How war’s hidden weapons endanger culture and communities from Syria to Ukraine

Special How war’s hidden weapons endanger culture and communities from Syria to Ukraine
This aerial view shows the 2nd-century Roman amphitheater and the Great Colonnade (Decumanus Maximus) at the ancient ruins of Palmyra in central Syria on February 7, 2025. Palmyra is one of six Syrian sites listed on the UNESCO elite list of world heritage and all of them sustained some level of damage through out the 13-year civil war. (AFP)
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Updated 07 September 2025

How war’s hidden weapons endanger culture and communities from Syria to Ukraine

How war’s hidden weapons endanger culture and communities from Syria to Ukraine
  • Survival of ruins of Syria’s Palmyra and Afghanistan’s Herat threatened not only by time but by hidden landmines
  • Clearing explosives from ancient cities is essential if communities are to return and cultural treasures are to be preserved

LONDON: Ancient landmarks across the Middle East and Central Asia face not only the ravages of time but also landmines and explosives from years of war. From the colonnades of Palmyra in Syria to Afghanistan’s Herat Citadel, cultural treasures remain at risk and often out of reach.

The danger goes far beyond heritage. Despite being banned in 165 countries under the 1997 Ottawa Convention, landmines remain entrenched in conflict zones, claiming lives and causing life-altering injuries.

In 2023, they caused 2,426 deaths and 3,331 injuries worldwide, according to the Landmine and Cluster Munition Monitor. Civilians made up 84 percent of the victims, and more than one-third were children.




Ahmad Hajj Hmaidy, 36, who lost his legs as a result of a landmine explosion, poses with his only surviving daughter Nada, 9, who also bears shrapnel wounds across her body as a result, outside their destroyed family home in the Syrian city of Raqa on February 26, 2021. (AFP)




A victim of landmines waits for a treatment at the ICRC physical rehabilitation center in Kabul on June 28, 2021. (AFP file photo)

The toll — the highest for the ninth year in a row — reflects both an increase in armed conflicts and the growing use of improvised mines.

The use of landmines “on such an extensive scale” presents immediate dangers and long-term consequences, as “areas remain contaminated for extended periods, causing casualties long after the violence has ceased,” according to Anne Hery, advocacy director at Humanity and Inclusion.

Yemen shows the scale of the challenge. The Masam project, which Arab News explored in a Deep Dive in 2023, has removed 512,323 mines — including 4,735 explosive devices in August — from various regions since it began in 2018.




Demining specialists of KSrelief's Masam Project are seen at work in Yemen's minefields in this combination image. (SPA photos)

The demining initiative, run by ’s King Salman Humanitarian Aid and Relief Center, has helped reduce the threat posed by landmines to civilians, including children, women and the elderly.

Although fighting in Yemen has subsided, the legacy remains deadly — in 2023 alone, 499 people were killed or injured by mines.

Yemen, along with Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq, Myanmar, Ukraine and parts of Africa, remains among the hardest-hit regions.




Infographic from the Landmine Monitor 2024 report

The danger is not limited to civilians, however. Landmines and unexploded ordnance also threaten a key part of the identity of nations: cultural heritage.

“There’s always going to be war, and it’s hard to see a conflict where there’s not going to be some residual risk of explosive contamination to civilians, and that’s where we come into it,” Damien O’Brien, operations manager for The HALO Trust’s Middle East programs, told Arab News.




Infographic from the Landmine Monitor 2024 report

Founded in Kabul in 1988 in response to the crisis left by the Soviet withdrawal, HALO now operates in 30 countries with a staff of more than 9,000.

The Middle East remains a priority, where clearing mines in urban and rural areas, including heritage sites, is essential to giving communities, and their culture, a chance to recover.

“Any site, regardless of what it is, needs to be surveyed so that we understand what the conflict history was, what the evidence is of any remaining unexploded items, and then also what is the intended use of that site,” O’Brien said.

