
which are suspected or confirmed to be contaminated.
Last year we recorded 29.
The changes are that we could remove Bosnia and Herzegovina from the list,
which is great news.
So they completed clearance in August 2023.
We added south Sudan, which was known to be contaminated before.
But as it is now a state party member, it's one of them
10 state parties to be known to be contaminated.
We also took the decision to add Kuwait to the list of contaminated countries,
although we do not know the extent of the contamination.
But we have several reports of cluster munition
found predominantly during survey of oil fields.
So we decided to add it to the list,
maybe one word to Myanmar.
It is not on the list of contaminated
countries because we have reports from attacks.
We have reports of casualties which are
casualties from attacks,
but we do not have sufficient evidence of actual contamination on the ground.
But
we are closely observing that and are going to add
Myanmar to the list as soon as we have any evidence
in terms of the extent of contamination.
Lao remains at the top of the list with a massive contamination of more than 1000
square kilometres
of the non state parties.
Vietnam is also on top of the list
in the same category with the massive contamination
largely contaminated between 100,000 square kilometres remain Iraq,
which is a state party
and also Cambodia, which is not a state party.
As of the end of last year,
five states had quite a clear understanding of their contamination.
This includes um
this includes Germany. It includes also Iraq.
Uh, it includes Lebanon
and uh,
the states that have a less clear understanding
of their contamination or as an example,
Lao
PPDR in Mauritania, a
survey is still going on in both countries and particularly in Laos.
This is a is a huge task as the contamination is also,
um extensive and big.
So with Bosnia and Herzegovina who we could add
to the list of countries that have completed clearance.
We have now in total,
11 state parties that have completed their clearance obligations
between 2008
and 2023.
Before Bosnia Herzegovina last year,
the last two state parties to complete clearance were Croatia and Montenegro.
In 2020.
Moving on to clearance,
we had eight of the
10 state parties that reported clearance. In 2023
we had at least
83.91 square kilometres and over 70,000 submunitions destroyed.
This is less clearance than we had last year.
The reasons for less clearance conducted are predominantly degrees of funding,
but also increasingly difficult terror to access, particularly in Lebanon.
This is the main concern of them that all the
remaining areas that have to be cleared are in difficult terror
which
are simply difficult to access, but also in terms of methodology to be used to clear
there are some challenges.
Iraq, Lebanon, Bosnia Herzegovina and south Sudan also reported
other methodologies applied,
so not only clearance but also release of
land through non technical survey and technical survey,
which we will call cancelled land or reduced land.
And I would like to emphasise that this is an equally important,
an equally important success than clearance because
it helps us to reduce contaminated land through
the most efficient methodology.
Somalia and south Sudan are the only state parties
which still work towards their original clearance deadline,
so south Sudan obviously just joined.
They have 10 years to go to complete clearance.
Somalia has a bit less left, seems to be on track.
But we have to say that Somalia did not really fulfil
its reporting obligations.
It usually comes late or we do not receive an update,
so we do not really know what's going on in Somalia.
In early 2024 3 state parties requested an extension of their Article four deadline
chart,
requested an extension until 2024
Germany and Lao P
both until 2030. So for Germany and Laos, this means a five year extension
for chart it is a two year extension.
Char will use this extension to survey the remaining area in TIBE,
which they suspect to be contaminated.
Germany hopefully will finish its clearance until 2030. They
know very well what they have to do. It's just a matter of getting it done.
And in Lao
it's a bit a mix. So further surveys going on,
they have good clearance rates.
But we also all know that with this massive contamination it will take
them longer and we expect them to hand in further extension requests beyond
2030
uh, next slide. Please
risk education all contaminated state parties.
So all 10 reported conducting risk education in 2023 for cluster munition,
but also for other ammunition.
So this is usually combined risk education,
which includes all explosive ordnance threats present.
Chile and Germany did not report any risk education as in previous years,
because the contaminated area in both countries is
on military ground, which is not accessible to the public.
It's fenced, it's marked, but they do not conduct any risk education there
not a lot of changes in terms of who are the main groups at risk.
Men remain the main groups at risk the high risk group,
predominantly due to due to their Parti participation
in activities that take them into contaminated areas.
