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IRAQ WARS
Heavy rains unearth Iraqi mines in Kuwaiti desert
by Staff Writers
Kuwait City (AFP) Nov 21, 2018

Bulgaria sends 200,000 landmines back to Greece
Sofia (AFP) Nov 21, 2018 - The Bulgarian government said Wednesday it has finally shipped back to Greece nearly 200,000 landmines that have been waiting to be destroyed since a deadly explosion ripped through the plant where they were stored four years ago.

"Bulgaria completed the transportation to Greece of 190,570 landmines from the plant near Gorni Lom," the foreign ministry said in a statement.

Greece had contracted a private Bulgarian firm to destroy a total of 1.5 million landmines at the plant, but an explosion ripped through the factory on October 1, 2014, killing 15 people.

The privately-owned plant was then stripped of its licence to decommission the remaining landmines.

With worried local residents long pressing for the removal of the mines, Sofia and Athens have been negotiating their safe transfer back to Greece.

Bulgaria's arms industry, which flourished during communism, was largely privatised in the 1990s.

But many of the new owners had neither the necessary know-how nor the financial means to invest in safety and accidents, sometimes deadly, were frequent.

At the plant in Gorni Lom itself, six workers were also injured in explosions in 2007 and 2010.

Unprecedented heavy rains which recently lashed Kuwait unearthed dozens of land mines planted by Iraqi troops during their 1990-91 occupation, disrupting the emirate's popular desert camping season, officials said Wednesday.

Authorities have closed 18 desert sites and have so far removed at least 48 mines after receiving complaints from the campers, they said.

The civil defence committee has urged campers to delay their plans until after the defence ministry has searched the areas, said Fahad al-Shutaily, deputy director of Kuwait's Jahra and Farwaniya governorates.

"Floods have uncovered and carried away scores of mines, bombs and ammunition left by the Iraqi army in desert areas. We are waiting for the defence ministry to hand over the areas after clearing them," Shutaily told AFP.

The ministry of defence is currently searching at least 18 sites which are normally used for camping.

Iraqi troops, under former president Saddam Hussein, invaded and occupied Kuwait on August 2, 1990 before they were evicted seven months later by a US-led international coalition.

But before that, Kuwaiti authorities say Iraqis planted some two million mines mostly in the desert.

Through multi-billion dollar contracts, Kuwait removed some 1.65 million mines, leaving behind 350,000 others.

Since early November the desert state of Kuwait has received about 300 mm of rain -- almost three times its annual average rainfall -- which has caused widespread damage to residential zones.

The flooding of desert areas has come at the start of the camping season, when hundreds of thousands of Kuwaitis set up modern camps for around four months.

After waiting to enjoy the beautiful and usually uninhabited desert areas, some campers are refusing to heed the warnings.

"A majority of my relatives and neighbours are camping," Yousef Abdullah told AFP.

"No one is backing down because of fear from mines... We impatiently wait for the camping season," he added.

Shutaily however said that over the past two days, authorities have removed 36 camps and warned 60 others.


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Saudi King Salman welcomed Iraq's new President Barham Saleh Sunday on his first official visit to the kingdom, amid a warming of ties between the Arab neighbours after years of strain. The king hosted a lunch and "discussed regional developments" with Saleh, the official Saudi Press Agency said, after the Iraqi leader's arrival in Riyadh following a visit to Saudi Arabia's arch-rival Iran. Saleh, a 58-year-old moderate Kurd elected to the largely ceremonial role last month, was on an overnight ... read more

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