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Africa

De-bombing South Sudan

Clearing explosives removes remnants of war, gets farmers back in their fields.

Clearance teams conduct a visual search of former battle grounds. All contaminated areas must be visually searched to clear all surface level items.

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MUNDRI, Southern Sudan — Sudan's civil war ended five years ago, but its legacy remains in the cluster bombs that can still be found on the fertile banks of the Yai River.

This meandering Nile tributary bisects Mundri, a desolate, southern trading center. An historic stronghold of the Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA), Mundri saw intense fighting during the latter years of the war, which lasted from 1983 to 2005.

In addition to pitched ground battles, the town endured frequent bombings by the northern Sudan Armed Forces (SAF). Although the bombings tapered off in 2003, their tangible and potentially lethal remains lie scattered in fields along the river.

“The northern army [SAF] used a lot of cluster bombs in this area,” says Murjan James, an Explosive Ordinance Disposal (EOD) technician leading clearance operations in Mundri. “Many of the [cluster] sub-munitions failed to explode and are buried under the surface.”

The presence of sub-munitions poses significant risks to this largely agrarian community. Food, charcoal, building materials and other staples are extracted from the land using methods that could easily detonate a so-called “bomblet.” As more refugees and displaced persons return to Mundri in this period of calm, the demand for land is rising.

“We need the land here to be cleared so that our people can cultivate it,” says Bullen Abiatara Ariwara, the county commissioner for Mundri. “Many here are dependent on agriculture for everything,” he adds.

A case in point is Kerila Jenuba, whose family land in the Mili Lugu area of Mundri is heavily contaminated with sub-munitions. From 1996 to 2004, the family sought refuge in a forest near Bangolo, some 20 miles south of Mundri. Upon return, Jenuba found the family lands littered with the small bombs.

“We are cultivating the land that is clear of bombs,” she says. “But there are still so many in that end,” she adds with a sweeping arm gesture. A small banana tree marks the location where clear land ends and the contaminated area begins. “We are fearful of planting near those bombs but without doing so, we have barely enough food to survive.”

Jenuba says that under ordinary circumstances, her family’s farming would yield a surplus to be sold in local markets, generating income for other needs. Instead, she joins millions of others in southern Sudan for whom food access is not guaranteed.

Murjan James and his unit of technicians from the Danish Demining Group (DDG) face the arduous task of clearing land of explosives. Under blistering sun, two-man teams carry large, rectangular metal detectors over narrow swaths of earth. All metal readings are marked for excavation with red flags.

http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/africa/100215/war-southern-sudan