Rudaw 

Active mines dispersed across the Kurdistan Region’s border areas continue to claim the lives and limbs of the residents of border villages.

Momn Abdulla, 43, is from the village of Herti in Erbil’s Soran district. She lost a leg to a landmine just one kilometer from her house 14 years ago.

She warns that her fellow villagers continue to be at great risk of being injured or killed by landmines.

“There are still landmines there. This year landmines have killed people. No one [from the authorities] has reached out to us to resolve this issue, because they are near populated areas,” said Abdulla.

Over the past decades, a total of 46 villagers from 14 villages in the Soran district have fallen victim to landmines, the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) Mine Action Agency confirmed to Rudaw English. It killed 16 of them and left the rest with missing limbs.

“Not just villagers are falling on the landmines, but also tourists who visit the area to picnic or look for wild plants,” Farsat Farhad, a cleric from the village of Nizariya.

“We are urging the relevant authorities to at least repair the landmine signs so people are warned that the region is a landmine zone so they avoid them,” he added.

There are tens of millions of unexploded landmines and explosive ordinances across the Kurdistan Region’s borders with Iran.

These remnants date back more than three decades to the devastating Iran-Iraq war from 1980 to 1988.

This video was filmed on November 28, 2021.