Beyond Burning
The Ripple Effects of Incendiary Weapons and Increasing Calls for International Action
Many urgent arms-related challenges need be addressed to protect civilians affected by conflict and its deadly legacy. Antipersonnel landmines and cluster munitions have been prohibited outright due to their inherently indiscriminate and lasting effect on civilians yet continued advocacy and monitoring is needed to ensure these treaties gain universal support and are fully implemented. The use of artillery projectiles, rockets, mortars, missiles, air-delivered bombs and other explosive weapons in populated areas is causing foreseeable harm to civilians and the infrastructure they depend on to live, study, and work. Incendiary weapons, including white phosphorus, inflict painful and cruel injuries, yet they continue to be used. The development of autonomous weapons systems—“killer robots”—that could select and engage targets without human intervention needs to be prohibited and regulated through new international law to prevent a future of warfare and policing outside of human control and responsibility. The Arms Program of the Crisis, Conflict and Arms Division advances humanitarian disarmament, enhancing protections for civilians from various weapons that inflict unacceptable harm, including by strengthening international treaties and legal norms.
December 13, 2024
December 13, 2024
December 5, 2024
The Ripple Effects of Incendiary Weapons and Increasing Calls for International Action
Congolese Army Puts Displaced People Around Goma at Greater Risk
Killings of Civilians, Mass Arson, Unlawful Recruitment in Rakhine State
In Poor Region, Scores Killed Taking Goods Across the Iran-Iraq Border
Highest Casualties Worldwide Since 2023
Accounts from Landmine Survivors in Myanmar
Reprehensible Rejection of 1997 Mine Ban Treaty
Landmine Monitor 2024 Highlights New Use by Russia, Myanmar
Delivered by Mary Wareham, Deputy Director of Crisis, Conflict and Arms Division
Delivered by Mary Wareham, Deputy Director of Crisis, Conflict and Arms Division
Stronger Law Needed to Govern Weapon with Cruel Effects