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PFM-1 mine

PFM-1 (Russian: ПФМ-1 — Противопехотная Фугасная Мина-1, lit.'Anti-infantry high-explosive mine') is a scatterable high explosive anti-personnel land mine of Soviet and Russian production.[1] It is also known as a Green Parrot or Butterfly Mine.[1] The mines can be deployed from mortars, helicopters and aeroplanes in large numbers; they glide to the ground without exploding and will explode later upon contact.[2]

A PFM-1 training mine, distinguishable from the live version by the presence of the Cyrillic letter У (short for учебный, uchebnyy, "for training").
PFM-1 schematic

Design edit

The mine consists of a polyethylene plastic container containing 37 g (1.3 oz) of VS-6D or VS-60D liquid explosive.[1][3] The two wings of the PFM-1 allow it to glide after being released in the air, then spin, stabilizing it and slowing its descent, similar to maple seeds.[4][1] The thick wing contains the liquid explosive.[4] The two wings together are 120 mm (4.7 in) long.[5] The plastic body can be produced in a variety of colours for best camouflage. As existing stocks were in European green rather than sand coloured, the first examples used in 1980s Afghanistan were green and easily visible. This led to their name 'green parrots'.[4]

The shape and bright colour is attractive to children, inspiring claims that they were deliberately designed to look like a toy.[6][7]

The mine comes in two variants: PFM-1 and PFM-1S. The only difference between the two variants is that the PFM-1S comes with a self-destruct mechanism, with a nominal self destruct time for 85% of all mines of 40 hours.[8] The self destruct mechanism is designed to activate after 1– 40 hours depending on ambient temperature.[9] The PFM-1S self-destruct mechanism is not very reliable, and is likely to leave mines in an armed or sensitive state;[3] with mines known to continue to randomly self-destruct for weeks after deployment.[8] The mines cannot be laid manually and must be laid only using minelaying systems, such as remote mining machine UMZ, portable mining kit - PKM (mortar), and those present on multiple rocket launchers, helicopters (VSM-1 mine system) or airplanes.[1][10] The remote minelaying systems can only use cluster munition containing PFM-1 mines. The cassettes that contain the PFM-1 mines are KSF-1 (72 PFM-1), KSF-1S (64 PFM-1S) or KSF-1S-0.5 (36 PFM-1 and 36 PFM-1S).[11][12]

Because the mine is so light, it can be carried in waterways and move downstream after heavy rains or melting snow. The PFM-1 mines are notorious for attaining good camouflage in the conditions of dense foliage, snow or sand.[1]

Action edit

The mine is stored with a pin restraining a detonating plunger. Once the arming pin is removed, the plunger is slowly forced forward by a spring until it contacts the detonator, at which point it is armed.[13]

Deformation of the soft plastic skin of the mine forces the arming plunger to strike the detonator, detonating the mine.[13] Because the body of the mine is a single cumulative pressure primer, it is extremely dangerous to handle the mine: The Imperial War Museum states that "A pressure in excess of 5kg would activate the mine".[1] Holding it between the thumb and forefinger may be enough to make it explode.[10] The charge is usually nonlethal, although sufficient to maim.[10]

Disposal edit

The PFM-1(S) mines can be disposed by destruction or activation by mechanical or explosive means; they cannot be disarmed. The mines are generally disposed of in-situ to prevent unintended initiation while moving. If the mine has to be moved, it is done so with an implement that is at least 3 meters long, made of soft materials (for example, plastic) to prevent injury in the event the mine detonates in transit. The disposal technician should ideally wear suitable personal protective equipment (PPE), including gloves and a helmet with a ballistic visor of at least 8–10 mm of PMMA.[11] If the mine is to be destroyed mechanically, then they should be driven on by the tracks of an armoured vehicle, or impacted with a load weighing at least 60 kg. Otherwise, the technician must dispose of the mine with at least 200 grams of explosive at least 4–5m away.[11] The requirement to use soft materials is due to secondary fragments that may be generated as a result of the mine exploding: if the mine is placed on a hard or metallic surface, such as asphalt or steel, it could generate secondary fragmentation and potentially wound the disposal technician, or people around them. As it is almost impossible to tell the PFM-1 and PFM-1S versions apart care should be taken when approaching them as the mine's self-destruction mechanism may actuate.

