Croatia declared free of landmines after 31 years

(glashrvatske.hrt.hr)

205 points | by toomuchtodo 5 hours ago

7 comments

  • ra 3 hours ago
    I stayed near Dubrovnik in the summer of 2005. There was a wildfire burning on on the hills behind us.

    The fire traversed the hillside, and every hour or two a landmine would explode.

    This was ten years after the war.

    • segmondy 53 minutes ago
      10 years is a long time, but 10 years after a war is not a long time. Damages to building still remains, mines and plenty of unexploded ordinances will remain, and psychological scars are still very strong.
  • locusofself 1 hour ago
    I had the good fortune of going to Croatia (as an American) for work about 10 years ago, and I milked that trip hard. What a beautiful country. Dubrovnik, Split, Hvar Island, it was pretty magical.
    • yieldcrv 1 hour ago
      Conflict zones are the most beautiful places

      They make me immediately go “oh I get it”

  • andrewflnr 1 hour ago
    I wonder how long it will take in Ukraine.

    Actually at the rate we're going, there will still be active minefield defenses for most of our lifespans.

    • stevekemp 55 minutes ago
      Poland withdrew from the Ottawa Convention last month, with the aim of being able to lay anti-personnel mines along its eastern border.

      Whether it does or not is an open-question, and while I understand it of course, the idea we're increasing the use of mines is a sad day. They're so indiscriminate and will no doubt cause injuries far into the future.

  • gregjw 3 hours ago
    I wonder when/if places like vietnam will ever achieve this.

    Hell, Australia still has WW2 mines.

    • Animats 2 hours ago
      France still has WWI unexploded ordnance, and keep-out areas are still being de-mined. This has been going on for a century now. About 900 tons of explosives are removed each year. Completion in 700 years at the current rate.[1]

      [1] https://www.warhistoryonline.com/world-war-i/the-red-zone-la...

    • strken 1 hour ago
      Does Australia have any landmines? I was under the impression that we had some areas with sea mines which had been swept but still weren't guaranteed safe, and that was it.
    • riffraff 2 hours ago
      Is that actual land mines or generic lost explosives and unexploded bombs?

      Cause the latter is pretty common in Europe too, but I'm surprised you have actually minefields which haven't been cleared up in Australia.

    • MattGaiser 2 hours ago
      I imagine a lot has to do with motivation. Canada has UXO that it doesn't clean up as land is abundant.
    • adamnemecek 1 hour ago
      This feels like a perfect use case for AI.
  • gethly 42 minutes ago
    Meanwhile.... Poland.
  • KingMob 1 hour ago
    I visited Vientiane in Laos a couple years ago. One of the more depressing places to visit there is the COPE Center.

    It's a group that provides prosthetics to people who have lost body parts due to landmines left over from the Vietnam War.

    Even decades later, there are areas in Laos that have so many unexploded bomblets, it's dangerous to do stuff there, or even build.

  • toomuchtodo 5 hours ago
    • bobmcnamara 2 hours ago
      Oof, only 90% survival rate for deminers.
      • smokeyfish 2 hours ago
        Drones can help these days
        • lukan 1 hour ago
          Can drones sniff explosives? I think that would be very expensive, they can have metal detectors, and mark suspicious sites for someone (or something, like a different digging drone) else to check.

          But rats can sniff explosives and do so succesfully.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magawa