Clearing landmines: Despite sophisticated new technology
many explosive devices are still cleared by hand with the help of trained
animals
DURING
a morning operation against the Taliban in Afghanistan’s Helmand province in
2010, a British army contingent halted before a narrow pass reckoned to be
mined with improvised explosive devices (IEDs). The day before, two of the
unit’s armoured vehicles had been destroyed nearby by IEDs (the crews were
uninjured). The commander, Lieutenant-Colonel Matt Bazeley, fired a rocket that
pulled 200 metres of a fat, coiled hose out over the route ahead. Packed with
about 1.5 tonnes of explosives, it detonated upon landing with such a force
that the shock wave was felt at a command centre 13km (8 miles) away.
Python, as
the mine-breaching system is called, is so powerful that before it is fired
soldiers must ensure no civilians are within half a kilometre (on that morning,
a B-2 bomber and a drone first scanned the area). Other methods used to
detonate IEDs and landmines, such as armoured machines that flail the ground or
sift through it like a potato harvester, are less violent. But setting off
buried mines is not always the best option.
When
conflicts cease and civilians return to resume their daily lives,
mine-breaching alone cannot ensure that land is clear of the unexploded
remnants of war. Scattered shrapnel and explosives residue make it difficult to
confirm that no mines remain. Mines may survive blasts and some are designed to
do so. For example, the MAT/5 and Valmara 69, Italian anti-tank and
anti-personnel mines, are detonated by the momentarily sustained pressure from
a passing vehicle or foot. This means there is often no option but to resort to
the laborious and dangerous process of clearing mines manually.
A brave thing to do
Humanitarian
demining, as post-conflict mine clearance is known, is carried out by the army,
non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and commercial companies. It usually
involves deminers, dressed in moderately blast-resistant clothing (the heavy,
full-body armour used by bomb squads is considered by many to be too
restrictive), checking the ground with metal detectors and carefully prodding
to find buried objects.
When the
Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention, known as the Ottawa treaty, came into force
on March 1st 1999, landmines were killing or maiming more than 9,000 people a
year. By 2012 casualties were down to some 3,620, roughly three quarters of
them civilians, according to Landmine Monitor, the research arm of the
International Campaign to Ban Landmines. Improved detection methods have
helped, and there has been a big decrease in mines being planted—more than 130
countries are signatories to the Ottawa treaty (America is not, but follows its
precepts). Even so, the Pentagon reckons that at least 45m landmines remain in
the ground worldwide.
Deminers can
struggle to find them with metal detectors because for decades most mines have
been made largely from plastic. They might contain only one metal component: a
firing pin smaller than a sewing needle, says Eddie Banks, a retired deminer
and author of a book on landmine design. But some hand-held detectors are
sensitive enough to detect even a buried scrap of silvery paper from a
cigarette pack, says Alex van Roy of the Armenian government’s Centre for
Humanitarian Demining and Expertise, a new body clearing mines in Armenia that
remain after a war in the 1990s with Azerbaijan.
Such machines
cost about $4,000 and some can be calibrated to take account of the soil’s
mineral content. This helps searching in soils rich in iron and aluminium, says
Pehr Lodhammar, an equipment expert at the Geneva International Centre for
Humanitarian Demining, an NGO. Nevertheless, progress can still be slow because
everything detected must be treated as a potential mine until it is dug up, be
it a splinter of shrapnel or a bottle cap.
Peering below ground
NATO forces
in Afghanistan have been using a novel landmine detector known as AN/PSS-14. It
combines metal detection with wideband ground-penetrating radar, which can
reveal inconsistencies in the soil whether or not metal is present. The
detector, developed by a clutch of American universities and L3 CyTerra, a
Florida firm, uses algorithms to analyse data from each detection system to
determine if buried metallic objects might be part of a mine.
GlobalSecurity.org,
an American think-tank, reckons the AN/PSS-14 is a vast improvement over
previous mine detectors and the Pentagon has promoted its use by demining
organisations. But, as each machine costs more than $20,000, few have been
purchased by NGOs because it is cheaper to employ people to clear mines
manually. In Lebanon a deminer’s typical monthly wage is about $1,000; in Sri
Lanka it is just $200. Moreover, the AN/PSS-14 requires a number of technical
skills to operate which deminers with little formal education may not have,
adds Mr Banks, the retired deminer.
For those
with big budgets, even more elaborate detectors are being developed. Raytheon,
an American defence firm, has developed a truck-mounted one that detects
landmines and tunnels by sending acoustic and seismic signals into the ground.
These signals cause minute vibrations which are measured with lasers. The
pattern of the vibrations can be used to predict what lies below. A smaller
system which could be carried by a deminer might cost less than $100,000,
reckons James Sabatier, a University of Mississippi engineer who is attempting
to design one.
