You are here: Home Making Peace and Saving Lives: Canada's Peacekeepers and Landmines

Image not available

Making Peace and Saving Lives: Canada's Peacekeepers and Landmines

This exhibit focuses on the former Yugoslavia, the effects of mines on children and Operation Decimal (1989) in which Canadian Peacekeepers educated Afghan refugees on mine awareness.

Category: Visual Arts Events
alt_share

What:

Audience | All Ages

Schedule of Events

Date Venue Description
17-May-12 to 17-May-13 The Military Museums Experience Canada's history at home and abroad at western Canada's largest military museum. 

Profile

Canada's Peacekeepers and Landmines celebrate the anniversary of the ratification of the Mine Ban Treaty. This Treaty is the international agreement that bans antipersonnel landmines. Sometimes referred to as the Ottawa Convention, it is officially titled: the Convention on the Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling, Production and Transfer of Anti-Personnel Mines and on Their Destruction. <br><br>The treaty is the most comprehensive international instrument for ridding the world of the scourge of mines and deals with everything from mine use, production and trade, to victim assistance, mine clearance and stockpile destruction. <br><br>In December 1997 a total of 122 governments signed the treaty in Ottawa, Canada. On March 1st 1999 the treaty became binding under international law, and did so more quickly than any treaty of its kind in history. <br><br>Today, the treaty is still open for ratification by signatories and for accession by those that did not sign before March 1999. A total of 45 countries remain outside of the treaty entirely and these include China, Egypt, Finland, India, Israel, Pakistan, Russia and the United States.<br><br> source--Museum of the Regiments