Compliance with the Ottawa Convention edit

In 2017, the government of Belarus announced that it had destroyed its stockpiles of PFM-1 mines.[14] The last 78 PFM-1 mines held by Belarus were destroyed as the highlight of the closing ceremony marking the elimination of their landmine stock.[14]

Ukraine stated that its stockpile of PFM-1 mines in 1999 was 6,000,000 units.[15] In a November 2008 presentation, Ukraine indicated that it had destroyed 101,088 PFM-1 mines per the convention in 1999. Following the agreement between the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine and NATO Support and Procurement Agency (NSPA, formerly known as NAMSO) on 1 September 2012, a three-way agreement between Ukraine, NSPA and the EU was signed, which figurated that the EU would provide 3.689 million euros for the destruction of 3.3 million mines.[15][16] In 2013, the NSPA provided assistance in destruction of 300,000 mines.[15] In 2014, following the outbreak of war with Russia, Ukrainian representatives did not attend in person but submitted a document to the Mine Ban Treaty Third Review Conference, stating that it had destroyed 568,248 mines since the ratification, with an additional 576 mines in 2014, leaving its stockpile at 5,434,672 mines.[17] After failing to meet the Ottawa Treaty deadline of November 2018 on the destruction of its anti-personnel mines, Ukraine requested the deadline be extended to 1 June 2021, later asking for further extension on 8 June 2020.[18][19] In 2019, 67,236 mines were destroyed. Amid continuing conflict in the Donbas region, in 2020 Ukraine refused to destroy any PFM-1 mines.[failed verification]In 2021, Ukraine's PFM-1 stockpile was reported at 3,363,828 mines.[20][21]

Russia, as well as the United States, China, and several other countries, is not a signatory of the Ottawa Treaty (the Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention).[22][23]

Military use edit

Afghanistan edit

 
"Butterfly" mines, OMAR Mine Museum, 2008

PFM-1 was used during the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, allegedly resulting in a high number of casualties among children from the mine being mistaken for a toy due to its shape and coloring.[24]

Ukraine edit

The Ukrainian government alleged that the Russian Federation deployed PFM-1 mines during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.[25][26][27] At the start of the invasion, in March 2022, Deutsche Welle found no evidence to support the accusation.[28] In June, Human Rights Watch (HRW) reported that Russia had used "at least seven types of antipersonnel mines in at least four regions of Ukraine: Donetsk, Kharkiv, Kyiv, and Sumy", but could not ascertain PFM-1 use in its briefing.[29][30]

In summer 2022, HRW found no credible information about Ukraine using any anti-personnel mines,[29][30] but said in January 2023 that its team "saw physical evidence of PFM antipersonnel mine use in seven of the nine areas around Izyum" in Kharkiv Oblast, and urged the Ukrainian government to investigate possible PFM use by its forces.[31]

In Russian-controlled Donetsk many PFM-1 were widely dispersed, and Russian and local sources accused the Ukrainian army of being responsible for their deployment.[27] There have been reported casualties, the most prominent of which was the Russian influencer Semfira Sulejmanova.[32] Another Russian influencer, Semyon Pegov, reportedly had his leg injured and was hospitalized as a result of these mines.[32]

Similar weapons edit

The PFM-1 is very similar to the BLU-43 landmine used by the US Army in Operation Igloo White in Laos during the Vietnam War.[33][5] According to a U.S. military document, the Soviet military created PFM-1 after reverse-engineering BLU-43.[12]

Specifications (PFM-1 & PFM-1S) edit

  • Dimensions: 119 mm × 64 mm × 20 mm (4.69 in × 2.52 in × 0.79 in) [11]
  • Activation pressure: 5.1–25.5 kgf (50–250 N) [11][13]
  • Weight:[11]
    • Mine: 75 g (2.6 oz)
    • Charge: 37 g (1.3 oz) of VS-6D or VS-60D liquid explosive [34][35]
    • KSF-1 cassette: 9.2 kg (20 lb)
  • Shelf life: 10 years [11][13]
  • Temperature range : −40 to 50 °C (−40 to 122 °F)
  • Fuze: MVDM/VGM-572 (МВВДМ ВГММ-572)
  • Self-destruct time (PKM-1S):[8] 1–40 hours (85% nominal self destruction within 40 hours)[9]

