logo
Princess Diana campaigned to ban these deadly weapons. Some of Europe wants them back

Princess Diana campaigned to ban these deadly weapons. Some of Europe wants them back

The Age2 days ago
The memory of Diana, however, is helping campaigners mount their case against the new plans out of fear the mines laid in the next few years will sit beneath the soil for decades, killing and wounding civilians.
Loading
The HALO Trust, the non-profit organisation that guided Diana through the minefield in Angola, where it was steadily clearing the weapons, said the visit by Prince Harry, the Duke of Sussex, also helped the campaign.
'The duke's support comes at a crucial time when the Ottawa Treaty is challenged by more conflicts raging across the globe than ever before,' the HALO Trust head of policy, James Denselow, told this masthead.
The trust has removed 2 million landmines over 35 years and continues to work in countries such as Angola, Ukraine and Afghanistan. It destroyed 58,000 mines last year and cleared 7500 hectares.
MAG International, set up by a British army engineer who saw mines killing civilians in Afghanistan, also rejects the new moves to lay minefields.
'Any military utility of anti-personnel mines is outweighed by their immediate and long-term impact on civilians,' said Josephine Dresner, the organisation's director of policy.
Dresner rejected the idea that a minefield along the remote border between Finland and Russia might not pose the same threat, saying the danger remains even in sparsely populated areas.
And she said the example set by Poland and the Baltic States would make it harder to restrain other countries, for example, Angola, from burying mines in future.
'If Angola were to decide in future to use anti-personnel mines to address a national security threat, no actor who has justified Finland's actions could legitimately criticise Angola's,' she said.
Loading
The president of Finland, Alexander Stubb, has defended his decisions in light of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
'When Russia attacked, our opinion, rules changed,' he told this masthead in a feature published earlier this month.
At NATO headquarters in Brussels, the peak defence organisation is not taking sides. Norway, however, has criticised its neighbours and will not quit the treaty.
'If we start weakening our commitment, it makes it easier for warring factions around the world to use these weapons again because it reduces the stigma,' Norwegian Foreign Minister Espen Barth Eide told Reuters in April.
The land border between Norway and Russia is about 200 kilometres long, while the border between Finland and Russia stretches for more than 1300 kilometres. Finnish policy is shaped in part by the Winter War that began in November 1939 when Russia invaded Finland.
Diana's advocacy helped produce the Ottawa Treaty within a year of her visit to Angola, but it was controversial at the time. One British government minister said she was a 'loose cannon' and badly advised.
Asked about this in Angola, she played down her actions. 'I'm only trying to highlight a problem that's going on all around the world, that's all,' she said.
In fact, her words shaped a global debate on arms control. Now they echo decades later – even if some in Europe do not want to hear them.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Inside Russia's suicide drone factories manned by teenagers
Inside Russia's suicide drone factories manned by teenagers

Sydney Morning Herald

time2 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Inside Russia's suicide drone factories manned by teenagers

Teenagers are helping Russia build Shahed suicide drones as President Vladimir Putin ramps up production at a major factory in Tatarstan, about 800 kilometres east of Moscow. The Yelabuga production facility, the largest of its kind in the world, is spearheading efforts to stockpile the weapons to overwhelm Ukrainian air defences with mass aerial bombardments. The footage, recorded by Zvezda, the Russian defence ministry's TV channel, is the first detailed look inside the plant. Students and staff are shown on the production line constructing row after row of matte black Geran-2 drones, the Russian-built version of the Iranian-designed Shahed-136. Teenagers are reportedly invited to the plant after finishing ninth grade at 15 years of age, and most come from the nearby technical college. 'Everywhere you look, there's young people working here,' the voice-over says as the camera pans across what appear to be dozens of teenagers making drone components and working at computers on the bright factory floor. Shahed drones have become instrumental in Putin's plans to relentlessly pound Ukrainian cities and drain morale among the armed forces and terrorised civilians. The Kremlin said on Sunday that achieving its war goals remains Russia's priority ahead of signing a peace deal with Ukraine, despite US President Donald Trump giving Moscow 50 days to agree to a ceasefire or face severe sanctions.

