Stop Cluster Bombs

Paul Hannon, Director Mines Action Canada wants ban on cluster bombs

© Julie Burtinshaw

Children of War, ali110 Morgue File

The Cluster Munitions Coalition (CMC) and Mines Action Canada (MAC) fight for a worldwide ban on cluster bombs. You can help to ban cluster munitions.

Paul Hannon, Executive Director of Mines Action Canada, (MAC) spoke at the Liu Institute for Global Issues at the University of British Columbia, on March 21, 07. Hannon is in Vancouver to raise public awareness about cluster bombs – weapons that are, in his words, “not a weapon for the 21st century, rather a weapon for the cold war.”

Cluster bombs, or cluster munitions have been used, and continue to be used in conflicts around the world. In their wake, they leave a deadly legacy of slaughtered and maimed civilians. Shockingly, one quarter of all cluster bomb victims are children – children left missing upper limbs, blind, deaf and scarred for life.

Cluster bombs continue to kill long after the conflict is over. Like landmines, which were successfully banned in 1992 (The Ottawa Treaty), unexploded cluster munitions pose a terrible threat to anyone who is unlucky enough to come into contact with them. Years after a conflict, cluster bombs continue to pose a horrendous threat to civilians struggling to rebuild their lives and their homes.

Unlike landmine victims who can usually be identified by below-the-waist-injuries, cluster bombs usually inflict injury on the upper body – a result of victims bending over to pick pu the bomb, rather than stepping on it. Tragically, children are especially drawn to the submunitions because of their small size and interesting shapes.

And it is not just the innocents who are hurt – foot soldiers often suffer collateral damage, and in fact, in the first Gulf War, more American infantry were killed or maimed by cluster munitions than by the army they were fighting.

As Hannon points out, we should listen to the men and women on the front lines – the soldiers who know these weapons are outdated. After all, “good soldiers should have good weapons and good soldiers don’t want to kill civilians.”

What is a Cluster Bomb?

Cluster Munitions Facts:

What You Can Do to Help Ban Cluster Bombs?

In Oslo, (The Oslo Conference) in February, 07, forty-nine countries, including Canada (but excluding the USA, Russia and China), signed a document supporting a new treaty to ban cluster bombs by the end of 2008. Now it is your turn to help. Visit Mines Action Canada and sign their Petition. Educate yourself on this issue, spread the word to family and friends, write to your Member of Parliament and to the Prime Minister of Canada.

Landmines were banned in 1992 (The Ottawa Treaty), largely in part to the enormous support of people like you and me. This is an issue we can do something about, and in doing so, we take a step toward protecting the innocent victims of war.


The copyright of the article Stop Cluster Bombs in Disarmament is owned by Julie Burtinshaw. Permission to republish Stop Cluster Bombs must be granted by the author in writing.




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