Land mine explodes on Chile border, injuring two Peruvians

Two Peruvians were injured on Monday when an anti-personnel land mine detonated in Chile’s border region with Peru.

The two men were illegally walking across the border from Chile into Peru through an unauthorized crossing when the mine exploded, injuring both men. Correo reports that one man requires having his right leg amputated.

In the 1970s Chile President Augusto Pinochet placed tens of thousands of anti-personnel mines along the border with Peru during a tense time between his right-wing dictatorship and the left-wing dictatorship of Peru’s President Juan Velasco. Pinochet also planted mines near Bolivia and Argentina during border disputes with those countries.

In February a 27-year-old Peruvian man was killed by a land mine as he crossed illegally from Peru into Chile.

In 2012 the border crossing between Peru’s southern city of Tacna and Chile’s northern city of Arica was closed after heavy rains washed some of those mines on to the highway. More than 300 mines also washed on to Peruvian territory.

In 2012 a Chilean soldier was injured while performing demining work.

Chile planted over 180,000 mines along its borders during the 1970s and 1980s. In 2002 Chile signed the Ottawa Treaty, which banned the use of anti-personnel mines in 1997. Chile’s signing on to the agreement requires the country to remove all anti-personnel mines from its territory by 2020.

“Anti-personnel mines cannot distinguish between civilians and soldiers,” reads the Red Cross profile on mines aimed to injure or kill humans as opposed to debilitate tanks or vehicles. “They continue to kill and maim civilians long after the fighting has ceased. Vast areas of valuable land are put out of use, destroying livelihoods. Communities can be affected for decades after the end of an armed conflict.”

Chile’s defense ministry announced in May that it had removed 31,000 mines this year. The army has removed a total of 130,000 mines since 2002. El Comercio reports that 20,000 of the remaining 50,000 mines are placed near the border with Peru.

Sources

Peruano pierde la pierna tras explotarle una mina en la frontera con Chile (Correo)

Dos peruanos heridos por explosión de mina en Chile (El Comercio)

Explosión de mina antipersonal hirió militar chileno en frontera con Perú (El Comercio)

Peruano muere tras pisar una mina antipersonas en frontera Perú-Chile (Andina)

La olvidada frontera minada entre Chile y Perú (BBC)

Chile-Peru border closed over landmine hazard (BBC)

Chile removes more than 31,000 land mines along border with Peru (Fox News)

Anti-personnel mines (International Committee of the Red Cross)

Colin Post:

View Comments (2)

  • I have a solution: Since any and every Peruvian needs nothing but an valid ID to cross in or out of Chile, use the designated Point of Entry. Anyone walking away from it is hiding something.