Preamble
Preamble
Determined to put an end to the
suffering and
casualties caused by
anti-personnel
mines, that
kill or
maim hundreds of
people every
week, mostly
innocent
and
defenceless civilians and especially
children,
obstruct economic
development
and
reconstruction, inhibit the
repatriation of
refugees and internally
displaced
persons,
and have other severe
consequences for
years after emplacement,
Believing it necessary to do their utmost to
contribute in an
efficient
and
coordinated
manner to face the
challenge of removing
anti-personnel mines placed
throughout
the
world, and to
assure their
destruction,
Welcoming the
adoption of the
Protocol on
Prohibitions or
Restrictions
on the Use of
Mines,
Booby-Traps and Other
Devices, as amended on 3 May 1996, annexed
to
the
Convention on
Prohibitions or
Restrictions on the Use of Certain
Conventional
Weapons Which May Be Deemed to Be Excessively
Injurious or to Have
Indiscriminate
Effects, and calling for the early
ratification of this
Protocol by all
States
which have not yet done so,
Welcoming also
United Nations General Assembly Resolution 51/45 S of
10 December 1996 urging all
States to pursue vigorously an effective,
legally-
binding
international agreement to
ban the use, stockpiling,
production and
transfer
of
anti-personnel landmines,
Welcoming furthermore the
measures taken over the
past years, both
unilaterally
and multilaterally, aiming at
prohibiting, restricting or
suspending
the
use, stockpiling,
production and
transfer of
anti-personnel mines,
Stressing the
role of
public conscience in furthering the
principles of
humanity as
evidenced by the call for a total
ban of
anti-personnel mines and
recognizing
the efforts
to that end undertaken by the
International Red Cross and
Red Crescent
Movement,
the
International Campaign to
Ban Landmines and numerous other
non-governmental
organizations around the
world,
Emphasizing the
desirability of attracting the adherence of all
States
to this
Convention,
and
determined to
work strenuously towards the
promotion of its
universalization
in
all
relevant fora including,
inter alia, the
United Nations, the
Conference
on
Disarmament,
regional organizations, and groupings, and
review conferences of the
Convention
on
Prohibitions or
Restrictions on the Use of Certain Conventional
Weapons
Which May
Be Deemed to Be Excessively
Injurious or to Have Indiscriminate
Effects,
Basing themselves on the
principle of
international humanitarian law
that
the
right of the
parties to an
armed conflict to
choose methods or means of
warfare is
not
unlimited,
on the
principle that
prohibits the
employment in
armed conflicts of
weapons,
projectiles
and
materials and
methods of
warfare of a
nature to cause superfluous
injury
or
unnecessary
suffering and on the
principle that a
distinction must be
made
between
civilians and combatants,