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Vietnam needs billions of USD and a hundred years for landmine clearance

This is the differences between us and them we didnt ask any nations for compensation, we worked hard to build up our nation

Idiot you can ask Japan pay for you. he he, but you dare not do that, you work hard to collect money and to fund to US military activitis, hey, slave mentality of chinese. :D

US begged China to normalize relations,Nixon even invited himself to come to China to please chairman Mao,even during the time when China still had anti US banners and slogans everywhere in the country.as for beggars,Vietnamese are always are,they owe China 20 billion US dollars during Vietnam war,what a big beggar.

Beggar is famous job invented first in China. Ha ha. You know about "Cai Bang" in china.:yahoo:
 
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Vietnamese economy is the worst in Asia,inflation is the highest and live in constant fear of being blown up by a hiden landmine,what a country!maybe that's why so many Vietnamese girls came to China to find a husband or have a family,that place is simply too dangerous to live.
 
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Idiot you can ask Japan pay for you. he he, but you dare not do that, you work hard to collect money and to fund to US military activitis, hey, slave mentality of chinese. :D



Beggar is famous job invented first in China. Ha ha. You know about "Cai Bang" in china.:yahoo:

Actually they offers compensation but we refused, we have dignity unlike you guys crying for money all the time:rofl:
 
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Actually they offers compensation but we refused, we have dignity unlike you guys crying for money all the time:rofl:

they surrendered to us and the term for that money is called"war reparation".no one surrendered to Vietnam.
 
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10 Countries With The Most Landmines(five muslim countries,four African countries,one European countries and Cambodia)
10
Somalia


Landmine Count: 1 million

The mine problem in Somalia is a result of various internal and regional conflicts over an almost 40-year period, with the first reported occurrence of mine-laying in 1964. Central and southern Somalia are heavily contaminated with mines and unexploded ordnance (UXO). The UN claims that the socioeconomic impact of landmines can be seen in almost every aspect of Somali society: reduced land available for livestock and agricultural production, increased transportation costs, poor performance of rehabilitation and development efforts, loss of life, disabilities, a general lack of security of communities, and obstacles to repatriation and reintegration. Casualties continue to be reported from mines and UXO. The UN also believes, however, that the mine and UXO threat in Somalia is “a finite problem” and one that “given sustained attention,” can be solved in a seven- to ten-year period with adequate resources. Somalia cannot accede to the Mine Ban Treaty because it has been without a central government since the 1991 fall of the government of Siyad Barre.


9
Mozambique


Landmine Count: 3 million

After almost thirty years of war, Mozambique is one of the poorest countries in Africa. Grain must be imported and the economy depends heavily on foreign aid. Mozambique is faced with desertification, pollution of surface and coastal waters, and severe drought and floods in the central and southern provinces. In addition, much of its farmable land is unusable because of landmines. “Perhaps the most devastating use of land mines was the random dissection of mines in fields and along access paths to stop peasants from producing food,” notes Human Rights Watch Africa in a report entitled “Land Mines and Economic Life”. Mines manufactured in 15 different countries were used by all sides in the fighting, accelerating a devastating famine cycle in the 1980s that sent a huge refugee exodus across the borders with South Africa, Zambia, Tanzania and Malawi. According to Handicap International, an estimated 20 people step on landmines every month in Mozambique. Sixty percent of them die because they lack access to health services. In 1996, Mozambique’s Defense Minister estimated that there were still about 3 million landmines in Mozambique. The devastation caused by mines in Mozambique is striking. In addition to farmable land, power lines, roads, bridges, railroads, and airports, even schools, factories and cattle dip tanks were mined. Wildlife is also threatened by mines: elephants have been found maimed by anti-personnel mines and killed by anti-tank mines. The average life expectancy in Mozambique is about 46 years.

