In Ukraine, land mines left by Russian forces pose a deadly threat
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[July 28, 2023]
By Gerry Doyle, Han Huang and Jackie Gu
(Reuters) - As Ukrainian forces slowly push ahead with their 2023
counteroffensive after more than a year of shifting battle lines, the
country's military and civilians face a deadly problem: land mines,
potentially hundreds of thousands of them, scattered across roads,
buried in fields and concealed in devastated cities.
There are new, advanced types that can sense movement or destroy
vehicles from hundreds of meters away. Most common, however, are older,
simple weapons that were produced in the tens of millions and fill the
armories of both the Ukrainian and Russian militaries.
Reuters interviewed four humanitarian demining organizations and two
military experts and examined technical surveys by mine-clearance groups
of unexploded ordnance in Ukraine to reveal mine contamination so vast
that it is most likely unprecedented in the 21st century.
(To view the graphic, go to )
Because the conflict is ongoing, "there has been no empirical way to
determine the area that has been contaminated" or the degree of
contamination, said Mark Hiznay, associate arms director at Human Rights
Watch. "Whatever the largest category you want to create, call it large,
very large, severe, extreme… (Ukraine) would be in that category."
Land mines have proved a formidable obstacle for Ukraine’s military,
bogging down assaults during its counteroffensive and disabling armored
vehicles. Minefields in Zaporizhzhia and Donetsk oblasts have required
large-scale combat engineering efforts, a difficult endeavor for even
the best-equipped militaries.
As a result, Ukrainian forces have been forced to proceed at a
deliberate pace, attacking Russian artillery and other fire support
before attempting to create assault lanes with mine-clearing line
charges and armored vehicles with plows.
Militaries and humanitarian deminers use vastly different methods for
mine decontamination, so even after Ukraine's armed forces clear lanes
through minefields and recapture territory, the risk to civilians
persists – and may continue for decades.
"There are still communities interacting with (mines) every day… because
they have to, as a matter of livelihood," said Adam Komorowski, regional
director for Eastern Europe, South America and the Caribbean at
humanitarian deminer Mines Advisory Group. "Do I go out and take the
risk that I might come across an explosive device? Or do I simply decide
to not plant or harvest crops? Either way you're making a horrific
choice."
THE WEAPONS
One of the most common types found in the Ukraine war is the PFM-1
anti-personnel mine, known colloquially as a butterfly mine, which has a
plastic body about the size of a paperback book. With only 37 grams (1.3
ounces) of explosives, according to Geneva International Centre for
Humanitarian Demining (GICHD) documents, it is not meant to create a
large blast. Rather, when a person steps on one of the mine's "wings,"
it detonates in an explosion big enough to maim.
Used widely by the Soviet Union during its invasion of Afghanistan in
the 1980s, such mines can be scattered by hand, by aircraft or by rocket
artillery. Metal detectors can sense their metal parts, but the mines'
odd shape and size mean that they can lie unnoticed for years, and
civilians can mistake them for harmless objects.
"They are very dangerous, especially for civilian populations," said
Tymur Pistriuha, head of the Ukrainian Deminers Association. "It is like
a leaf… it is green. In grass it is difficult to identify this."
The POM-3 anti-personnel mine, by contrast, is a new design that does
not need to be touched to detonate. It also can be scattered by
aircraft, rockets and artillery, righting itself after landing with
small mechanical "petals". The mine, about the size and shape of a
soft-drink can, inserts a small probe into the ground. When the probe
detects vibration – for instance, footsteps nearby – it launches the
main mine 1 to 1.5m into the air, according to GICHD documents. At that
point, the 100g explosive payload detonates, spraying deadly metal
fragments. Because these mines are dangerous to even approach, one way
to safely disable them is to shoot them from a distance, Hiznay said.
