Suleiman Khalil was harvesting olives in a Syrian orchard with two pals 4 months in the past, unaware the soil beneath them nonetheless hid lethal remnants of conflict.
The trio instantly seen a mine mendacity on the bottom. Panicked, Khalil and his pals tried to go away, however he stepped on a hidden mine that exploded. Terrified, his pals ran to search out an ambulance, however Khalil, 21, thought they’d deserted him.
Khalil’s left leg was badly wounded within the preliminary explosion. His proper leg was blown off from above the knee in a second blast. He used his shirt as a tourniquet on the stump and screamed for assist till a close-by soldier heard him and rushed to his assist.
Whereas the practically 14-year Syrian war got here to an finish with the autumn of Bashar al-Assad on December 8, conflict remnants proceed to kill and maim.
Mines and explosive remnants – extensively used since 2011 by Syrian authorities forces, its allies and armed opposition teams – have contaminated huge areas, a lot of which turned accessible solely after al-Assad’s authorities collapsed, resulting in a surge within the variety of landmine casualties, in keeping with a current Human Rights Watch (HRW) report.
Specialists estimated that tens of 1000’s of landmines stay buried throughout Syria, significantly in former front-line areas like rural areas of Idlib governorate.
Not less than 249 individuals, together with 60 youngsters, have been killed and 379 injured by these munitions since December 8, in keeping with INSO, a global organisation that coordinates security for assist staff.
Landmines not solely kill and maim but in addition trigger long-term psychological trauma and broader hurt, akin to displacement, lack of property and lowered entry to important companies, HRW says.
The rights group has urged the transitional authorities to determine a civilian-led mine motion authority in coordination with the United Nations Mine Motion Service to streamline and broaden demining efforts.