8
Bosnia-Herzegovina


Landmine Count: 3 million

Bosnia-Herzegovina is heavily contaminated with landmines and explosive remnants of war, primarily as a result of the 1992-1995 conflict related to the break-up of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. The mine contamination is generally low density. Mines were used extensively along confrontation lines, which moved frequently. Most minefields are in the zone of separation between the two entities; this is 1,100 kilometers long and up to four kilometers wide. In southern and central Bosnia-Herzegovina, mines were often used randomly, with little record keeping. Some of the affected territory is mountainous or heavily forested, but the fertile agricultural belt in Brčko District is one of the most heavily contaminated areas. Every month landmines kill or injure 30-35 people, 80% of them civilians. The presence of these deadly weapons is hindering reconstruction, severely reducing food production and diverting resources needed to rebuild society. So far, only a small percentage of mine-contaminated land has been cleared according to humanitarian standards. Most minefields remain unmarked.

7
Kuwait


Landmine Count: 5 million

Kuwait’s history has been filled with stress due to the vast amount of oil found throughout the country. During the Gulf War, Iraq occupied Kuwait from August 1990 until February 1991. The Iraqi troops planted millions of AP and AT mines in the “Kuwait Theater of Military Operations.” Approximately 97.8 percent of Kuwait’s land became mined or UXO affected. Heavily mined areas were the northern cost of Kuwait Bay and the Kuwait-Saudi Arabia border. Immediately after Kuwait’s liberation, the government planned for an integrated mine action program. The duration was 24 months and cost $128 million (U.S.). According to the Landmine Monitor Report, as of April 3, 1999, almost 2 million landmines had been recovered from coastal and desert areas of Kuwait. A mine awareness program was also established to inform civilians about the dangers of landmines.

6
Cambodia


Landmine Count: 8-10 million

Three decades of war in Cambodia have left scars in many forms throughout the country. Unfortunately, one of the most lasting legacies of the conflicts continues to claim new victims daily. Land mines, laid by the Khmer Rouge, the Heng Samrin and Hun Sen regimes, the Vietnamese, the KPNLF, and the Sihanoukists litter the countryside. In most cases, even the soldiers who planted the mines did not record where they were placed. Now, Cambodia has the one of the highest rates of physical disability of any country in the world. While census data for Cambodia is sketchy, it is generally accepted that more than 40,000 Cambodians have suffered amputations as a result of mine injuries since 1979. That represents an average of nearly forty victims a week for a period of twenty years. While it is believed that no military groups are still deploying mines, the devices are still being used in new and horrible ways: Civilians have used mines to protect property and settle disputes; poachers are reportedly using mines to hunt tigers, which are prized for use in medicines in neighboring Vietnam; and in once incident in 1998, police surrounded a forest with mines in order to capture a murder suspect who had hidden there. He emerged from the forest and stepped on a mine, and was then shot to death by police. At the current rate of progress, it may take as many as 100 years to clear all the mines in Cambodia.









5
Iraq


Landmine Count: 10 million

Iraq is severely affected by mines and unexploded ordnance (UXO) as a result of the 1991 Gulf War, the 1980-1988 Iraq-Iran War, two decades of internal conflict, and even World War Two. Landmines and UXO pose a problem in the north, along the Iran-Iraq border, and throughout the central and southern regions of the country. The number of mines planted in Iraq is not known, but it is estimated by the United Nations to be at least 10 million. A recently completed Landmine Impact Survey confirmed that all twenty-five districts in the three provinces (governorates) comprising northern Iraq are mine-affected, and 3,444 distinct areas suspected of mine and/or UXO contamination affect over 148,000 families (more than one in five) living in 1,096 mine-affected communities.

4
Afghanistan


Landmine Count: 10 million

Afghanistan has suffered greatly from war since 1978, and all sides to the various armed conflicts have used antipersonnel mines, particularly Soviet forces and the Afghan government from 1979 to 1992. Landmines have been planted indiscriminately over most of the country. Agricultural farms, grazing areas, irrigation canals, residential areas, roads and footpaths, both in urban and rural areas, are contaminated. Mines are a major obstacle to repatriation, relief, rehabilitation and development activities. Landmines kill or maim an estimated ten to twelve people each day in Afghanistan. It is believed that almost 50 percent of landmine victims die due to lack of medical facilities.

