Danmark støtter UNDP's minerydningsarbejde i Ukraine med 12 millioner

25. August 2022
An employee of the State Emergency Service of Ukraine sweeps an area of ground for unexploded ordnance and landmines. Photo credit – Oleksandr Simonenko / UNDP Ukraine.

An employee of the State Emergency Service of Ukraine sweeps an area of ground for unexploded ordnance and landmines

Photo credit – Oleksandr Simonenko / UNDP Ukraine.

Den danske regering har bidraget 12 millioner kroner til FN's Udviklingsprogram (UNDP) for at styrke Ukraines minerydningsarbejde og fjernelse af ueksploderet ammunition. Projektet vil bidrage til, at nationale institutioner er i stand til håndtere de komplekse udfordringer, det indebære at gøre jorden sikker igen for menneskelig beboelse og landbrug.

Projektet gennemføres i samarbejde med Ukraines nationale minerydningsmyndighed og indenrigsministeriet i samarbejde med FN's søsterorganisationer og minerydningspartnere.

Manal Fouani, UNDP's repræsentant i Ukraine, understreger, at Danmarks rettidige investering i minerydningssektoren i Ukraine vil blive brugt til at designe og implementere en effektiv nationalt-ledet minerydningindsats i Ukraine, baseret på internationale erfaringer og en grundig vurdering af den eksplosive ammunitionsforurening og dens indvirkning på lokalbefolkningen.

Ole Egberg Mikkelsen, Danmarks ambassadør i Ukraine, udtaler, at det er af afgørende betydning at styrke Ukraines evne til at reagere på den krise, der er under opsejling. "Ukraines fremtidige evne til at dyrke fødevarer vil i vidt omfang afhænge af landets evne til at gøre landområder sikre igen, så snart forholdene tillader det," sagde han. "Ellers kan det, der engang var verdens brødkurv, blive nettoimportør, hvis markerne bliver for farlige at dyrke."

Projektet, som er en del af UNDP's større minerydningsprogram i Ukraine, vil også styrke kapaciteten hos minerydningsmyndigheder over hele landet og kommunikationsindsatsen så offentligheden og lokale myndigheder er velinformerede om risici og sikkerhedsforanstaltninger, når de nærmer sig forurenede arealer.

--------

English:

The Government of Denmark announced a contribution of US$1.6 million to the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) to strengthen Ukraine’s coordination of demining and the removal of unexploded ordnance. The project will help ensure existing national institutions are able to effectively respond to, lead and manage the complex challenges of making the lands safe again for human habitation and agriculture.

The project is being implemented jointly with the Government of Ukraine’s National Mine Action Authority and the Ministry of Internal Affairs, in collaboration with UN sister agencies and mine action partners.

Manal Fouani, UNDP interim Resident Representative in Ukraine, said the timely investment of Denmark in the Mine Action sector in Ukraine will be used to design and implement an effective a nationally led mine action response for Ukraine based on international best practices, and to thoroughly assess the nature and extent of the explosive ordnance contamination and its impacts on the local populations.

“The current situation is seriously challenging decades of human and economic development in Ukraine across an increasing area of the national territory,” said Fouani. “Any economic activity to return these lands to productive use will have to take this into account.”

Although the Government has been involved with clearing landmines across eastern Ukraine (Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts) since 2015, it now has a much larger area to contend with.

Ole Egberg Mikkelsen, Ambassador of Denmark to Ukraine, said strengthening Ukraine’s ability to respond to the unfolding crisis is of paramount concern. “Ukraine’s future ability to grow food will for the most part depend on its ability to return its lands to productive use as soon as conditions allow,” he said. “Otherwise what was once the breadbasket of the world could become a net importer if its fields become too dangerous to cultivate.”

The project, which is part of UNDP’s larger mine action programme in Ukraine, will also strengthen the capacities of mine action authorities across the country, and will target outreach and communication to ensure the general public and local authorities are well informed of risks and safety measures when approaching contaminated lands.

------

Yderligere oplysninger:
I Danmark: Mette Fjalland, UNDP’s nordiske kontor, mette.fjalland@undp.org, +45 5183-6228
I Ukraine: Yuliia Samus, kommunikationsrådgiver, UNDP Ukraine, Yuliia.Samus@undp.org