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Project Sekong 2012: Work is going slow. We’re finding cluster bomblets but also shrapnel by the bucketful.

February 23, 2012
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Project Sekong 2012: Work is going slow.  We’re finding cluster bomblets but also shrapnel by the bucketful.

Report 30 Our team is grinding along, clearing expansion garden plots, but it’s frustrating work.  Early on we were fortunate to be working fields with little scrap, but now we are harvesting thousands of pieces of bomb frag every day.  Metal shards by the bucketful. We’re working both sides of a steep valley that...
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Project Sekong 2012: Meet our team. “Kik” proves women just as capable as men when working with bombs and landmines.

February 21, 2012
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Project Sekong 2012: Meet our team. “Kik” proves women just as capable as men when working with bombs and landmines.

Report 29 Kik took some ribbing last year for being the youngest member of our team but, in truth, if she hadn’t admitted to being just seventeen we wouldn’t have guessed that she was so young. In Laos girls start taking responsibility for tasks around the home at an early age.  It’s common to...
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Project Sekong 2012: We interrupt our “area clearance” to respond immediately to villagers who have found bomblets.

February 20, 2012
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Project Sekong 2012: We interrupt our “area clearance” to respond immediately to villagers who have found bomblets.

Report 28 Our first task of the day was calming a lady who was shaken by the experience of nearly whacking a cluster bomblet with her machete while she was cutting back weedy growth in her family’s coffee plantation.  She pulled up short when she spied the bomblet mostly hidden amongst the grass and...
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Project Sekong 2012: Will two rice crops a year mean double the work for women who pound and winnow the grain?

February 19, 2012
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Project Sekong 2012: Will two rice crops a year mean double the work for women who pound and winnow the grain?

Report 27 Hill rice is grown on the steep hillsides that have had all natural vegetation removed through the age-old practice of “slash and burn” or “swidden” agriculture.  The slopes are too steep to permit standing water; hill rice plants depend on sufficient rainfall during the growing season and, as a consequence, yield just...
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April 4 is Landmine Awareness Day. Let’s remember Lao victims and resolve to rid the world of these weapons.

February 18, 2012
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April 4 is Landmine Awareness Day.  Let’s remember Lao victims and resolve to rid the world of these weapons.

In recognition of International Landmine Awareness Day I am reposting a blog that I wrote back in 2006, when We Help War Victims first carried amputees to Vientiane to be fitted with artificial limbs.  Our good friends at COPE (Cooperative Orthotics and Prosthetic Enterprise) assisted the victims we delivered to their door.  In the...
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Project Sekong 2012: Meet our team. Dao Vieng: driver, master mechanic, waits for the explosion that we all dread.

February 17, 2012
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Project Sekong 2012: Meet our team.  Dao Vieng: driver, master mechanic, waits for the explosion that we all dread.

Report 25 Dao Vieng, our driver, is on the job every hour that our team is in the field.  He’s indispensable to our project, but actually breaks a sweat far less often than any other staff.  Once he delivers us to the work site, his only duty is to stand by, prepared at a...
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Project Sekong 2012: It could be that our truck has been down the Ho Chi Minh Trail before. This workhorse makes our project possible.

February 16, 2012
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Project Sekong 2012: It could be that our truck has been down the Ho Chi Minh Trail before.  This workhorse makes our project possible.

Report 24 Early on, we sent our first truck, a Hyundai Porter, home in shame.  A Porter is a low slung, flatbed truck that’s great for hauling cargo on tame roads and, when fitted with benches, it’s good transport for a team of seven or eight.  But off road, where clearance is important and...
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Project Sekong 2012: Occasionally, as we dig we find bodies of soldiers. But we need to continue our search for ordnance.

February 16, 2012
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Project Sekong 2012: Occasionally, as we dig we find bodies of soldiers.  But we need to continue our search for ordnance.

Report 23 A couple of our deminers did a poor job of clearance yesterday and made a mistake that could have had tragic consequences.  There’s an explanation for what happened but that’s all I’ll term it — an explanation, not an excuse. Our two female deminers were assigned to search a garden next to...
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Project Sekong 2012: The cold doesn’t keep us from work when work’s the only way to stay warm.

February 15, 2012
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Project Sekong 2012: The cold doesn’t keep us from work when work’s the only way to stay warm.

Report 22 Bad weather moved in.  It’s turned cold. Last night, an hour after dark, a heavy fog oozed down and drove us from the fire where we usually sit after dinner, alternately warming our hands and our feet.  After we retreated to our tents, all we could do was layer on our warmest...
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Project Sekong 2012: Meet more of our team. Bounphasith Xayavong (“Yai”) is our interpreter.

February 14, 2012
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Project Sekong 2012: Meet more of our team.   Bounphasith Xayavong (“Yai”) is our interpreter.

Report 21 Our interpreter’s full name is Bounphasith Xayavong but he prefers the shorter nickname, “Yai”.  Even his oldest friends would have a difficult time conjuring up his real name.  Yai is our main man.  Usually, the guy who makes it all happen.  The man who puts things right when the wheels fall off the...
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