A detection
system recently demonstrated by Gap EOD, an Australian firm, to a copper-mining
company keen to avoid digging up unexploded bombs dropped in Laos by American
warplanes in the 1960s and 1970s costs more than $250,000. This device, called
UltraTEM, uses a 10kW generator to flood with electricity, 25 times a second, a
thick copper cable laid on the ground in a loop about 100 metres in diameter.
This generates electromagnetic eddy currents in any buried metal and these
currents can be detected on the surface with a hand-held receiver. UltraTEM is
said to double the typical detection depth for a 250-pound bomb to more than
five metres in certain soils.
Besides more
sophisticated kit, it helps to have better intelligence on where IEDs and
landmines have been planted in the first place. But obtaining reliable
information is difficult, says Valeria Fabbroni, operations boss of the Swiss
Foundation for Mine Action, an NGO known by its French acronym FSD. This was the
case in Sri Lanka after the defeat of the Tamil Tigers in 2009. An FSD team
visited the insurgents’ former fief in the north of the country to map areas
thought to contain landmines but found that many locals were reluctant to
speak, no doubt because some had supported the Tigers. The FSD team ended up
studying the group’s military doctrine and combing media reports for any
mention of positions defended by the Tigers to help work out where landmines
might be.
Now such
surveys can get help from a free service offered by the European Space Agency.
Its Space Assets for Demining Assistance project superimposes satellite photos
of an area taken before, during and after armed conflict. By studying how the
use of land has changed, a trained eye can spot a wealth of clues to the
presence or absence of landmines. Previously productive farmland that has
fallen fallow may well have been mined. The same goes for areas where firewood
is used for cooking or heating but fallen trees have not been collected.
Buildings with unrepaired roofs, abandoned water wells and well-trodden new
paths that appear circuitous also provide telltale signs.
An
alternative system using photographs taken by aircraft is used by the Croatian
Mine Action Centre (CROMAC), a government agency in Sisak, a town southwest of
Zagreb. High-resolution colour images can reveal old defensive positions dug by
militias. Fighting in the 1990s against ethnic-Serb forces left an astonishing
1.2% of the territory littered with landmines.
Those
devices included the dreaded PROM-1, a “bounding” metal mine manufactured in
the former Yugoslavia. The size of a litre bottle, it contains two charges. The
first propels the mine a metre or so into the air; the second turns it into a
shower of “high-velocity razors” that can kill a person 50 metres away, says
Miljenko Vahtaric, CROMAC’s head of international co-operation. Most of
Croatia’s landmine deaths have been caused by PROM-1s.
After a few
months underground, almost all landmines leak vapours that betray the presence
of explosives. The University of Connecticut has designed a fibrous film that
can be laid on the ground like a carpet. It is treated with secret chemicals
that change colour upon contact with vapour from plastic explosives. The film
detects some explosives in concentrations as weak as a half dozen parts per
trillion. Such sensitivity is impressive, but dogs can do much better.
Belgian,
Dutch and German shepherds are used to help locate mines on the ground.
(Beagles and spaniels have keen noses but their personalities are too flighty
for minefield work.) Dogs, however, present a problem. They can be heavy enough
to detonate an anti-personnel mine.
Sniffing safely
A clever way
around that comes from MECHEM, a subsidiary of Denel, a South African defence
contractor. It uses a vacuum device to filter out particles from explosives
that have seeped from the ground. The filters are sent to a laboratory where
they are safely sniffed in controlled conditions by trained dogs. If the dogs
detect explosives in a particular filter, the corresponding area of land,
typically about 100 metres square, is demined.
A rat can reliably check the ground faster than a human with a metal detector
Bees can
also be trained to associate the whiff of explosives with food, but they can be
hard to track. Rats, however, are more controllable. Dozens of giant pouched
rats, tethered by deminers, are used to sniff out landmines in Mozambique.
Teaching a rat to scratch the ground upon smelling explosives costs around
€6,000 ($8,200), which is only a third of what it costs to train a dog,
according to APOPO, a Belgian NGO that runs such a programme. A rat can
reliably check the ground faster than a human with a metal detector, says
Zacarias Chambe, an APOPO deminer who uses rats in Mozambique’s Tete province.
Not one rat has made a mistake that has led to an accident, he adds. APOPO’s
rats have recently started work in Angola and are expected to begin this year
in Cambodia.
Many of the
new high-tech solutions are likely to remain beyond the financial reach of some
civilian mine-clearing operations, at least until prices come down. Meanwhile,
the job will continue to be done largely by hand with some improved kit and the
assistance of well-trained animals. Further into the future, a clever robot
that is dexterous enough to unearth and carry away landmines may well be
developed. But until then, one of the most dangerous jobs in the world is a
long way from being automated.
The
Economist
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