3
Angola


Landmine Count: 10 to 20 million

Estimates of the number of Angolan landmines range between 10 and 20 million, which equates to at least 1 to 2 land mines for every person in the country. U.N. estimates put the number of Angolan amputees resulting from the silent killers at 70,000. For three decades mines were scattered in Angola’s fields, villages, roads, and other unexpected places to intimidate, maim and kill innocent victims. Land mines have a devastating effect upon the environment by restricting the movement of people, deterring farming, disrupting economies, and killing and mutilating many innocent men, women, and children. In 1993 a UN General Resolution moratorium on the sale and export of antipersonnel land mines was passed. However, international consensus has yet to be achieved and Angola’s problem continues unabated.

2
Iran


Landmine Count: 16 million

Landmine and unexploded ordnance (UXO) contamination in west and southwest Iran, particularly the provinces of Kurdistan, Western Azerbaijan, Khuzestan, and Kermanshah, results from the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq conflict. Government officials claim that Iraq planted some 16 million landmines in Iran during the 1980s, contaminating an area of over 42,000 square kilometers. Landmines and UXO are reported to have severely limited agricultural production in the five provinces along the Iraqi border. They also compromise exploitation of oil fields. Mine and UXO contamination has affected historical sites and hindered archeological studies in southwest Iran.

1
Egypt


Landmine Count: 23 million

World War II and the Egypt-Israel wars of 1956, 1967, and 1973 have left Egypt a mine-affected country. Egypt often cites a figure of 23 million landmines buried in the country. Egypt’s problem stems from the fact that its land mines are old and hard to locate and were designed for use against tanks, whereas international criticism is generally focused on anti-personnel mines. According to the ministry of defense, mines have hampered human and economic development and have killed and injured thousands of civilians. Seven million mines have been cleared from the western desert in the past 15 years and three million from the Sinai desert. The nomadic people refer to waste tracts of desert minefields as “The Devil’s Garden.”
 
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10 Countries With The Most Landmines
10
Somalia


Landmine Count: 1 million

The mine problem in Somalia is a result of various internal and regional conflicts over an almost 40-year period, with the first reported occurrence of mine-laying in 1964. Central and southern Somalia are heavily contaminated with mines and unexploded ordnance (UXO). The UN claims that the socioeconomic impact of landmines can be seen in almost every aspect of Somali society: reduced land available for livestock and agricultural production, increased transportation costs, poor performance of rehabilitation and development efforts, loss of life, disabilities, a general lack of security of communities, and obstacles to repatriation and reintegration. Casualties continue to be reported from mines and UXO. The UN also believes, however, that the mine and UXO threat in Somalia is “a finite problem” and one that “given sustained attention,” can be solved in a seven- to ten-year period with adequate resources. Somalia cannot accede to the Mine Ban Treaty because it has been without a central government since the 1991 fall of the government of Siyad Barre.


9
Mozambique


Landmine Count: 3 million

After almost thirty years of war, Mozambique is one of the poorest countries in Africa. Grain must be imported and the economy depends heavily on foreign aid. Mozambique is faced with desertification, pollution of surface and coastal waters, and severe drought and floods in the central and southern provinces. In addition, much of its farmable land is unusable because of landmines. “Perhaps the most devastating use of land mines was the random dissection of mines in fields and along access paths to stop peasants from producing food,” notes Human Rights Watch Africa in a report entitled “Land Mines and Economic Life”. Mines manufactured in 15 different countries were used by all sides in the fighting, accelerating a devastating famine cycle in the 1980s that sent a huge refugee exodus across the borders with South Africa, Zambia, Tanzania and Malawi. According to Handicap International, an estimated 20 people step on landmines every month in Mozambique. Sixty percent of them die because they lack access to health services. In 1996, Mozambique’s Defense Minister estimated that there were still about 3 million landmines in Mozambique. The devastation caused by mines in Mozambique is striking. In addition to farmable land, power lines, roads, bridges, railroads, and airports, even schools, factories and cattle dip tanks were mined. Wildlife is also threatened by mines: elephants have been found maimed by anti-personnel mines and killed by anti-tank mines. The average life expectancy in Mozambique is about 46 years.

