DEVELOPMENT REPORT - Clearing Land Mines in Afghanistan(在线收听

By Jill Moss
DEVELOPMENT REPORT - January 21, 2002: Clearing Land Mines in Afghanistan

This is the VOA Special English Development Report.

Each year, thousands of people are killed or injured by explosions from land mines. This is a serious problem in
many developing countries that are experiencing war. Afghanistan is considered the most heavily land-mined
country in the world. Soviet forces fighting in Afghanistan placed most of the bombs during the Nineteen-
Eighties.


The United Nations estimates that as many as ten-million land mines were buried in
Afghanistan before the American-led war against terrorism started. That number has increased.
United States military planes dropped unexploded cluster bombs in Afghanistan. These bombs
are especially dangerous because they look like games for children to play with.

Now, the United States is helping Afghanistan remove these dangerous land mines. It has
employed a company based in Washington, D.C., called Ronco Consulting Company. Ronco is
sending an eleven-man team of experts to Afghanistan to help remove the bombs. The team

will also train Afghan officials in mine removal techniques. They will start in Jalalabad, then move to four other
areas of the country.

Stephen Edelmann and Ronald Boyd started Ronco in Nineteen-Seventy-Four. Since that
time, the company has worked on more than three-hundred projects in more than fifty
developing countries. About ninety people work for Ronco in the United States. More
than three-hundred people work for the company around the world.

In recent years, Ronco experts have gone to several other countries to find and remove
land mines. The company uses metal sensing equipment and specially trained dogs to
find the buried bombs. It also helps countries create special picture books for children.
These books warn children about the dangers of land mines.

Human Rights Watch estimates that a single land mine costs between three and thirty
dollars to make. Yet, the cost of finding and removing a single bomb is between three-
hundred and one -thousand dollars. Although the cost is high, the United States believes it is money well spent.

Secretary of State Colin Powell has said the United States will help rebuild Afghanistan and bring hope to its
people. He says that hope will begin with clearing the country of land mines.

This VOA Special English Development Report was written by Jill Moss.


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Land mine victim in
Afghanistan

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