So this includes farmers, herds, herders, shepherds
but also, um, in in general nomadic communities, refugees and ID PS,
which do, of course, not only consist of men,
but, um, they simply remain the main group at risk.
Children represented the largest groups of beneficiaries,
as in previous years as well.
So in 2023 we had 66% of Children who benefited from risk education.
This is 14% more than the previous year. But we have to say this is also due a large
data set we received from UN
for last year.
And UNICEF has been focusing on educating Children on the risk
most state parties. When it comes to educating Children.
They focused on boys, as they are known to be more
have a high risk appetite than girls. Only child
educated, more girls than boys.
But in all other state parties that focused on Children,
boys were the highest group targeted.
That's it from my end. Thank you,
Lauren. Over to you.
Thank you.
Um, I'd like to continue with some updates on the situation
of casualties of class admissions and also
victim assistance
to, um,
the casualties, their families and communities
Significantly,
This was the second year in a row where
Ukraine had
recorded the highest number
of annual class
mission casualties in the world.
And this This marks a
significant change
from a decade
of Syria
having
the by far the highest number of cluster emission casualties.
It's a very unfortunate
two years since the full invasion
of Ukraine by Russia,
and
many
things concerning the impact of cost emissions
for the annual statistics for 2023 have remained
pertinent
throughout the period of the Convention on Cluster Musicians.
So
93% of the casualties recorded were civilians
and
just under half
of the casualties of the unexploited sub
emissions. The clued
emission remnants that remain
as we just heard, sometimes for decades after their use,
um were Children
Children being attracted
to the remnants or otherwise finding them
as we heard in situation of risk and risk education.
Now
the number of casualties recorded,
uh, was significantly,
um, less
in 2023 than in 2022.
there's
some various factors
uh, for that, And it doesn't necessarily mean
that there was
so much, uh, fewer casualties and certainly fewer less impact.
it may be the case that many casualties went unreported
because of the nature of conflicts changing, including the conflict in Ukraine.
And
it's
also the case that there are very, really very few,
although the number of casualties may remain unknown for years.
And this was the situation with Syria
that Syria had the highest number of casualties from
2012 to 2021.
But the casualties from 2012 through 2015
2016 were only really reported years later,
and and and that may well be the case again.
As I mentioned with the impact,
there are very few unknowns when it comes to who suffers most.
It is civilians and Children,
interacting with unexploded sub
sub
music
and this use of cluster
Ms creates really a vicious cycle
in the sense that
it's often when there is a lull in fighting or a peace,
or people are able to return to land that was affected by conflict and class
use
that
people come into contact with
unexploded
submunitions
and we see an increase in casualties.
So
the
this change this decrease between 2022 and 2023
unfortunately
may not really mean
fewer people will suffer because of the use in this period.
And we also note that there were many classes
attacks
just in Ukraine
where no casualties were recorded for them. But
there there may have been casualties that occurred.
So casualties overall globally occurred in nine countries that was Azerbaijan,
Iraq,
Lao PDR,
Lebanon,
Mauritania, Myanmar,
Syria again, Ukraine and Yemen
and all of those countries except Myanmar. As Katrine had mentioned
where no
evidence so far of clusters
remnants has been found explosive remnants.
So all of the other countries except Myanmar had casualties of clusters,
remnants
and
casualties from class.
The attacks were only recorded in
Myanmar, Syria and Ukraine as mere
had mentioned those attacks.
Uh, just
move on to
the situation of addressing
the impact on victims.
So
victim assistance, which is a
obligation of the Convention on class missions and it
really holds a higher standard of victim assistance,
um
has
being undertaken,
uh,
very generously supported by donors in many
cases and including by states themselves.
However,
the level of assistance is just not matching
the needs of custom
victims
in almost any state.
And in
some countries specifically
standing out, are Afghanistan and Lebanon.
The economic and, um,
other conditions in the country have really
meant that
victims have been impeded in being able to access the services they need, such as
rehabilitation,
psychological support
and economic inclusion
and
jobs and work placement or other financial support.
And those last
points, particularly psychological support and economic inclusion,
are
areas where
victims have seen the least progress
much less than in a
sense of rehabilitation.
on the whole.
So I'll leave it there and hand it over. Thank you very much for your time.
Thank you very much, Lauren. Um, and to almost all the speakers, uh, for
the insightful presentation
and contribution to the subject. At
this moment, I'll open the floor, um, four questions around the room
and also online.
