UN / GAZA MINE ACTION PROGRAM

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Briefing reporters in New York from Gaza, the Chief of the Mine Action Program, in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, Luke Irving, said, “at least 92 people have been killed or injured from explosive ordnance” since October 2023, and since the ceasefire came into effect, informal reports indicate that civilians are “coming across explosive ordnance in their homes.” UNIFEED
Description

STORY: UN / GAZA MINE ACTION PROGRAM
TRT: 02:21
SOURCE: UNIFEED
RESTRICTIONS: NONE
LANGUAGE: ENGLISH / NATS

DATELINE: 29 JANUARY 2025, NEW YORK CITY / RECENT

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Shotlist

FILE - NEW YORK CITY

1. Wide shot, exterior United Nations Headquarters

29 JANUARY 2025, NEW YORK CITY

2. Wide shot, press room
3. SOUNDBITE (English) Luke Irving, Chief, Mine Action Program, Occupied Palestinian Territories, United Nations Mine Action Service (UNMAS):
“Over the past 14 months, our teams have encountered a range of explosive ordnance, including aerial bombs, mortars, rockets, projectiles, grenades and improvised explosive devices. These have killed and injured civilians in Gaza, and they have risked preventing humanitarian activities from taking place safely. Primary data collected from reports by individuals to our online public information system, shows that at least 92 people have been killed or injured from explosive ordnance since October 23.”
4. Wide shot, press room
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Luke Irving, Chief, Mine Action Program, Occupied Palestinian Territories, United Nations Mine Action Service (UNMAS):
“Since the ceasefire came into effect, people have started returning to their homes and humanitarian personnel can reach areas which have previously been inaccessible. Yet we have already received informal reports of civilians coming across explosive ordnance in their homes, and humanitarian convoys are finding items more and more as we reach new areas, which we previously could not get to.”
6. Wide shot, press room
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Luke Irving, Chief, Mine Action Program, Occupied Palestinian Territories, United Nations Mine Action Service (UNMAS):
“UNMAS has focussed on scaling up on our response, making sure people know how to navigate the explosive threat, particularly when returning to their homes along routes or in areas that may be contaminated.”
8. Wide shot, press room
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Luke Irving, Chief, Mine Action Program, Occupied Palestinian Territories, United Nations Mine Action Service (UNMAS):
“When people move into areas where they previously have left, could be their homes, could be other infrastructure, etc. that there's a risk of explosive ordnance, unexploded bombs, etc. being in that area. A lot of people might not understand the threat of what those items are, so when they come into contact with them, either picking up or moving it, it's highly dangerous. And those explosive items could then function as they were initially designed to do, and of course they are weapons of war and are deadly. So, you can imagine the impact that will have.”
10. Wide shot, press room
11. SOUNDBITE (English) Luke Irving, Chief, Mine Action Program, Occupied Palestinian Territories, United Nations Mine Action Service (UNMAS):
“We are focusing on critical infrastructure. So, getting hospitals back, power stations, etc. making sure that’s safe for other UN colleagues and humanitarians and Palestinians in Gaza to use those facilities.”
12. Wide shot, end of presser

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Storyline

Briefing reporters in New York from Gaza, the Chief of the Mine Action Program, in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, Luke Irving, today (29 Jan) said, “at least 92 people have been killed or injured from explosive ordnance” since October 2023, and since the ceasefire came into effect, informal reports indicate that civilians are “coming across explosive ordnance in their homes.”

Irving said, “over the past 14 months, our teams have encountered a range of explosive ordnance, including aerial bombs, mortars, rockets, projectiles, grenades and improvised explosive devices. These have killed and injured civilians in Gaza, and they have risked preventing humanitarian activities from taking place safely.”

Since the ceasefire began, he continued, “humanitarian convoys are finding items more and more as we reach new areas, which we previously could not get to.”

The United Nations Mine Action Service (UNMAS), Irving said, “has focussed on scaling up on our response, making sure people know how to navigate the explosive threat, particularly when returning to their homes along routes or in areas that may be contaminated.”

He said, “a lot of people might not understand the threat of what those items are, so when they come into contact with them, either picking up or moving it, it's highly dangerous. And those explosive items could then function as they were initially designed to do, and of course they are weapons of war and are deadly. So, you can imagine the impact that will have.”

UNMAS, Irving said, is also “focusing on critical infrastructure. So, getting hospitals back, power stations, etc. making sure that’s safe for other UN colleagues and humanitarians and Palestinians in Gaza to use those facilities.’

According to UNMAS, since the escalation of hostilities in Gaza after 7 October 2023, explosive ordnance has become increasingly widespread throughout the Strip. The Gaza context also deals with Deep Buried Bombs which can be found deep within infrastructures and rubble.

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