UN says 13,500 square km of Ukrainian waterways need de-mining

UN says 13,500 square km of Ukrainian waterways need de-mining
The UN said Wednesday that around 13,500 square kilometres (5,000 square miles) of Ukraine's lakes, rivers and coastlines are potentially contaminated with mines and explosives after the nearly four-year Russian invasion. (X/@DacianDracoMW3)
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UN says 13,500 square km of Ukrainian waterways need de-mining

UN says 13,500 square km of Ukrainian waterways need de-mining
  • “An estimated 13,500 square kilometers of Ukraine’s aquatic areas are potentially contaminated with explosive remnants of war,” UNDP in Ukraine said
  • Only 1.4 percent of the contaminated waters has been de-mined

KYIV: The United Nations said Wednesday that around 13,500 square kilometers (5,000 square miles) of Ukraine’s lakes, rivers and coastlines are potentially contaminated with mines and explosives after the nearly four-year Russian invasion.
Even as the war is mostly fought on the ground, both sides have mined large areas near coastlines, and some undetonated projectiles from Russia’s daily aerial barrages end up in bodies of water.
“An estimated 13,500 square kilometers of Ukraine’s aquatic areas — including the Dnipro River, lakes, and Black Sea coastlines — are potentially contaminated with explosive remnants of war,” the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) in Ukraine said in a statement.
Only 1.4 percent of the contaminated waters — roughly equivalent to the size of Puerto Rico — has been de-mined, with the removal of around 2,800 explosive devices.
Ukraine uses underwater robots in its de-mining efforts, and the UN said it had trained 15 specialist instructors as part of its support efforts.
In August, a mine explosion killed three beachgoers in the Black Sea coastal city of Odesa after they set off the device while swimming in a prohibited area.
Ukraine is the most mine-contaminated country in the world after more than a decade of war — since 2014 with Moscow-backed separatists in the east, and since 2022 when Russia launched its full-scale invasion.
Including land mines and other unexploded ordnance, the Ukrainian government estimates that 23 percent of its total territory — around 137,000 square kilometers, an area larger than Greece — is contaminated.


Three migrants dead as boat capsizes off Greek island of Gavdos

Updated 12 sec ago

Three migrants dead as boat capsizes off Greek island of Gavdos

Three migrants dead as boat capsizes off Greek island of Gavdos
“Their movement to the left side resulted in water inflow and its overturning,” the coast guard said
Survivors said more people were in the boat when it capsized about 28 km off Gavdos

ATHENS: Three migrants drowned when their wooden boat overturned off Greece’s southernmost island of Gavdos on Tuesday and the coast guard is still searching for people reported missing.
The people on board moved rapidly to one side of the boat as a vessel from the European Union border agency Frontex approached the boat, the coast guard said, causing it to capsize.
“Their movement to the left side resulted in water inflow and its overturning. Immediately the Frontex vessel’s crew launched life cushions ... and a lifeboat,” the coast guard said in a statement.
Fifty-five people have been rescued, including one who is injured and in hospital on the nearby island of Crete.
Survivors said more people were in the boat when it capsized about 15 nautical miles (28 km) off Gavdos, a coast guard officer said. Four vessels and a Frontex aircraft were looking for survivors.
Greece was on the front line of a 2015-16 migration crisis when more than a million people from the Middle East and Africa crossed into Europe.
Numbers have fallen since but Crete and Gavdos, the two Aegean islands nearest the African coast, have seen a steep rise in migrant boats, mainly from Libya, reaching their shores over the past year. Deadly accidents remain common.
The European Commission said on Tuesday that Greece, Cyprus, Spain and Italy will be eligible for help in dealing with migratory pressures under a new EU mechanism when the bloc’s pact on migration and asylum comes into force in the middle of next year.