Landmines destroy limbs and lives on Bangladesh-Myanmar border

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Mr Ali Hossain lost his leg to a landmine while collecting firewood.

Mr Ali Hossain, who lost one of his legs to a landmine while collecting firewood, leaning on crutches as he walks home in the Bangladesh-Myanmar frontier village of Naikhongchhari, Bandarban district, on Dec 19.

PHOTO: AFP

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In the dense hill forests along Bangladesh’s border with war-torn Myanmar, villagers are losing limbs to landmines, casualties of a conflict not of their making.

Mr Ali Hossain, 40, was collecting firewood in early 2025 when a blast shattered his life.

“I went into the jungle with fellow villagers. Suddenly, there was an explosion and my leg was blown off,” he told AFP. “I screamed at the top of my voice.”

Neighbours rushed to stem the spurting blood.

“They picked me up, gathered my severed leg and took me to hospital,” he said.

In Ashartoli, a small settlement in Bandarban district – the village name translates as “haven of hope” – the weapons of a foreign war have turned forests, farms and footpaths deadly.

Bangladesh’s 271km-long eastern border with Myanmar cuts through forests, much of it unmarked, as well as rivers. It is crossed daily by villagers, as their families have done for generations, for collecting firewood or small-time trading.

Surgeons amputated Mr Hossain’s leg above the knee.

“My wife had to carry me on her back,” he said, gesturing towards the steep hillside around his home, as he recalled the months after the blast.

A year later, Mr Hossain walks with an artificial leg and a crutch, but he cannot return to his job on a rubber plantation.

With Mr Hossain needing 300 taka (S$3) a day for medicine, his two young sons now take on his former dangerous task, collecting firewood after school.

My whole life

Similar stories echo across the border region.

“My father and forefathers collected wood from the jungle,” said Mr Abu Taleb, 47. “I learnt no other trade.”

He crossed unwittingly into Myanmar.

“I stepped on a pile of dry leaves and there was an explosion,” he said, leaning on a crutch. “It took away my whole life.”

His 10-year-old son has since dropped out of school to help support the family.

Mr Ali Hossain leaning on a crutch as he removes his prosthetic leg outside his house in the Bangladesh-Myanmar frontier village of Naikhongchhari, Bandarban district, on Dec 19.

PHOTO: AFP

Mr Taleb said trips to repair his artificial leg and attend medical check-ups cost around US$80 (S$100) – an impossible burden for a family struggling to survive.

Mr Nurul Amin, 23, lost his leg while attempting to take a cow across the border, a memory blurred by pain.

“They carried me on their shoulders to the hospital,” he recalled, saying he was more worried that his monthly income had now fallen to around US$25 to US$30.

“That’s not enough for a family,” he said. “I have no other way to survive.”

Cruelty

Myanmar is the world’s most dangerous country for landmine casualties, according to the International Campaign to Ban Landmines, which has detailed the “massive” and growing use of the weapons, banned by many countries.

It recorded more than 2,000 casualties in Myanmar in 2024, the latest full statistics available – double the total reported in 2023.

“The use of mines appeared to significantly increase in 2024 to 2025,” it said in its Landmine Monitor report.

This highlighted “an increase in the number of mine victims, particularly near the border” with Bangladesh.

Bangladesh accuses Myanmar’s military and rival armed forces of planting the mines.

Guerilla Arakan Army fighters – one of the many factions challenging the junta’s rule – control swathes of jungle across the border with Myanmar.

More than a million Rohingya refugees who fled Myanmar also live in Bangladesh’s border regions, caught between the warring military and separatist groups.

Bangladesh police say that at least 28 people were injured by landmines in 2025.

In November, a Bangladesh border guard was killed when a landmine tore off both his legs.

“This cruelty cannot be legitimised,” said Lieutenant-Colonel Kafil Uddin Kayes, a local Border Guard Bangladesh commander.

Bangladesh’s border force has put up warning signs and red flags, and conducts regular mine-sweeping operations.

But villagers say the warnings offer little protection when survival depends on entering forests seeded with explosives, leaving communities in Bangladesh to pay the price of war.

“The population is increasing and people are moving closer to the border as we have farmlands there,” said 42-year-old farmer Dudu Mia.

“Planting landmines cannot be the solution. It can’t go on like this.” AFP


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