Um, so
yes, please.
Hi. Thank you for taking my question. Uh, Nina Larson with a FP.
Um, I want I had a couple of questions.
Um, first on the issue of the number of casualties in Ukraine.
Uh, last year, compared to the year before, I understand that maybe all the
casualties haven't been, um,
haven't been recorded, but would that not also have been the case in 2022?
Uh, because there does seem to be a very large, uh, difference.
So if you could explain that a little bit better,
I think there's an echo. Your your mic is on. Thanks.
Um, And then, uh,
I was wondering if you've had any other countries
besides Lithuania who have signalled that they might be
considering withdrawing from the convention.
If if and sort of how you link this Lithuania's decision
to Ukraine. I mean, is it are they considering that these weapons have been
useful in their fight against Russia?
I'm just wondering if you could sort of explain that a little bit more
and, um,
also what way?
The use in Ukraine is impacting the stability of the convention itself. Thank you.
Thank you very much.
Laura, You wanna take the first question?
Yes, please. Um, thanks a lot. It's a really good question.
Um, certainly,
there are there. There's there's a grey area, an element of uncertainty
when it comes to casualty counting in conflict in general.
And the situation last year in Ukraine and last year really
saw a peak in recorded casualties during an annual period.
It was the most casualties recorded in a year.
Um, since the convention on class nations
entered into force, and that was because of Ukraine.
But there were some factors which may have made that information
more available, and that included some horrendous
attacks on civilians and civilian infrastructure,
where there were multiple casualties. So that was picked up
by media.
And then there's another factor,
which is that there may also be significantly more military casualties
in 2023 than were recorded. It's possible. Um,
so there were numerous claims in Russian affiliated media
or by Russian ministries of cluster munition attacks on,
Ukrainian military forces. We note this in the report.
Um, they were always rounded estimates,
and they were all unverified.
But counting those together, that would be close to 900 casualties.
So it's certainly a matter of waiting until
information is verifiable.
one could hope that
changing
situation somehow led to significantly less,
um, civilian casualties.
Ah, but that's not clear, I think at this point.
Sorry.
Thanks very much, Nina, for your other questions,
including the one about any other countries signalling that they
intend to withdraw from the convention on Cluster Munitions.
We have not heard that yet.
Perhaps this week we'll hear more at the conventions meeting.
But it's fair to say that the countries
that border Russia are very nervous right now.
there are five kind of core humanitarian disarmament conventions.
Biological weapons, Chemical Weapons Convention,
the Cluster Munition Convention, the
Meba Treaty and the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear
Weapons That makes up the set of humanitarian disarmament instruments,
and Lithuania is the first to withdraw from any of them.
So Lithuania's withdrawal has a broader impact than
just on the convention on class munitions.
There are now concerns about containing what it has done
and trying to ensure that it doesn't spread any further.
As I mentioned, you know,
we believe the convention on Cluster Munitions is in strong standing,
with none of the state's parties engaging in any of the prohibited activities.
The problems lie outside.
The problems lie in countries such as Russia,
which has supported Syria's use of cluster munitions over
the past decade and which has used cluster munitions repeatedly
in Ukraine. Other problems lie in
United States, which, you know.
President Biden took the decision last July to transfer thousands of unreliable,
obsolete cluster munitions on to Ukraine
for use in the war there.
And that was a really devastating move for the United States,
but also for the convention because the United States hasn't
produced cluster munitions since 2007 hasn't used them since 2003,
and yet it has
vast stockpiles, which it is drawing on.
So I guess the lesson from all of this is that if you have the stocks and you're at war,
there's a high likelihood that they will be used.
And this is why we've placed such an emphasis over the last 15 years
on ensuring that countries who join the
convention destroy their stockpile class di munitions.
And that's where we're glad to have seen such progress.
But of course the problems remain outside
and we need to tackle and confront them.
Uh, especially this week.
So we'll be looking for strong, uh,
outcome documents at the Convention on Class Dimunition meeting this week,
which Mexico is presiding over
and looking for strong commitments from countries going forward,
uh, to support the convention on class Dimunition. Thanks.
Thank you very much. Yes, please.
Thank you for this report and thank you to be here.
My question is just only about the UN because we are now in the UN.