FASTFACTS:

• Historic areas in Syria’s Hama, Homs, Aleppo and Damascus suburbs are heavily mined or contaminated with unexploded ordnance after over 14 years of conflict.

• Afghanistan is one of the world’s most heavily mined countries, with millions of explosives posing risks to civilians and heritage sites.

• The HALO Trust and other groups are clearing mines in Syria, Yemen, Afghanistan, Sudan and beyond.

Where people have remained active, he added, many “hazardous items have probably been found and removed.”

The impact goes beyond safety. “What we do reduces the number of casualties because we’re removing items, but it is also designed to help restore livelihoods,” O’Brien said. “And of course, tourism is extremely important in a place like Syria or Afghanistan.”

Years of war have devastated economies across Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria. O’Brien emphasized that HALO’s work seeks to balance humanitarian needs with development.




HALO Trust has cleared areas around monasteries in the West Bank of landmines left over from 1967. (AFP file photo)




Heba Gadaa, who works in clearing mines after the civil war, at work in the Aleppo countryside, Syria, on June 1, 2025. (REUTERS)

“You might say that getting people back to their homes and resettled is a more urgent priority in terms of human safety and in terms of the economy than rehabilitating heritage sites,” he said. “That’s a discussion.”

Ultimately, he added, the decision is one for “the local government to make — we would work in line with their reconstruction strategy.”

HALO operates across the region during and after conflict, often in partnership with local and international authorities.

In Afghanistan, O’Brien noted, a robust mine action system has endured through political upheaval, enabling HALO to clear about 30,000 tons of ammunition at sites including Kabul’s Bala Hissar fort, Ghazni Bala Hissar and the Herat Citadel. At the latter, HALO partnered with the Aga Khan Trust for Culture, which carried out conservation work.




This picture taken on November 9, 2021 shows a teacher from the HALO Trust educating children about mine risks in Nad-e-Ali village in Helmand province. (AFP File)

The organization also assisted the Turquoise Mountain Foundation at Shashpul Caravanserai near Bamiyan, along the Silk Road, and cleared ordnance from the Musallah Minarets complex in Herat.

Removing mines from historic sites is especially difficult. At the Musallah Minarets — a 13th-century complex of mausoleums, madrassas and mosques once home to 20 towers, now reduced to five and a half — clearance required careful manual excavation.

Carried out between 2017 and 2018, O’Brien said the intervention was prompted by a child’s accident with an anti-personnel mine near the site.

“There was a lot of important archeological excavation work that needed to be done,” he said. “And suddenly local museum officials were aware that there was a risk of explosive ordnance.

“It was quite a delicate operation. Because of the proximity to these monuments, we were not able to use machines, (such as) mechanical excavators with armor.

“So, we had to dig manually, sometimes as deep as a meter.”




This picture taken on November 10, 2021 shows a deminer from the HALO Trust scanning the ground for mines with a hand-metal detector in Nad-e-Ali village in Helmand province. (AFP)

During the work, complicated by ongoing archaeological digs, HALO teams discovered “sacks” full of blue mosaic fragments that had fallen from the minarets. The pieces were carefully sorted and catalogued at the local museum.

O’Brien was also among the first to return to Palmyra in central Syria after the fall of Bashar Assad’s regime on Dec. 8. The ancient site, dating to the Neolithic period, held some of the best-preserved Roman ruins before Daesh militants arrived.

However, Daesh caused extensive destruction and violence in Palmyra between 2015 and 2017. The terrorist group destroyed iconic historic monuments, including the Temple of Bel, Temple of Baalshamin, the Arch of Triumph, and parts of the Roman theater using explosives and sledgehammers.

In 2015, Daesh executed the 82-year-old head of antiquities, archaeologist Khaled Al-Asaad, publicly beheading him for refusing to reveal the locations of hidden artifacts.

