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HI clears over 64 acres of Laos farmland of deadly munitions

Explosive weapons
Laos

HI clears in Houaphanh Province - one bomb at a time.

Four people are standing in an outdoor setting with dense vegetation, surrounded by trees, bushes, and branches. They are wearing light-colored work clothes and boots. Some are holding tools, including a shovel and a circular metal object. On the ground in front of the four people, a large number of long, rusty metal objects are arranged in a group. The objects vary in size but are similar in shape. A spray can is visible on the ground to the right.

The presence of unexploded ordnance was reported by the communities. HI team came on the site to dispose the items that were destroyed later that day. | © Lattikone / HI

HI has cleared more than 64 acres of land in Houaphanh Province, Laos, neutralizing 111 unexploded ordnance (UXO) items. The operation is directly benefiting 362 community members — nearly half of them women. They were launched last March and have made a significant impact so far.

By the numbers

•    Over 64 acres were cleared, made up of both agricultural and development land (water pipe trail)
•    111 unexploded ordnance items were found and destroyed: 58 cluster munition bomblets + 53 other remnants (rockets, projectiles, etc.)
•    362 people (182 women) now have access to safe land

A typical day

The HI 22-person clearance team uses metal detectors for manual detection . They start their day  at around 7:30 a.m., arriving on site around 8:00 a.m.. They work until 4:00 p.m., at clearance sites located 15–30 minutes from the base.

Every unexploded bomb found is destroyed on-site — typically in the afternoon before the team wraps for the day. Cluster munitions make up the majority of finds – Laos is among the most contaminated by cluster munition in the world, largely from U.S. air campaigns during the Vietnam War era.

Operations face real friction. The team is small, meaning explosive ordnance specialists must double as bush-cutters in dense vegetation. The sites are hilly and difficult to traverse, and the muddy, poorly maintained roads make daily access more complicated.

Why it matters

The cleared lands are agricultural. Communities living roughly a mile from active clearance sites, and sometimes adjacent to main roads, are now able to farm land that was previously off-limits due to contamination risk.

Operations are ongoing. With the technical survey phase complete, the focus shifts to expanding cleared acreage and reaching more villages in the province.

Date published: 06/04/26

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