8
Bosnia-Herzegovina


Landmine Count: 3 million

Bosnia-Herzegovina is heavily contaminated with landmines and explosive remnants of war, primarily as a result of the 1992-1995 conflict related to the break-up of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. The mine contamination is generally low density. Mines were used extensively along confrontation lines, which moved frequently. Most minefields are in the zone of separation between the two entities; this is 1,100 kilometers long and up to four kilometers wide. In southern and central Bosnia-Herzegovina, mines were often used randomly, with little record keeping. Some of the affected territory is mountainous or heavily forested, but the fertile agricultural belt in Brčko District is one of the most heavily contaminated areas. Every month landmines kill or injure 30-35 people, 80% of them civilians. The presence of these deadly weapons is hindering reconstruction, severely reducing food production and diverting resources needed to rebuild society. So far, only a small percentage of mine-contaminated land has been cleared according to humanitarian standards. Most minefields remain unmarked.

7
Kuwait


Landmine Count: 5 million

Kuwait’s history has been filled with stress due to the vast amount of oil found throughout the country. During the Gulf War, Iraq occupied Kuwait from August 1990 until February 1991. The Iraqi troops planted millions of AP and AT mines in the “Kuwait Theater of Military Operations.” Approximately 97.8 percent of Kuwait’s land became mined or UXO affected. Heavily mined areas were the northern cost of Kuwait Bay and the Kuwait-Saudi Arabia border. Immediately after Kuwait’s liberation, the government planned for an integrated mine action program. The duration was 24 months and cost $128 million (U.S.). According to the Landmine Monitor Report, as of April 3, 1999, almost 2 million landmines had been recovered from coastal and desert areas of Kuwait. A mine awareness program was also established to inform civilians about the dangers of landmines.

6
Cambodia


Landmine Count: 8-10 million

Three decades of war in Cambodia have left scars in many forms throughout the country. Unfortunately, one of the most lasting legacies of the conflicts continues to claim new victims daily. Land mines, laid by the Khmer Rouge, the Heng Samrin and Hun Sen regimes, the Vietnamese, the KPNLF, and the Sihanoukists litter the countryside. In most cases, even the soldiers who planted the mines did not record where they were placed. Now, Cambodia has the one of the highest rates of physical disability of any country in the world. While census data for Cambodia is sketchy, it is generally accepted that more than 40,000 Cambodians have suffered amputations as a result of mine injuries since 1979. That represents an average of nearly forty victims a week for a period of twenty years. While it is believed that no military groups are still deploying mines, the devices are still being used in new and horrible ways: Civilians have used mines to protect property and settle disputes; poachers are reportedly using mines to hunt tigers, which are prized for use in medicines in neighboring Vietnam; and in once incident in 1998, police surrounded a forest with mines in order to capture a murder suspect who had hidden there. He emerged from the forest and stepped on a mine, and was then shot to death by police. At the current rate of progress, it may take as many as 100 years to clear all the mines in Cambodia.









5
Iraq


Landmine Count: 10 million

Iraq is severely affected by mines and unexploded ordnance (UXO) as a result of the 1991 Gulf War, the 1980-1988 Iraq-Iran War, two decades of internal conflict, and even World War Two. Landmines and UXO pose a problem in the north, along the Iran-Iraq border, and throughout the central and southern regions of the country. The number of mines planted in Iraq is not known, but it is estimated by the United Nations to be at least 10 million. A recently completed Landmine Impact Survey confirmed that all twenty-five districts in the three provinces (governorates) comprising northern Iraq are mine-affected, and 3,444 distinct areas suspected of mine and/or UXO contamination affect over 148,000 families (more than one in five) living in 1,096 mine-affected communities.