Anti-vehicle mines are also prevalent in Ukraine. Among the most
numerous is the TM-62 series, which both the Russian and Ukrainian
militaries have deployed. They can be placed on the surface or buried in
shallow holes. The TM-62M is older and has a metal body, making it
easier to detect, according to GICHD; the TM-62P3 has a plastic body.
Both contain 6.5 to 7.5 kg (14 to 16.5 pounds) of high explosives
designed to blast upward through the weaker belly armor of a vehicle.
If a pressure fuze is installed, 150 kg of mass on the fuze is required
to trigger it. Magnetic-influence fuzes sense any metal containing iron,
such as steel, and detonate when it passes a certain threshold.
The German-designed PARM mine — short for Panzerabwehrrichtmine — is
concealed near places where enemy vehicles are expected to pass. When it
is triggered via a tripwire, infrared sensor or remote command, it fires
a high-velocity rocket with roughly 2 kg of explosives shaped to blast
through a vehicle's armor. The Ukrainian military received more than
1,500 of them from Germany in 2022.
GICHD has documented at least 12 types of anti-personnel mines and nine
types of anti-vehicle mines in use in Ukraine. Andro Mathewson, global
research officer for HALO Trust, a humanitarian demining organization,
said the group's experts had found at least 10 new types of modern
mines, including the POM-3 and PARM series, in Ukraine.
The Ukraine war "is the first one I have worked in where we are dealing
with a developed nation superpower as one of the present combatant
armies", Komorowsi said, referring to Russia. The "last time you had a
nation of that power using land mines on any kind of industrial scale"
was the Soviet Union in Afghanistan four decades ago, he said.
THE MINEFIELDS
Militaries typically plan and map out minefields so that their own
forces know where the danger is. That can make humanitarian demining
easier. In Ukraine, most such minefields are around the line of contact,
which runs through the country's east from the border with Russia about
150 km east of Kharkiv, south and west through Zaporizhzhia oblast to
just south of Kherson city near the Black Sea coast. The line is
thousands of kilometres long and the number of minefields along it has
not been determined, Hiznay said.
"In the 1991 Gulf War, the Iraqi defensive zones the U.S. Army breached
through were 2 to 5 kilometres deep," with tens of thousands of mines
per minefield, said Mick Ryan, a retired major general in the Australian
Army and a combat engineer. "What the Russians have done in the south in
particular might approach something like that … we are talking in the
hundreds of thousands at a minimum."
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An anti-tank mine is seen in the village
of Neskuchne, recently retaken by the Ukrainian Armed Forces, amid
Russia's attack on Ukraine, near a front line in Donetsk region,
Ukraine July 8, 2023. REUTERS/Sofiia Gatilova/File Photo
In places where Ukraine has recaptured territory, the level of mine
contamination is better understood. Formerly occupied towns in Kyiv;
Sumy, Chernihiv, Mykolaiv and Kharkiv oblasts all saw a large number
of mines, especially anti-personnel mines, left in place, Mathewson
said.
That creates a situation where "everything is dangerous", Pistriuha
said.
"For example, we are still in liberated areas forbidden to go into
forests during mushroom season," he said. "Our authorities do not
allow people to go into the forest to pick mushrooms, because it is
still not clear of mines."
Hiznay and Komorowski said anti-personnel mines and improvised booby
traps presented a huge risk to civilians in these areas.
Nonetheless, most of the reported civilian land-mine injuries since
the invasion have been related to anti-tank mines, Mathewson said.
Between February 2022 and May 2023, HALO trust data show, 855
civilians were reported hurt or killed in 550 mine-related
accidents.
"The most dangerous thing you can really do right now in Ukraine is
drive on an unpaved road," he said. "If you think about an anti-tank
mine that is designed to take the treads off or disable a 30-ton
tank, you can imagine what it does to a 2-ton car."