“We had this request to go out to the eastern border, and it was on the way, and couldn’t really miss the opportunity,” O’Brien said. “I went with a Syrian colleague who had never visited Palmyra even before the war.”




An image made available by propaganda Islamist media outlet Welayat Halab on July 2, 2015 shows a Daesh group fighter destroying ancient artifacts smuggled from the Syrian city of Palmyra as other watch on in the town of Manbij, northeast of Syria's embattled northern town of Aleppo. (AFP/File)

The visit provided a preliminary assessment of the extensive work needed. O’Brien expressed hope that HALO would soon be involved in clearing the site. For now, the group is focused on training Syrians and Afghans, many formerly engaged in risk education, to take on demining and site restoration.

“When we gave them the opportunity to train to dispose of these items, both men and women, seize the opportunity,” he said. “I think that to be taking on such an important role in the reconstruction of their country is something that they feel tremendously proud of.”

Reflecting on the value of restoring heritage, O’Brien said he feels “privileged” to have contributed.




Labourers work at the site of the remains of the Triumphal Arch of Septimius Severus built during the reign of the 3rd-century Roman emperor, and destroyed by Islamic State (IS) group militants in 2015, in the ruins of Syria's Roman-era ancient city of Palmyra on May 9, 2022.

“My academic background is in ancient languages. I studied those because I thought that was the best way for me to try to understand the world (and) to understand where cultures come from,” he said. “Whatever is happening at the moment, or whatever happened in recent history, there was a time before, and there’ll be a time afterward.

“A very unpleasant chapter in Syria’s history has just ended. Anything historical that predates that is a common heritage. It’s something which will bring people together at some point.”

Ultimately, O’Brien said, “when people have been through such an appallingly traumatic experience where so many things have been broken, that process of reconnection, however done, is extremely valuable.”


French justice minister visits jailed former president Sarkozy

French justice minister visits jailed former president Sarkozy
Updated 3 sec ago

French justice minister visits jailed former president Sarkozy

French justice minister visits jailed former president Sarkozy
Gerald Darmanin met Sarkozy on Wednesday evening at La Sante prison
Darmanin said he intended to visit Sarkozy to ensure his security conditions were adequate for his “exceptional status“

PARIS: France’s former president Nicolas Sarkozy has received a prison visit from the justice minister, a source close to the case said on Thursday, despite a prosecutor warning that it could undermine judicial independence.
Gerald Darmanin met Sarkozy on Wednesday evening at La Sante prison in the presence of the jail’s director, and discussed the former head of state’s security arrangements, the source told AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Before he was locked up, Darmanin said he intended to visit Sarkozy to ensure his security conditions were adequate for his “exceptional status.”
Top prosecutor Remy Heitz at the time warned that such a visit risked “undermining the independence of magistrates.”
Fifty-seven percent of French people also disapproved of the visit, according to a survey of 1,025 people published last week by Taluna Harris.
The right-wing leader who led France from 2007 to 2012 was found guilty last month of trying to get election campaign funding from Muammar Qaddafi’s Libya.
The 70-year-old was handed a five-year prison term for criminal conspiracy.
Sarkozy’s legal team has requested his release pending his appeal trial, but said he is expected to remain in jail for at least “three weeks to a month.”
Two security officers are stationed in a neighboring cell to ensure his protection, Interior Minister Laurent Nunez said.
Sarkozy is the first former head of a European Union state to be jailed, and the first French leader to be incarcerated since Philippe Petain, the Nazi collaborationist head of state who was jailed after World War II.
He has faced a flurry of legal woes since losing his re-election bid in 2012, having already been convicted in two other cases.
Sarkozy still enjoys some popularity on the French right. Days before starting his prison sentence, he visited French President Emmanuel Macron at the Elysee Palace.

