Brussels, 3 December 2008. To welcome in the international ban on cluster munitions, signed in Oslo on 3 December, Handicap International presents Fatal Footprint. This exhibition, put together by renowned Belgian photographers, will be in the centre of Brussels throughout December.
Years after the return of peace, antipersonnel mines, cluster munitions and other unexploded ordnance are still found on former battlefields. This exhibition presents the footprint left by these weapons. A footprint that proves fatal for many civilians. An enormous footprint that includes not just the physical harm caused by accidents, but also the socio-economic and psychological consequences resulting from accidents or simply from the presence of this constant danger.
Following the antipersonnel mine ban treaty in 1997, the cluster munitions ban process is finally nearing completion with the signing of the treaty in Oslo on 3 December. The key arms treaty of the decade, it represents a victory for Handicap International and for the NGOs and survivors that have led the campaign against these unacceptable weapons. Raed Mokaled, a campaigner with Handicap International, told his story in Brussels on 27 November before travelling to Oslo to attend the signing of the treaty banning cluster munitions. He said: “I come from Lebanon where my five-year-old son, Ahmad, was killed by a cluster bomb. Ahmad was not a terrorist or a criminal. He was just a child who wanted to play and enjoy life.”
To mark the signing of this major treaty, Handicap International asked three great names in Belgian photography, Tim Dirven (Panos), Gael Turine (Vu’) and John Vinck (Magnum), to travel to Cambodia, Colombia, Ethiopia and Laos to meet survivors of mine, cluster bomb and unexploded ordnance accidents. Fatal Footprint is the result of their many striking encounters.
On large 2.5-metre high canvas sheets, the photos will be visible, day and night, as part of a free exhibition, just a stone's throw from Winter Wonders, the Brussels Christmas market.
The photos can also be viewed at www.fatalfootprint.be, along with numerous personal accounts, presentations of the countries visited and explanations regarding mines, cluster munitions and the fight to ban these weapons.
Tim Dirven / Vu’, Laos 2008
Recycling unexploded ordnance as
ordinary objects is an art at which the
Laotians have become masters. Aluminium
cluster bomb containers make perfect
fishing boats, as can be seen here in
the village of Dong Nai.
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Tim Dirven / Vu’, Laos 2008
It would have taken the bomb disposal
team three hours to defuse and move this
bomb, which had fallen near a village,
to the destruction site. In 2007,
Handicap International teams destroyed
1157 pieces of unexploded ordnance, 112
of which were bombs.
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Tim Dirven, Laos 2008
"I'm really scared that there will be
another accident in my family,
especially if something happens to my
wife. You never know. I was just cutting
tree branches when it happened." Aichan,
a 33 year-old farmer in Dong Nai, was
clearing his field when his sickle hit a
cluster bomb.
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[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]





