The Prague Post - Landmines destroy limbs and lives on Bangladesh-Myanmar border

EUR -
AED 4.256495
AFN 73.018569
ALL 94.714221
AMD 426.658331
ANG 2.075111
AOA 1058.318517
ARS 1656.809504
AUD 1.63909
AWG 2.089131
AZN 1.962882
BAM 1.952555
BBD 2.33462
BDT 142.285365
BGN 1.959762
BHD 0.437078
BIF 3466.625012
BMD 1.159019
BND 1.486156
BOB 8.009792
BRL 5.883985
BSD 1.159173
BTN 109.727528
BWP 15.55242
BYN 3.209122
BYR 22716.767049
BZD 2.331266
CAD 1.621792
CDF 2690.082667
CHF 0.920835
CLF 0.026223
CLP 1032.070989
CNY 7.835604
CNH 7.833471
COP 4046.655934
CRC 527.33268
CUC 1.159019
CUP 30.713996
CVE 110.081571
CZK 24.142251
DJF 205.980837
DKK 7.473758
DOP 68.127948
DZD 154.010248
EGP 58.360997
ERN 17.385281
ETB 186.877431
FJD 2.56543
FKP 0.8648
GBP 0.864164
GEL 3.077163
GGP 0.8648
GHS 12.866782
GIP 0.8648
GMD 84.608518
GNF 10154.255185
GTQ 8.836428
GYD 242.509046
HKD 9.080459
HNL 30.996885
HRK 7.534665
HTG 151.500822
HUF 350.405557
IDR 20526.221655
ILS 3.364162
IMP 0.8648
INR 109.80781
IQD 1518.495933
IRR 1594667.791145
ISK 144.391247
JEP 0.8648
JMD 183.734636
JOD 0.821761
JPY 185.748402
KES 149.999992
KGS 101.355907
KHR 4658.338291
KMF 493.742164
KPW 1043.11726
KRW 1757.924267
KWD 0.357174
KYD 0.966011
KZT 567.404325
LAK 25523.909946
LBP 103805.02094
LKR 385.416095
LRD 210.963023
LSL 18.749462
LTL 3.422281
LVL 0.701079
LYD 7.370877
MAD 10.715998
MDL 20.162838
MGA 4816.07885
MKD 61.651688
MMK 2432.8848
MNT 4145.449554
MOP 9.353815
MRU 46.273892
MUR 54.613165
MVR 17.918635
MWK 2009.994102
MXN 19.953493
MYR 4.695141
MZN 74.071883
NAD 18.749381
NGN 1574.747264
NIO 42.659652
NOK 11.049911
NPR 175.564244
NZD 1.989305
OMR 0.445648
PAB 1.159089
PEN 3.942099
PGK 5.076519
PHP 70.027454
PKR 322.494336
PLN 4.250412
PYG 7097.143412
QAR 4.22585
RON 5.234362
RSD 117.342549
RUB 83.97055
RWF 1702.799355
SAR 4.348747
SBD 9.32497
SCR 15.202557
SDG 695.993719
SEK 10.899012
SGD 1.486923
SHP 0.865325
SLE 28.569498
SLL 24304.047443
SOS 662.410513
SRD 43.484096
STD 23989.347599
STN 24.459349
SVC 10.142275
SYP 128.108771
SZL 18.746168
THB 37.737219
TJS 10.745181
TMT 4.068156
TND 3.392333
TOP 2.790639
TRY 53.652484
TTD 7.868059
TWD 36.547326
TZS 3048.216963
UAH 51.967328
UGX 4305.917927
USD 1.159019
UYU 47.012677
UZS 13885.861987
VES 674.500035
VND 30470.602332
VUV 138.503943
WST 3.17976
XAF 654.879899
XAG 0.016579
XAU 0.000269
XCD 3.132306
XCG 2.089055
XDR 0.815226
XOF 654.879899
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.540535
ZAR 18.790709
ZMK 10432.558077
ZMW 20.376398
ZWL 373.203557
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    60.72

