Cluster Bomb Treaty: Signing Begins to Bring Ban on Production
Ban on cluster bomb production due to pass into international humanitarian law, despite absence of US, Russia signatures
OSLO - Governments from around the world
today began signing an international convention banning the production
of cluster bombs - unexploded canisters that have killed and maimed
thousands of civilians and remain scattered dozen of countries.
At
the Oslo signing ceremony, Norway, which has led the efforts to ban
cluster munitions, was the first country to sign. It was followed by
Laos - where cluster bombs dropped by US planes more than 30 years ago
are still killing civilians, and Lebanon, another country affected by the weapons.
There will,
however, be a number of notable absentees, including the US, China,
Russia, India and Pakistan as well as Israel, which fired many cluster
bombs during the 2006 Lebanon war.