Your organisation is not
part of the UN family, but still you are working with them.
I just wanted to know what is concretely your relationship with the UN agencies.
If you are working with them to prepare this kind of report or not.
And
in general, what is your relation with the U?
Uh,
the class dimunition coalition has a long
history of co-operation with United Nations agencies,
the UN agencies that work to clear landmines and class dimunition such as En Masse
and U. NDP, who played a pivotal role in the development of the convention.
And
UNIR has supported the launches of the class dimunition monitor for years.
So this is a good example of the
partnership between civil society and the United Nations.
The same partnership exists with the International Committee of the Red
Cross and with the country who are part of the convention
transfer.
The,
uh the,
uh
the, uh the
American
responsibility.
No.
As I understand it.
The question is about what is Germany's responsibilities as a state party.
Under the Convention on Cluster Munitions,
at least 34 countries have who are part of the Convention on Class Di Munitions
have declared that the transit and foreign
stockpiling of class di munitions are explicitly prohibited
by the convention through the prohibition on
assistance we used to regard Germany as
as being in that camp.
But we pulled them off the list this year after the evidence came forward,
that US class dimunition is based on a located stored at a base.
A US base in Germany have been pulled off
that base transferred through German territory onto Poland,
which is not a member and into Ukraine.
Um, it raises all sorts of concerns for the convention on class dimunition,
you know,
in the very first place.
Germany should have told the United States to
get rid of the class dimunition straight away
when the convention was open for signature in 2008.
That's what Norway and the United Kingdom did,
and the United States removed stockpiles from their respective territories.
The Wikileaks cables,
the State Department cables that were leaked by Wikileaks more than a decade ago,
they showed that the United States stockpiles cluster munitions
at its base is in other countries as well,
and they may still perhaps be there on the bases in Italy and Spain
and Netherlands
and other countries as well.
We'd urge those states parties to tell the
United States to remove those close dimunition now.
So this goes back to the United States
and its inability to sign the convention, let alone acknowledge that the
convention on class dimunition exists.
Uh,
we look to state parties to take a strong stance
on this because it's it's inconsistent with their their commitment,
uh,
to to the absolute prohibitions to be allowing a state par a
non state party such as the US to to do this.
Thanks.
Thank you very much,
Mary. Yes, please.
And then, um
I think this question
up
now
the
No.
Yes. So was it
related to the new
conflict in Gaza?
So we have. What we have is the evidence of of the legacy contamination in Lebanon.
But we do not have evidence of new
contamination due to the new conflict.
If this was the question,
so
the
line
up
Yes, I have another part. The situation today in Lebanon, we know.
In 2006, Israel launched
many bombs in south of Lebanon
today. What is the situation?
Thank you.
And if you have some information about Gaza,
Israel uses this kind of bomb in Gaza.
Yeah. So to the situation in Lebanon,
we have the detailed data in terms of contamination in our country profile.
So there is remaining contamination left.
And as I briefly mentioned,
Lebanon currently struggles accessing the remaining contamination.
And they also keep finding new
contamination contamination They didn't know before,
So they are still conducting a survey as well.
But we are confident that this contamination is going to be cleared.
Let's say in the near future Lebanon struggles as well with having
the financial means to clear the rest based on their economic crisis.
But they are exploring
new possibilities for
new funding
or
the thinking about the crowd funding.
So
I would say the situation is moving in the right direction.
in terms of the conflict in Gaza,
we do not have any evidence of any contamination on use.
But, Marie, you're probably going to say something about that Yeah,
yeah, thanks very much.
I just want to confirm that we've not seen any evidence
of cluster munitions being used in Gaza or in south Lebanon.
The last
Israel's last use of cluster munitions was in south Lebanon in 2006,
and its last production
of cluster munitions was around about 2018 when the last cluster
munition producer in Israel shut down that line of of business.
It's also important to note that cluster munitions we've not seen any
evidence of new cluster dimunition use in Sudan in that current conflict.
Uh,
so this is why we we highlight those three countries in the
report as being the ones where cluster munitions are being used today,
which is in Myanmar, Syria and Ukraine.
Thanks.
Thank you very much, Mary. Yes, please.
Thank you very much
for
the news. Japan.
Um I just have a question regarding the projection.
