|
Ask Congress to Support the New Bill
to Eliminate Landmines
(March 28, 2001)
Issue:
On March 7-10, over 200 people representing 45 states came
to
Washington D.C. for the U.S. Campaign to Ban Landmines' Legislative
Action
Conference. The participants talked to their Members of Congress
about
landmine issues and garnered support for recently introduced
legislation in
Congress. Sen. Patrick Leahy (D-VT) introduced the Landmines
Elimination
and Victim Assistance Act of 2001 (S. 497) in the Senate, and
Reps. Lane
Evans (D-IL), Jack Quinn (R-NY), and James McGovern (D-MA) introduced
a
companion bill (H.R. 948) in the House.
This legislation (1) sends a message to the President that
Congress wants
the United States to sign the Mine Ban Treaty, (2) extends the
current U.S.
prohibition on the export of antipersonnel landmines and anti-tank
landmines, (3) urges the military to field treaty- compliant
alternatives
to antipersonnel landmines, and (4) provides support to landmine
victim
assistance projects.
CALL OR WRITE your Senators and Representative and urge them
to co-sponsor the Landmines Elimination and Victim Assistance
Act of 2001. The U.S. is already a leader in humanitarian efforts
to help clear mines. The U.S.
should also set a good example by signing the Mine Ban Treaty
and providing
more assistance to landmine survivors.
Capitol Switchboard: 202-224-3121
Sen. ________
U.S. Senate
Washington, DC 20510
Rep. ________
U.S. House of Representatives
Washington, DC 20515
To locate your members of Congress and find more information
about them,
check the following websites: www.senate.gov, www.house.gov,
or
www.congress.org.
The Friends Committee for National Legislation has developed
an online
system to send e-mail letters to members of Congress. Start
with the sample
letter posted on the Internet, personalize the language, then
send the
message directly from the site or print it out and mail it.
Go to
http://capwiz.com/fconl/issues/alert/?alertid=17691&type=CO,
enter your zip
code, then click <Go> in the <Take Action Now> box.
Background:
Landmines indiscriminately kill and maim innocent civilians.
The International Committee of the Red Cross estimates that
upwards of
26,000 people lose their lives and limbs to landmines each year.
In 1994,
President Clinton called for a global ban on antipersonnel landmines.
In
1997, an international treaty to ban landmines was created,
but President
Clinton then announced that the United States would not sign
the treaty
until 2006, and then only if "suitable alternatives"
to landmines were
found. The president asked the military to begin developing
alternatives to
antipersonnel landmines, but it does not appear that these will
be ready by
2006.
The International Campaign to Ban Landmines (ICBL) has identified
the
United States as a special target country, and the March conference
in
Washington, DC was the first-ever global landmine movement meeting
in the
U.S. The Bush Administration has not yet made any policy statement
on the
banning of antipersonnel mines. The State Department and Pentagon
are
currently reassessing of U.S. policy as part of the Quadrennial
Defense
Review.
Of particular concern to the U.S. are the over one million
mines laid in
South Korea, which the Pentagon views as a necessary line of
defense
against attack from the north. As the danger of war on the Korean
peninsula
recedes, this claim is increasingly difficult to justify. Furthermore,
experience from other conflicts suggests that mines are at least
as likely
to wound or kill U.S. soldiers and allies as they are to stop
an enemy
attack. Civic groups in Korea have also identified a growing
number of
civilian victims.
To date, 139 countries have joined the 1997 Mine Ban Treaty,
of which 110
have ratified. These include all of the U.S.'s NATO allies except
Turkey
and all countries in the Western Hemisphere except the U.S.
and Cuba. In
Asia and the Pacific, key advocates of the treaty include Japan,
Cambodia
and Australia. Among the countries that have not yet joined
the treaty are
China, Russia, India, Pakistan, and both North and South Korea.
The ICBL's global monitoring project, Landmine Monitor, reports
that over
the past two years, virtually all trends are positive, notably
decreased
use, fewer new mine victims, and more land being cleared of
mines. "While
we still find instances of use of anti-personnel mines, the
Mine Ban Treaty
is having a significant impact on alleviating the global mine
problem,"
says ICBL Ambassador Jody Williams, co-recipient of the 1997
Nobel Peace
Prize.
The treaty bans the use, production, transfer and stockpiling
of
antipersonnel mines. It also requires countries to clear mines
in the
ground within ten years after signing, and to provide assistance
to other
countries to do the same. Even before the U.S. joins the treaty,
it can
begin to move closer to treaty requirements by limiting its
production and
export of mines, clearing mines laid around the world, and assisting
mine
victims and survivors. The legislation under consideration in
Congress
proposes these steps as it calls on President Bush to sign the
Mine Ban
Treaty.
|