4
Afghanistan


Landmine Count: 10 million

Afghanistan has suffered greatly from war since 1978, and all sides to the various armed conflicts have used antipersonnel mines, particularly Soviet forces and the Afghan government from 1979 to 1992. Landmines have been planted indiscriminately over most of the country. Agricultural farms, grazing areas, irrigation canals, residential areas, roads and footpaths, both in urban and rural areas, are contaminated. Mines are a major obstacle to repatriation, relief, rehabilitation and development activities. Landmines kill or maim an estimated ten to twelve people each day in Afghanistan. It is believed that almost 50 percent of landmine victims die due to lack of medical facilities.

3
Angola


Landmine Count: 10 to 20 million

Estimates of the number of Angolan landmines range between 10 and 20 million, which equates to at least 1 to 2 land mines for every person in the country. U.N. estimates put the number of Angolan amputees resulting from the silent killers at 70,000. For three decades mines were scattered in Angola’s fields, villages, roads, and other unexpected places to intimidate, maim and kill innocent victims. Land mines have a devastating effect upon the environment by restricting the movement of people, deterring farming, disrupting economies, and killing and mutilating many innocent men, women, and children. In 1993 a UN General Resolution moratorium on the sale and export of antipersonnel land mines was passed. However, international consensus has yet to be achieved and Angola’s problem continues unabated.

2
Iran


Landmine Count: 16 million

Landmine and unexploded ordnance (UXO) contamination in west and southwest Iran, particularly the provinces of Kurdistan, Western Azerbaijan, Khuzestan, and Kermanshah, results from the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq conflict. Government officials claim that Iraq planted some 16 million landmines in Iran during the 1980s, contaminating an area of over 42,000 square kilometers. Landmines and UXO are reported to have severely limited agricultural production in the five provinces along the Iraqi border. They also compromise exploitation of oil fields. Mine and UXO contamination has affected historical sites and hindered archeological studies in southwest Iran.

1
Egypt


Landmine Count: 23 million

World War II and the Egypt-Israel wars of 1956, 1967, and 1973 have left Egypt a mine-affected country. Egypt often cites a figure of 23 million landmines buried in the country. Egypt’s problem stems from the fact that its land mines are old and hard to locate and were designed for use against tanks, whereas international criticism is generally focused on anti-personnel mines. According to the ministry of defense, mines have hampered human and economic development and have killed and injured thousands of civilians. Seven million mines have been cleared from the western desert in the past 15 years and three million from the Sinai desert. The nomadic people refer to waste tracts of desert minefields as “The Devil’s Garden.”

and non of them ask for $10billions compensation:rofl:man i tell you they have dignity unlike our little neighbour
 
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they surrendered to us and the term for that money is called"war reparation".no one surrendered to Vietnam.
don't try to argue with no-sense Mekonger.
we don't need to pay any compensation to Mekonger because they are not worthy of it
China will never apologize for what we have done in Mekonger's land
bacause Mekongers do not deserve to it

no matter what we have done in the past
begged , kill or be killed , slaughter or be slaughtered ,every cruel or every merciful
if it is good for our nation and our people
we would go on

VIETNAM ,such a small country even can't make thier own weapon self , is unable to be China's enemy
if clean up all viet living there is good for our nation and our people
you and me ,who would mind blood on our hands?
if nuclear to destory their cities is good for our nation and our people
what is our bomb waiting for?

what we have done on their land in history
even they are sufferring from a Cruel war launched by us for a long time
we never try to apologize a bit
because viet deserves to it
 
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Idiot you can ask Japan pay for you. he he, but you dare not do that, you work hard to collect money and to fund to US military activitis, hey, slave mentality of chinese. :D



Beggar is famous job invented first in China. Ha ha. You know about "Cai Bang" in china.:yahoo:

China will never treat you as enemy because you don't deserve to it
everyone own his right to dream but should know the fact clearly
whatever China have done in the past and no matter how you think about it
NOW ,the fact is that Vietnam is a country far more weaker,smaller and poorer than China.