Whitlam gave 18-year-olds the vote. Now it's time to lower it again
Whitlam gave 18-year-olds the vote. Now it's time to lower it again

Sydney Morning Herald

time2 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Whitlam gave 18-year-olds the vote. Now it's time to lower it again

In the midst of COVID and not long before the 2022 election, I tuned in half-heartedly to yet another Zoom seminar, something about sustainability in the global tech sector. It actually turned out to be riveting, but the thing I remember most was a throwaway line right at the end by a young speaker from western Sydney called Natasha Abhayawickrama. She was one of the brains behind the nationwide School Strike 4 Climate movement. Answering questions with great maturity from her family kitchen about her passion for climate action, she ended with a quiet aside: 'But of course I can't vote on any of this.' What? Here was a thoughtful, rational, educated leader, completely across the biggest challenge of our age, yet she could not participate in our election because she would only have been 17 on election day. Really? Let's check what Natasha could have done at 17. She could enlist in the army. She could get a job and pay taxes. She could drive a car. She could independently manage her own MyHealth records. She could be charged as an adult with a criminal offence. And, like the then 16-year-old Melbourne climate change activist, Anjali Sharma, she could launch a class action against the federal environment minister for failing to consider the impacts of climate change. Yet for some reason, Australia deemed Natasha incapable of stepping inside a voting booth, picking up the stumpy pencil, and voting for her future. Australia should follow England's lead and fix this. There are some, such as British academic and podcaster, Professor David Runciman, who argue the voting age could drop as low as six. Only a crazy brave government would float that one up. Yet surely by election day 2028, Australia should at least drop the voting age to 16 or 17. This is hardly radical. We'd simply be joining England and also Austria, Brazil, Scotland, Cuba, Malta, Ecuador, Germany, Greece, Wales and Indonesia, all of whom have lowered their voting ages across varying levels of government. A big question concerning lawmakers here in Australia is, would dropping the voting age skew the vote? The common fear is it would favour parties of the left. However, European researchers found voting patterns among 16 and 17-year-olds were unpredictable and poorly studied. But there were evident gender differences. Young women tended to vote progressive on issues such as climate change, gender equality and social justice. Young men were more split, showing greater support than young women for right-leaning, populist parties. In 1973, prime minister Gough Whitlam lowered the voting age from 21 to 18. Even the Liberal opposition leader at the time, Billy Snedden, admitted that compared to previous generations, young Australians were 'better informed, better able to judge, more confident in their judgements, more critical in their appraisals, and on more mature terms with society around them'. He was speaking then, of course, about the Baby Boomers. While their dominance might be fading, those Boomers swelled the ranks to become Australia's most feted and entitled generation. Just look at how many policy announcements over many decades were targeted squarely at them. Then try and find something, anything, that addresses in a long-term, concrete fundamental way, the generational inequality faced by young Australians. Rocketing rents and housing prices, precarious employment (not helped by AI), low wages, high HECS debt and, scariest of all, a failing planet they'll be forced to confront long after the rest of us have departed. Compared to Gough Whitlam's 1973, Australia feels like another world. Yet, Billy Snedden's words could apply just as equally to today's 16 and 17-year-olds. In their hand sits a tool that, with a swipe, allows them to find an answer to pretty much anything. At no other time in human history have they been more informed, educated and globally connected.

Inside Russia's suicide drone factories manned by teenagers
Inside Russia's suicide drone factories manned by teenagers

The Age

time2 hours ago

  • The Age

Inside Russia's suicide drone factories manned by teenagers

Teenagers are helping Russia build Shahed suicide drones as President Vladimir Putin ramps up production at a major factory in Tatarstan, about 800 kilometres east of Moscow. The Yelabuga production facility, the largest of its kind in the world, is spearheading efforts to stockpile the weapons to overwhelm Ukrainian air defences with mass aerial bombardments. The footage, recorded by Zvezda, the Russian defence ministry's TV channel, is the first detailed look inside the plant. Students and staff are shown on the production line constructing row after row of matte black Geran-2 drones, the Russian-built version of the Iranian-designed Shahed-136. Teenagers are reportedly invited to the plant after finishing ninth grade at 15 years of age, and most come from the nearby technical college. 'Everywhere you look, there's young people working here,' the voice-over says as the camera pans across what appear to be dozens of teenagers making drone components and working at computers on the bright factory floor. Shahed drones have become instrumental in Putin's plans to relentlessly pound Ukrainian cities and drain morale among the armed forces and terrorised civilians. The Kremlin said on Sunday that achieving its war goals remains Russia's priority ahead of signing a peace deal with Ukraine, despite US President Donald Trump giving Moscow 50 days to agree to a ceasefire or face severe sanctions.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store