Govt U-turn as Gaza students with British scholarships allowed to bring families

Govt U-turn as Gaza students with British scholarships allowed to bring families
Updated 11 min 42 sec ago

Govt U-turn as Gaza students with British scholarships allowed to bring families

Govt U-turn as Gaza students with British scholarships allowed to bring families
  • Move follows extensive lobbying campaign by MPs, academics, human rights groups
  • Refugee Council: ‘No one should be forced to choose between their education and their family’

LONDON: Palestinian students in Gaza who are traveling to the UK to take up scholarships will be allowed to bring their families after a government move to consider exemptions, The Guardian reported on Thursday.

Existing student visa policies meant that the students were previously unable to take up their scholarships because their families and children were prevented from coming with them to Britain.

But after an extensive lobbying campaign by MPs, academics and human rights groups, the government changed the rules and the students can now bring their family members.

“Students coming from Gaza to the UK have suffered an appalling ordeal after two years of conflict. They have endured unimaginable hardship but can now begin to rebuild their lives through studying in our world class universities,” a government spokesperson said.

“That is why we are supporting the evacuation of dependents of students on scholarships who are eligible to study here under the immigration rules on a case-by-case basis.”

Since British evacuations for Palestinian students began, about 75 have arrived in the country, all of whom have full university scholarships.

A cross-party group of more than 100 MPs wrote to the government earlier in October demanding the latest exemption and highlighting the plight of Palestinian students.

The Refugee Council’s CEO Enver Solomon said: “It is excessively harsh to tell students fleeing the appalling devastation in Gaza that while they can study safely here, they must leave their loved ones behind. No one should be forced to choose between their education and their family.”


Polish jets intercepted Russian aircraft over Baltic Sea, minister says

Polish jets intercepted Russian aircraft over Baltic Sea, minister says
Updated 30 October 2025

Polish jets intercepted Russian aircraft over Baltic Sea, minister says

Polish jets intercepted Russian aircraft over Baltic Sea, minister says
  • “Today MiG-29s intercepted a Russian reconnaissance plane over the Baltic Sea,” Kosiniak-Kamysz said
  • The Polish Army Operational Command later described the incident on social media platform X

WARSAW: Polish MiG-29 fighter aircraft intercepted a Russian reconnaissance plane over the Baltic Sea on Thursday in the second such incident this week, Polish Defense Minister Wladyslaw Kosiniak-Kamysz said.
Poland’s army said on Wednesday that Polish jets had intercepted a Russian aircraft flying a reconnaissance mission in international airspace over the Baltic Sea on Tuesday.
“Today MiG-29s intercepted a Russian reconnaissance plane over the Baltic Sea,” Kosiniak-Kamysz said, describing it as just like the incident on Tuesday.
The Polish Army Operational Command later described the incident on social media platform X.
“On October 30, 2025, before 9.00 a.m., the on-duty pair of MiG-29 fighters of the (Polish) Air Force carried out another interception this week of a Russian Federation reconnaissance aircraft Il-20 conducting a flight over the Baltic Sea,” it said.
“The aircraft, flying in international airspace without a filed flight plan and with its transponder turned off, was intercepted, identified, and escorted out of the area of responsibility. There was no violation of Polish airspace.”
Countries on NATO’s eastern flank have been on high alert for potential airspace incursions since September when three Russian military jets violated Estonia’s airspace for 12 minutes, days after more than 20 Russian drones had entered Polish airspace.


Indonesia launches probe after 600 pupils fall ill in new school meal poisoning outbreak

Indonesia launches probe after 600 pupils fall ill in new school meal poisoning outbreak
Updated 30 October 2025

Indonesia launches probe after 600 pupils fall ill in new school meal poisoning outbreak

Indonesia launches probe after 600 pupils fall ill in new school meal poisoning outbreak
  • Over 15,000 children have fallen ill after eating government-sponsored meals
  • Nationwide nutrition program was President Prabowo Subianto’s key election campaign promise

JAKARTA: Indonesian authorities said on Thursday they were investigating a new outbreak of food poisoning among schoolchildren, linked to the nationwide free lunch program, which has been blamed for thousands of cases in the past few months.

