Campaigners from Cambodia call on South Korea to join the Convention on Cluster Munitions and the Mine Ban Treaty. Photo credit: Cambodia Campaign to Ban Landmines and Cluster Munitions |
2012-03-28
Source: http://www.stopclustermunitions.org/news/?id=3589
The Cambodia Campaign to Ban Landmines and Cluster Munitions, a
member of the ICBL-CMC, was awarded the 15th Tji Haksoon Justice and
Peace Award 2012 on 14 March 2012 in recognition of their dedication to
the welfare and rights of landmine victims. During the visit,
campaigners took the opportunity to urge the South Korean government to
stop the manufacture of cluster munitions in the country and to join the
Convention on Cluster Munitions and the Mine Ban Treaty.
Sister Denise Coghlan, the Director of the Cambodia Campaign and
Director of Jesuit Refugee Service Cambodia, and Song Kosal, Youth
Ambassador to the International Campaign to Ban Landmines, accepted the
award at a ceremony in Seoul. The award is named after the deceased
Bishop Tji Haksoon, who offered his entire life to peace and justice in
South Korea.
The Cambodia Campaign to Ban Landmines has campaigned around the
world since its inception in 1994. “The number of new victims in
Cambodia has been reduced dramatically but even one victim is too many,”
said Kosal, who lost a leg after stepping on a mine in Battambang — the
most heavily mined province in Cambodia — when she was just five years
old.
South Korea is a producer, exporter and stockpiler of cluster
munitons. South Korea has not signed the Mine Ban Treaty or the
Convention on Cluster Munitions and neither has North Korea. Both
countries argue that these are necessary for “defence” in their
continuing conflict, and maintain a border littered with landmines,
although the humanitarian impact of these outdated weapons far outweighs
any military utility.
The four-day whirlwind visit to Seoul also included protests, talks
and ceremonies. Local NGOs, including ‘Weapons Zero’, joined the
Cambodian team in campaign actions outside the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs and Trade, with some campaigners dressed as cluster bombs. The
next day Sister Denise and Kosal entered the very same building and
addressed the Foreign and Defence Ministries.
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