again i say:everyone own his right to dream but should know the fact clearly

good luck to the United States of Mekong River

Mekong?if push comes to shove,we can simply dam this river or divert it to other Chinese provinces,then there will be no more Mekong river.
no man
that is my trick
a funny trick
i call him the United States of Mekong River
 
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a begger nation will always beg no matter when :chilli: stupid and idiot is best descriptions of your nation that s why you even beg us for money knowing we wont give a penny:victory:

China is homeland of Cai Bang, bravo.:yahoo:

Vietnamese economy is the worst in Asia,inflation is the highest and live in constant fear of being blown up by a hiden landmine,what a country!maybe that's why so many Vietnamese girls came to China to find a husband or have a family,that place is simply too dangerous to live.

He he, chinese girls go to do prostitution in Africa, refused to rescue and to bring back to homeland china.:taz:

Actually they offers compensation but we refused, we have dignity unlike you guys crying for money all the time:rofl:

You lies, Japanese refused to pay, and they didn't say apologize for Nanjing massacre.:chilli:

they surrendered to us and the term for that money is called"war reparation".no one surrendered to Vietnam.

Defeated on Japan, made by USA and Soviet Union, without such victory of two nukes in Hirosima chinese are still servants of Japanese.:bunny:

But you manchu boy, you could be won because Manchukuo should be Independence State with help of Japan, Bravo. But regretly, you lost your identity and screaming here like idiot kid.

2009passport1.jpg
 
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But you manchu boy, you won because Manchukuo should be Independence State with help of Japan, Bravo.

haha,but we love being Chinese and we love beating you tiny tiny Vietnamese midgets,do you even have something called sports?midgets
 
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China is homeland of Cai Bang, bravo.:yahoo:



He he, chinese girls go to do prostitution in Africa, refused to rescue and to bring back to homeland china.:taz:



You lies, Japanese refused to pay, and they didn't say apologize for Nanjing massacre.:chilli:



Defeated on Japan, made by USA and Soviet Union, without such victory of two nukes in Hirosima chinese are still servants of Japanese.:bunny:

But you manchu boy, you won because Manchukuo should be Independence State with help of Japan, Bravo.

2009passport1.jpg

no matter how much bs you post it here at the end of the day your pathetic useless nation still a begging nation:rofl:
 
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China is homeland of Cai Bang, bravo.:yahoo:



He he, chinese girls go to do prostitution in Africa, refused to rescue and to bring back to homeland china.:taz:



You lies, Japanese refused to pay, and they didn't say apologize for Nanjing massacre.:chilli:



Defeated on Japan, made by USA and Soviet Union, without such victory of two nukes in Hirosima chinese are still servants of Japanese.:bunny:

But you manchu boy, you won because Manchukuo should be Independence State with help of Japan, Bravo.

2009passport1.jpg

escape from a invincible enemy
YOUR COWARD
 
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don't try to argue with no-sense Mekonger.
we don't need to pay any compensation to Mekonger because they are not worthy of it
China will never apologize for what we have done in Mekonger's land
bacause Mekongers do not deserve to it

no matter what we have done in the past
begged , kill or be killed , slaughter or be slaughtered ,every cruel or every merciful
if it is good for our nation and our people
we would go on

VIETNAM ,such a small country even can't make thier own weapon self , is unable to be China's enemy
if clean up all viet living there is good for our nation and our people
you and me ,who would mind blood on our hands?
if nuclear to destory their cities is good for our nation and our people
what is our bomb waiting for?

what we have done on their land in history
even they are sufferring from a Cruel war launched by us for a long time
we never try to apologize a bit
because viet deserves to it

China will never treat you as enemy because you don't deserve to it
everyone own his right to dream but should know the fact clearly
whatever China have done in the past and no matter how you think about it
NOW ,the fact is that Vietnam is a country far more weaker,smaller and poorer than China.

again i say:everyone own his right to dream but should know the fact clearly

good luck to the United States of Mekong River


no man
that is my trick
a funny trick
i call him the United States of Mekong River

One more uneducated chinese guy. Learn to be human being, kido.
 
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