Launched in January, the Free Nutritious Meals Program was a major election campaign promise from President Prabowo Subianto, who took office last October. With a budget of around $10 billion for this year, the initiative is expected to reach some 70 million students and pregnant mothers across Indonesia by year end. 

But food poisoning cases linked to the project have been reported increasingly since it began, with hundreds of students falling ill this week in Yogyakarta’s Gunungkidul regency. The news has prompted the National Nutrition Agency, which runs the initiative, to launch an investigation. 

“We’ve received the reports. They’re now being investigated and analyzed, and we have temporarily stopped serving the (free meals),” the agency’s chief, Dadan Hindayana, told Arab News. 

At least 662 students from two separate schools suffered food poisoning in Gunungkidul, according to data from regional head Endah Subekti Kuntariningsih. 

“From a student population of 1,154 at one of the local vocational high schools, 476 suffered from food poisoning. There were also 10 teachers and educators who sampled the meals, and they also got food poisoning,” she said on her Instagram account. 

As of Oct. 29, more than 15,000 children nationwide have suffered from food poisoning related to the campaign since its January launch, data compiled by NGO Network for Education Watch showed. 

Authorities have said many of the cases were caused by improper food storage and late delivery of cooked meals. 

The free meals program, which has so far reached nearly 40 million Indonesians, is expected to receive double its current budget next year. 

But there have been at least 5,735 food poisoning cases in October alone, said Ubaid Matraji, the network’s national coordinator. 

“The government failed to stop the chain of poisoning. Ten months into the program, there has been no significant change. The pattern of recurring cases and increasing numbers of victims indicates systemic negligence, not random incidents,” he told Arab News. 

“There have been evaluations but no action. The National Nutrition Agency appears more concerned with appeasing public opinion rather than improving the food monitoring system. Each time a case occurs, the government simply forms an evaluation team, with no tangible results.”


Ukraine bolsters Pokrovsk defenses as Russia escalates assaults

Ukraine bolsters Pokrovsk defenses as Russia escalates assaults
Updated 30 October 2025

Ukraine bolsters Pokrovsk defenses as Russia escalates assaults

Ukraine bolsters Pokrovsk defenses as Russia escalates assaults
  • Syrskyi said he visited the area to meet his troops as Russia continued to increase its assaults
  • Russia has been inching toward Pokrovsk in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region for more than a year

KYIV: Ukraine is intensifying its efforts to defend the strategic hub of Pokrovsk, aiming to secure key supply and evacuation routes and root out Russian infantry infiltrating the city, the top army commander said on Thursday.
Oleksandr Syrskyi said he visited the area to meet his troops as Russia — almost four years into its invasion of Ukraine — continued to increase its assaults.
He dismissed Moscow’s assertion that its forces had trapped the Ukrainian troops inside the eastern stronghold. “The enemy infantry, avoiding combat, is gathering in urban areas and changing locations, so the primary task is to locate and destroy them,” Syrskyi said on the Telegram app.
Russia has been inching toward Pokrovsk in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region for more than a year, slowly but steadily taking control of the small villages to its south.
On Sunday, Ukraine’s general staff said that at least 200 Russian military personnel entered the city in separate groups as small-arms firefights raged in the former logistics hub. Ukraine was taking steps to “strengthen the stability of defenses” in the city and aimed at bolstering its logistics by improving defense of supply and evacuation routes, Syrskyi said.
“The main priority is to save the lives of our soldiers,” he said. Logistics for the city were complicated due to Russia’s FPV drones “but possible,” Ukraine’s 7th Rapid Response Corps operating in the area said in a statement on Facebook. The brigade added that Russia mostly used infantry to attack Pokrovsk, but also deployed armed vehicles to advance on Myrnohrad, around 6 km (4 miles) to the northeast.