"We should be worried that most of those killed or maimed are innocent
civilians, mainly children who don't know what wars are," Branislav
Kapetanovic, himself a cluster bomb victim, said to loud applause from
delegates representing some 70 countries. A former Serbian army deminer,
Kapetanovic lost his arms and legs as he tried to defuse a cluster bomb in
2000 in Sjenica, Serbia.

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Thursday May 24, 7:45 AM 

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Anti-cluster bomb conference meets in Lima


An international conference seeking a global ban on cluster bombs opened in
Lima Wednesday, with delegates pointing out that the victims are often
children who pick up unexploded munitions years after the fighting has
ended.

"We should be worried that most of those killed or maimed are innocent
civilians, mainly children who don't know what wars are," Branislav
Kapetanovic, himself a cluster bomb victim, said to loud applause from
delegates representing some 70 countries.

A former Serbian army deminer, Kapetanovic lost his arms and legs as he
tried to defuse a cluster bomb in 2000 in Sjenica, Serbia.

The three-day conference aims at broadening support for an initiative
launched in Oslo February, in which 46 countries called for an international
treaty to eliminate the deadly munitions by 2008.

The munitions contain as many as hundreds of bomblets, also known as
submunitions, which scatter over wide areas. Many of the bomblets do not
explode on impact, and lie dormant for years or decades. In many cases, they
blow up when children pick them up to play with them, delegates said.

"For children, these bombs might look like toys, and in some cases they look
like bottles of perfume," said Gebran Soufan, who heads Lebanon's diplomatic
mission in Geneva.

He cited the example of last year's Israeli invasion of Lebanon, saying that
many bomblets are still scattered in parks, streets and near schools.

"It is estimated there are still 1.2 million unexploded cluster bombs in the
south of Lebanon," said Soufan.

Cambodia's Sam Sotha told delegates his country remains littered with
cluster bombs dropped by US forces during the 1970s, and children were often
attracted by their shiny, toy-like appearance. He said 20 million cluster
bombs had been dropped on the southeast Asian country.

Sotha insisted on the urgency of reaching a treaty banning production,
sales, use and storage of the deadly weapons.

Jody Williams and five other female Nobel prize laureates hailed the Lima
gathering.

"We applaud bold initiatives that tackle such issues -- and lend our full
support to this new process determined to eliminate cluster munitions,"
Williams said in the Peruvian capital on Tuesday.

"While so many of the worlds arms cause so much human misery, cluster
munitions deserve to be singled out as an especially pernicious weapon of
ill repute." 

"They have become synonymous with civilian casualties," the US Nobel
laureate read from the statement signed by her and five women Nobel Peace
Prize winners: Rigoberta Menchu (Guatemala-1992); Shirin Ebadi (Iran-2003);
Wangari Maathai (Kenya-2004); Betty Williams and Mairead Corrigan Maguire
(Ireland-1976).

Williams, whose work to ban land mines garnered the 1997 Nobel Peace Prize,
represents the Cluster Munition Coalition, which urged South American
governments to follow the example of their Central American counterparts who
have already banned the weapons.

Argentina, Brazil and Chile currently manufacture cluster bombs in South
America. While Argentina and Chile have sent representatives, Brazil has
not.

China, Russia and the United States, the largest manufacturers of cluster
bombs, oppose the ban.

At least 400 million people live in areas contaminated by unexploded
bomblets weapons, according to groups supporting the proposed ban. 

The bombs are largely found in the Middle East, where they are used by
Israel; in southeast Asian countries, where the United States deployed them
in the 1970s; and in the former Yugoslavia.

 

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