(June 17, 2011) The United Nations declared Nepal free of land mine fields on Tuesday
after the last of the anti-personnel weapons planted by the army while fighting communist
insurgents was destroyed. Prime Minister Jhalnath Khanal flipped a switch to trigger
the last land mine, which had been laid to protect the main civil aviation radio tower
in mountains south of the capital, Katmandu. U.N. official Robert Piper declared
that the mine field in Phulchoki was the last of 53 areas where the army had planted
the weapons. The tower at Phulchoki is used by flight controllers to communicate
with planes flying across the Himalayan nation. It was guarded by an army camp, which
was surrounded by a land mine field to protect against attacks by the Maoist rebels.
However, Piper noted that there are still areas where homemade bombs were planted
by both sides, and efforts to clear them continue. The task of clearing the land
mines began in 2007 after the rebels signed a peace agreement and abandoned their
armed revolt, with the United Nations training Nepalese soldiers to do the task.
The army has cleared 170 of the 275 fields where it laid homemade bombs, but there
is no record on the part of the rebels. U.N. arms monitors have destroyed some 53,000
homemade bombs that were turned in by the rebels after they signed the peace deal.