Welcome Back!

You have Gifts for Good in your basket.

Welcome Back!

Last time you were here, you were looking to help vulnerable children and families. Your support can save and change lives.

As the Country Manager here in Laos, I get to see a whole range of development issues in play from the national level down to the village level. One of the most striking issues for me from my time here has been the ongoing impact of unexploded ordnance (UXO), even though the Vietnam War ended more than 30 years ago.

What is the impact of unexploded ordnance on children?

In one of the communities where we work, for example, the nearest primary school was a 45-minute walk away and, not surprisingly, school enrolment was below average. ChildFund supported the community to build a primary school and during the construction phase, the chosen site had to be levelled and prepared. This preparation took three months of painstaking work by a partner UXO clearance organisation able to work only to 30cm depth at a time. The whole process turned up 189 pieces of ordnance; most of them cluster munitions.

This legacy of the war continues not only to put children and their communities at risk of injury or death, it also affects the availability of safe play spaces for children and the amount of land available to grow food and to make a living. These impacts are continuing to be felt today and for me, it is striking that many of my friends and family are unaware of how heavily affected Laos still is today by a war that ended more than 30 years ago.

Why is it important to build new schools?

New schools will provide a range of benefits for the children in communities affected by unexploded ordnance. Children will have more access to education, with reduced travel times and safer journeys to school.

The new schools will be provided with everything teachers need to plan engaging lessons, which means the children in these communities will be able to enjoy the quality education they need for the future.

Laos has the unwanted distinction of being the most heavily bombed country per capita in the world. The use of more than 270 million sub-munitions (called ‘bombies’ in Laos) released from cluster bombs during the Vietnam War continue to have a devastating effect today by killing and maiming children and adults, as well as making potentially productive land inaccessible.

In ChildFund’s target villages in Nonghet district, this issue has a very real dimension with the first clearance sweep of a school construction site in Paka village yielding 160 bombies and 17 live bullets. Children are at particular risk from bombies as the munitions may be brightly coloured and are small and easy for children to handle.

More than 50 per cent of recorded injuries and deaths from unexploded ordnance (UXO) have involved children, from a total of 50,000 recorded civilian accidents since 1964 (given limited recording in some areas, this figure is likely to be higher).

ChildFund Laos is working with the support of MAG, an organisation specialised in UXO clearance, to ensure that children and their communities in target villages are no longer exposed to the risk of UXOs in their immediate environment. ChildFund will continue working in partnership with these communities to improve access to quality education and clean water.