    0%

  • CMSC

    0.0100

    22.34

    +0.04%

  • NGG

    -0.2700

    81.57

    -0.33%

  • CMSD

    0.0600

    22.32

    +0.27%

  • RIO

    0.5400

    105.89

    +0.51%

  • BCE

    -0.2369

    24.04

    -0.99%

  • BTI

    -1.2600

    61.06

    -2.06%

  • GSK

    -0.8100

    52.23

    -1.55%

  • RELX

    -0.9000

    32.84

    -2.74%

  • AZN

    -1.4800

    177.27

    -0.83%

  • BP

    -1.1900

    41.59

    -2.86%

  • RYCEF

    0.4600

    17.5

    +2.63%

  • VOD

    -0.5300

    15

    -3.53%

  • BCC

    0.4500

    71.59

    +0.63%

  • JRI

    0.1135

    12.78

    +0.89%

Landmines destroy limbs and lives on Bangladesh-Myanmar border
Landmines destroy limbs and lives on Bangladesh-Myanmar border / Photo: Munir UZ ZAMAN - AFP

Landmines destroy limbs and lives on Bangladesh-Myanmar border

In the dense hill forests along Bangladesh's border with war-torn Myanmar, villagers are losing limbs to landmines, casualties of a conflict not of their making.

Text size:

Ali Hossain, 40, was collecting firewood in early 2025 when a blast shattered his life.

"I went into the jungle with fellow villagers. Suddenly, there was an explosion, and my leg was blown off," he told AFP. "I screamed at the top of my voice."

Neighbours rushed to stem the spurting blood.

"They picked me up, gathered my severed leg and took me to hospital", he said.

In Ashartoli, a small settlement in Bandarban district -- the village name translates as "haven of hope" -- the weapons of a foreign war have turned forests, farms and footpaths deadly.

Bangladesh's 271-kilometre (168-mile) eastern border with Myanmar cuts through forests, much of it unmarked, as well as rivers.

It is crossed daily by villagers, as their families have done for generations, for collecting firewood or smalltime trading.

Surgeons chopped Hossain's leg off above the knee.

"My wife had to carry me on her back," he said, gesturing towards the steep hillside around his home, as he recalled the months after the blast.

A year later, Hossain walks with an artificial leg and a crutch, but he cannot return to his job on a rubber plantation.

Needing 300 taka ($2.50) a day for medicine, his two young sons now take on his former dangerous task, collecting firewood after school.

- 'My whole life' -

Similar stories echo across the border region.

"My father and forefathers collected wood from the jungle," said Mohammad Abu Taleb, 47. "I learned no other trade."

He crossed unwittingly into Myanmar.

"I stepped on a pile of dry leaves, and there was an explosion," he said, leaning on a crutch. "It took away my whole life."

His 10-year-old son has since dropped out of school to help support the family.

Taleb said trips to repair his artificial leg and attend medical checkups cost around US$80 -- an impossible burden for a family struggling to survive.

Nurul Amin, 23, lost his leg while attempting to bring a cow across the border, a memory blurred by pain.

"They carried me on their shoulders to the hospital," he recalls, saying he was more worried that his monthly income had now fallen to around $25-$30.

"That's not enough for a family," he said. "I have no other way to survive."

- 'Cruelty' -

Myanmar is the world's most dangerous country for landmine casualties, according to the International Campaign to Ban Landmines, which has detailed the "massive" and growing use of the weapons, banned by many countries.

It recorded more than 2,000 casualties in Myanmar in 2024, the latest full statistics available -- double the total reported the year before.

"The use of mines appeared to significantly increase in 2024–2025," it said in its Landmine Monitor report, highlighting "an increase in the number of mine victims, particularly near the border" with Bangladesh.

Bangladesh accuses Myanmar's military and rival armed forces of planting the mines.

Guerrilla Arakan Army fighters -- one of the many factions challenging the junta's rule -- control swathes of jungle across the border with Myanmar.

More than a million Rohingya refugees who fled Myanmar also live in Bangladesh's border regions -- caught between the warring military and separatist groups.

Bangladesh police say that at least 28 people were injured by landmines in 2025.

In November, a Bangladesh border guard was killed when a landmine tore off both his legs.

"This cruelty cannot be legitimised," said Lieutenant Colonel Kafil Uddin Kayes, a local Border Guard Bangladesh commander.

Bangladesh's border force has put up warning signs and red flags, and conducts regular mine-sweeping operations.

But villagers say warnings offer little protection when survival depends on entering forests seeded with explosives, leaving communities in Bangladesh to pay the price of war.

"The population is increasing, and people are moving closer to the border, as we have farmlands there," said 42-year-old farmer Dudu Mia.

"Planting landmines cannot be the solution. It can't go on like this."

C.Zeman--TPP