Um, how a RE you justifying and verifying every year
that, uh, So, um, sorry. North Korea is producing,
uh, cluster munitions.
Thank you.
So we list countries as producing class di munitions until they tell us otherwise.
And until they commit
not to produce in future and So there is
evidence that North and South Korea have produced Glass di
munitions and they'll remain on that list until they
tell us otherwise and commit not to do so.
Or better yet until they accede to the convention on Cluster Munitions.
And, uh, you know, we we write to governments,
use Official Information Act requests and and some researchers attended the Euros
arms exhibition in Paris this year in June,
where they saw companies from India and South
Korea promoting Class di munitions for sale there,
which is actually illegal in France under their national
implementing legislation for the Convention on Class dimunition.
So after the organisers were alerted,
I understand that those those those class
di munitions were pulled from the promotional part
of it.
So we have two problems here.
We've got vast numbers of stocks of cluster munitions held by countries who
have not joined the convention,
and there's also new production in certain countries.
But most importantly,
a big number of countries that are refusing to join the convention
and that are leaving the door open to keep producing in future.
Any more questions from the room?
How long?
OK,
Are there any questions online, please?
Yes. La
Roo, Swiss News Agency. Uh, thank you for taking my questions.
Um, as the coalition tried to engage with the Lithuanian authorities.
And, uh,
do you have any indication that they might
reverse their decision in the next six months
and then, uh, clarification? Because in the news release, it was mentioned 28
countries and territories contaminated or suspected to be contaminated.
And I think, uh, when you raised that, uh, at the beginning of the press conference,
Miss Atkins, you mentioned 27.
So just to clarify that thank you.
This
I'll take the question on. Have we tried to engage Lithuania?
My organisation, Human Rights Watch, was in Vilnius exactly a year ago,
talking to the Lithuanian government about this rumour that we'd heard
from a posting on Facebook by the defence Minister that Lithuania
was going to look to leave the convention on Class Di munitions,
and and and we and other members of the class diminish coalition
alerted governments who are part of the treaty.
The Red Cross, the United Nations and over the last year,
engaged in a lot of behind the scenes diplomacy to
try and encourage Lithuania not to go down this dangerous path
once the instrument or once the proposal to
withdraw from the convention was introduced in Parliament.
That put it out in the public spotlight. And that was the moment at which
people started to read about this move
in the media.
To be honest, it all depends,
or much much depends on the coming week and on not so much what
we say as civil society but what the treaty states parties say to Lithuania.
And we know that Mexico,
its presidents and other members of the Convention on class munitions have been
doing their utmost to try and convince Lithuania not to leave the convent.
It's it's
It's baffling because Lithuania never had Class di munitions.
It never acquired them, never stockpiled them, never used them
and all of a sudden it see a need to have Class di munitions as a as a deterrent,
as it says
it will find issues with procuring class di munitions. We are sure,
and so we plan to continue to keep up that dialogue.
I see the Lithuanian ambassador this Wednesday.
It's important that we keep talking to Lithuania
and it's really important that we have the conventions six
months waiting period before the withdrawal goes into effect.
This convention was designed to be of use not just in times of peace,
but in times of armed conflict when times get tough.
And this is why it's dismaying to see Lithuania take this move.
Yes, and the second answer is a short one. It is 28 states in other areas.
If I said 27 I apologise. That was wrong. 28 states.
Are there any more questions?
I think that, uh, perhaps, uh, brings us to
the end of, um, this afternoon's presentation.
whilst it appears that there is a marked, uh, improvement,
Uh,
in
the fight against cluster ammunitions, there appears to assist
a lot of challenges that perhaps,
uh, we need to resolve going into the future.
civilians still suffer, uh, from the use of cluster ammunitions,
as the presentations have shown,
and Children
account for
nearly half of cluster ammunition remnants.
And so it tells us that there are still some major challenges for us to
to deal with,
uh, on behalf of the United Nations in Institute for Disarmament Research
and, um,
on C MC.
Um I want to thank
the presenters, uh, for
the insightful presentation
and valuable contribution to the subject.
And I will encourage,
uh, the media and our participant in the room to widely circulate the report.
Uh, and make sure that it gets to,
uh, almost everybody.
Thank you very much for your valuable contribution speakers and, uh,
have a good afternoon.
Thank you.