GENEVA / CLUSTER MUNITION REPORT
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STORY: GENEVA / CLUSTER MUNITION REPORT
TRT: 3: 15
SOURCE: UNTV CH
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS
DATELINE: 25 AUGUST 2021 GENEVA, SWITZERLAND
1. Wide shot, exterior, Palais des Nations
2. Wide shot, press room with panel of speaker
3. SOUNDBITE (English) Mary Wareham, Advocacy Director, Arms Division, Human Rights Watch:
“Many have been documenting the use of cluster munitions in Ukraine on the ground, and we see near daily attacks causing predictable and lasting harm, hitting homes, hospitals and schools. I know that just yesterday, on Ukraine’s Independence Day, two people were reportedly injured in a cluster munition attack in a village in Kharkiv region.”
4. Close up, report Cluster Munition Monitor 2022 report and computers of journalists
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Mary Wareham, Advocacy Director, Arms Division, Human Rights Watch:
“Russia’s recent production of cluster munitions, its widespread use of them in Ukraine is unconscionable and deserves condemnation. These actions are a sobering reminder of what must be overcome if the international treaty to ban cluster munitions is to succeed in its goal of ending human suffering from these explosive weapons.”
6. Med shot, cameraman
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Mary Wareham, Advocacy Director, Arms Division, Human Rights Watch:
“Both Russia and Ukraine should reject cluster munitions and join the international treaty banning them. Ukrainian forces appeared to have used cluster munitions at least twice during this war.”
8. Med shot, Journalist taking notes, screen showing speakers
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Loren Persi, Impact research team editor Landmine and Cluster Munition Monitor:
“So far, we have some kind of indicative data of up to 700 casualties until June. Now I suggest that is indicative, both because the situation is very difficult to get clear information from, with the ongoing conflict, but also because there is clearly many, many more attacks than there are casualties reported.”
10. Med shot, Journalists taking notes
11. SOUNDBITE (English) Loren Persi, Impact research team editor Landmine and Cluster Munition Monitor:
“So, in 2021, 97% of casualties were civilians, and where the role of the other casualties was known, they were actually deminers, people trying to clear the cluster munitions who were killed and injured during that important and dangerous task. 2/3 of casualties in 2021 were Now this is a significant increase in the percentage of child casualties and the ratio of children killed and injured.”
12. Med shot, staff monitoring
13. SOUNDBITE (English) Loren Persi, Impact research team editor Landmine and Cluster Munition Monitor:
“Most of those child casualties occurred in States Parties to the Convention on Cluster Munitions. So, these casualties of the cluster munition remnants have been affected by cluster munition used that happened years ago, most often in Southeast Asia, remnants that have remained for decades, and that says something about both the impact of cluster munitions and the importance of the Convention to stop that use.”
14. Med shot, Journalists taking notes
15. SOUNDBITE (ENGLISH) Mary Wareham, Human Rights Watch Arms Advocacy Director: “Virtually all of the cluster munitions that have been declared by States Parties under this convention have now been destroyed. That is a total of nearly 1.5 million cluster munitions and more than 178 million submunitions, and each of those smaller bomblets or submunitions is lethal.”
16. Wide shot, panel of speakers, book flipping
17. Wide shot, camera on tripod, Journalists taking notes
18. Med shot, journalists taking notes, panel in the background
A new report said that the progress in eliminating cluster munitions is overshadowed by a devastating human toll from widespread use in the ongoing war in Ukraine.
This is one of the key findings of the Cluster Munition Monitor Report 2022 issued today by the Cluster Munition Coalition, which urged both Russia and Ukraine to stop using them and join the 2008 international treaty banning them.
“Many have been documenting the use of cluster munitions in Ukraine on the ground, and we see near daily attacks causing predictable and lasting harm, hitting homes, hospitals and schools,” said Mary Wareham, Human Rights Watch Arms Advocacy Director, when speaking to journalists at the launch of the report at the United Nations in Geneva.
“I know that just yesterday, on Ukraine’s Independence Day, two people were reportedly injured in a cluster munition attack in a village in Kharkiv region.”
Neither Russia nor Ukraine have joined the 2008 Convention on Cluster Munitions, which has 110 States Parties and 13 signatories.
The treaty banning cluster munitions comprehensively prohibits the weapon, requires destruction of stockpiles, clearance of areas contaminated by cluster munition remnants, and the provision of risk education and assistance for victims.
“Russia’s recent production of cluster munitions, its widespread use of them in Ukraine is unconscionable and deserves condemnation,” said the Human Rights Watch Arms Advocacy Director.
“These actions are a sobering reminder of what must be overcome if the international treaty to ban cluster munitions is to succeed in its goal of ending human suffering from these explosive weapons.”
Mary Wareham added that “both Russia and Ukraine should reject cluster munitions and join the international treaty banning them. Ukrainian forces appeared to have used cluster munitions at least twice during this war.”
Launched from the ground or dropped from the air, cluster munitions consist of containers that open and disperser submunitions indiscriminately over a wide area.
Many submunitions fail to detonate as intended leaving a trail of explosive remnants and submunitions that threaten lives and deny access to arable land, creating barriers to socioeconomic development.
Preliminary data indicates that at least 689 civilian casualties were reported during cluster munition attacks in the first half of 2022. This would represent a 300% increase compared to the 2021 global total.
“So far, we have some kind of indicative data of up to 700 casualties until June,” said Loren Persi, Monitor Impact research team editor.
“Now I suggest that is indicative, both because the situation is very difficult to get clear information from, with the ongoing conflict, but also because there is clearly many, many more attacks than there are casualties reported.”
Regarding casualties for the year 2021, the 100-page report has identified at least 149 new cluster munition remnant casualties in 2021.
This was the first time in a decade that no new casualties from cluster munition attacks were reported in the year prior to the publication.
“So, in 2021, 97% of casualties were civilians, and where the role of the other casualties was known, they were actually deminers, people trying to clear the cluster munitions who were killed and injured during that important and dangerous task,” said Loren Persi.
“2/3 of casualties in 2021 were children. Now, this is a significant increase in the percentage of child casualties and the ratio of children killed and injured.”
As children are always playing together and with siblings, this explains the high number of casualties, according to Loren Persi.
“Most of those child casualties occurred in States Parties to the Convention on Cluster Munitions. So, these casualties of the cluster munition remnants have been affected by cluster munition used that happened years ago, most often in Southeast Asia, remnants that have remained for decades, and that says something about both the impact of cluster munitions and the importance of the Convention to stop that use,” said Loren Persi.
On a positive note, regarding the stockpile destruction in 2021, Mary Wareham, Human Rights Watch Arms Advocacy Director reported that “virtually all of the cluster munitions that have been declared by States Parties under this convention have now been destroyed. That is a total of nearly 1.5 million cluster munitions and more than 178 million submunitions, and each of those smaller bomblets or submunitions is lethal.”