THE REMOVAL
Mines' military purpose is to hinder enemy movement, forcing
vehicles and troops to avoid certain areas, spend time clearing
mines or risk crippling casualties. "Kill and maim enemy soldiers —
at heart, that's what these things do," Ryan said. Over the winter,
Russian forces repeatedly assaulted the Ukrainian city of Vuhledar,
but the attacks were stalled by anti-vehicle mines, said Ryan and
Jack Watling, senior research fellow for land warfare at Royal
United Services Institute.
Armies don't clear all mines when they advance. Instead they create
lanes through which offensive forces can assault enemy positions,
Watling said. Because of that, he said, they can use tools that are
faster and more destructive, such as "line charges" – ropes of
explosives that are fired into a minefield and detonated, triggering
mines.
The faster that process is, the less time the assaulting force will
be exposed to enemy fire, he said.
"The problem is not the mine," Watling said. "The mines are an
unpleasant harassing capability that can be dealt with if you have
time. It's mines covered with (enemy) fire — that is the problem."
Watling and Ryan said other methods, such as plows or rollers
mounted on armored vehicles, could also be used depending on
circumstances. Military minefields almost always contain a mix of
anti-personnel and anti-vehicle mines to prevent infantry from
advancing on foot.
Humanitarian demining is more painstaking. First, in cooperation
with mine-action authorities in the country in question, workers
will do a non-technical survey to learn about levels of
contamination. That involves talking to communities, learning what
they have seen, heard and experienced, and sifting through reports
and records of battles and emplacements, Komorowski and Pistriuha
said. Demining workers adhere to the International Mine Action
Standards, a United Nations framework developed in the mid-1990s,
augmented with national standards of the country in which they are
operating.
Using survey information, experts will create polygons on a map
showing areas of focus, Hiznay said. The next step is a technical
survey, which involves searching for the edges of minefields using
equipment such as ground-penetrating radar and metal detectors. Dogs
and rats can be trained to detect the explosives in mines, the
demining experts said. Surveyors mark the edges of the minefields
and note what types of devices may be there.
At that point demining begins, with a priority placed on areas that
are important to the local population, such as agricultural fields,
water sources, urban areas and roads. There are two general types of
clearance, Komorowski said, both involving highly trained workers in
protective gear.
"One, no-touch mines. If you find those, you blow them in situ," he
said. "Two, a conventional anti-personnel mine is generally
activated by pressure on the top. If you excavate it from the side
and safely remove it and unscrew the fuze… you remove the explosive
and it's just an inert bit of plastic and metal."
Once that is finished, before land is handed over for safe civilian
use, "quality control" will be performed using different
mine-detecting methods, he said.
THE FUTURE
The destruction in June of the Nova Kakhovka dam and resulting
flooding in southern Ukraine has most likely displaced many mines
along the Dnipro River's left bank, creating more danger, HALO trust
said.
Ukraine is a signatory to the 1997 Convention on the Prohibition of
the Use, Stockpiling, Production and Transfer of Anti-Personnel
Mines and on their Destruction, and had been destroying its
anti-personnel mines when the war began. Human Rights Watch reported
in January that it had found evidence that rocket-scattered PFM-1
mines had been used against Russian forces in Izium; Ukraine's
foreign ministry said at the time that the country's forces strictly
adhered to the convention and that the report would be "properly
analyzed by the relevant institutions". Ukraine's foreign ministry
did not respond to a recent request for comment.
Russia, which is not a signatory, has widely used anti-personnel
mines. Russia's defence ministry did not respond to a written
request for comment.
Militarily, Ukraine's counteroffensive is trying to punch through
Russian minefields. On the humanitarian side, non-technical
surveying has begun, but working near the front is impossible. For
now, demining organisations are trying to help civilians avoid
danger and restore normalcy to everyday life.
"The scale of tragedy is tremendous," said Pistriuha, who is from
Kyiv. "That's why we cannot solve this problem just by ourselves.
Only the world community, our partners, can help us with support for
humanitarian demining."
(Reporting by Gerry Doyle, Han Huang and Jackie Gu. Editing by David
Crawshaw and Simon Scarr.)
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