[11][13]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "PFM 1 anti-personnel mine ("Green Parrot") (British drill/training example)". Imperial War Museum. Retrieved 2022-02-27.
  2. ^ "Russia using controversial butterfly mines in Ukraine, says MOD". Forces News. YouTube. 10 August 2022.
  3. ^ a b Explosive Ordnance Guide for Ukraine - Second Edition (PDF) (Report) (2nd ed.). Geneva International Centre for Humanitarian Demining. 2022-08-03. p. 15. (PDF) from the original on 2023-09-14. Retrieved 14 Sep 2023.
  4. ^ a b c McGrath, Rae (1998). Landmines: Legacy of Conflict: A Manual for Development Workers. DIANE. pp. 39–40. ISBN 0-7881-3280-6.
  5. ^ a b Hambling, David (2022-03-10). "Russia Accused Of Using Air-Dropped Butterfly Mines To Block Ukrainian Evacuation Route". Forbes. Retrieved 2022-03-11.
  6. ^ Braithwaite, Rodric (2011). Afgantsy : the Russians in Afghanistan, 1979-89. Oxford University Press. pp. 234–235. ISBN 9780199832668.
  7. ^ "Soviet Toys of Death". The New York Times. 10 December 1985. Retrieved 11 March 2019.
  8. ^ a b c "Landmine, APERS, PFM-1 Birdmine | Bullet Picker". www.bulletpicker.com. Retrieved 2023-09-14.
  9. ^ a b Yu.G., Veremeev; N., Iliev. . tewton.narod.ru. Archived from the original on 2008-12-25.
  10. ^ a b c Cauderay, Gérald C. (1993). "Anti-Personnel Mines" (PDF). International Review of the Red Cross. 33 (295): 273–287. doi:10.1017/S0020860400080530. S2CID 31512388. Retrieved 2022-02-27.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h Инженерные Боеприпасы. Руководство по материальной части и применению (in Russian) (5th ed.). г. Москва: Военное издательство министерства обороны СССР. 1987. pp. 4–8.
  12. ^ a b "INSTANT OBSTACLES: RUSSIAN REMOTELY DELIVERED MINES" (PDF). January 1996.
  13. ^ a b c d e "PFM Design" (PDF). apminebanconvention.org.
  14. ^ a b . 2017-04-05. Archived from the original on 23 August 2020. Retrieved 2022-02-28.
  15. ^ a b c "Commission Implementing Decision on the Annual Action Programme 2013 in favour of Ukraine" (PDF). 2013. Retrieved 2022-07-31.
  16. ^ Yu, Yakymenko (2021). UKRAINE: 30 YEARS ON THE EUROPEAN PATH. «Zapovit» Publishing House. p. 336. ISBN 978-966-2050-27-1.
  17. ^ "Mine Ban Treaty Third Review Conference, Maputo, Mozambique" (PDF). 18 June 2014. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
  18. ^ (PDF). AP Mine Ban Convention. 28 November 2018. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 August 2022. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
  19. ^ "REQUEST FOR AN EXTENTION OF THE DEADLINE FOR COMPLETING THE DESTRUCTION OF ANTI-PERSONNEL MINES IN ACCORDANCE WITH ARTICLE 5 OF THE CONVENTION EXECUTIVE SUMMARY" (PDF). AP Mine Ban Convention. 8 June 2020. (PDF) from the original on 8 August 2022. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
  20. ^ "Convention on the Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling, Production and Transfer of Anti-Personnel Mines and on Their Destruction" (PDF). AP Mine Ban Convention. 1 April 2021. (PDF) from the original on 28 July 2022. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
  21. ^ "КОНВЕЦИЯ О ЗАПРЕЩЕНИИ ПРИМЕНЕНИЯ, НАКОПЛЕНИЯ ЗАПАСОВ, ПРОИЗВОДСТВА И ПЕРЕДАЧИ ПРОТИВОПЕХОТНЫХ МИН И ОБ ИХ УНИЧТОЖЕНИИ" (PDF). AP Mine Ban Convention. 1 April 2020. (PDF) from the original on 28 July 2022. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
  22. ^ "Status of the Convention on the Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling, Production and Transfer of Anti-Personnel Mines and on Their Destruction". Treaties Database of the United Nations Office for Disarmament Affairs. Retrieved 2020-10-21.
  23. ^ "Treaty Status". ICBL. from the original on 14 September 2016. Retrieved 21 September 2016.
  24. ^ Tanner, Stephen. "Afghanistan: A Military History".
  25. ^ "In Kharkiv region, the Russian invaders are using internationally-banned butterfly mines".
  26. ^ "Russia likely using "indiscriminate" mines that kids mistake for toys: U.K." Newsweek. 2022-08-08. Retrieved 2022-08-08.
  27. ^ a b Knox, Brady (19 August 2022). "US approves $89 million to help Ukraine clear land mines". Washington Examiner.
  28. ^ "Is Russia using butterfly mines in Ukraine?". Deutsche Welle.
  29. ^ a b Young, Pariesa (17 August 2022). "What do we know about 'petal mines' scattered in the streets of Donetsk?". France 24. Retrieved 26 October 2022.
  30. ^ a b "Background Briefing on Landmine Use in Ukraine". Human Rights Watch. 15 June 2022. Retrieved 26 October 2022.
  31. ^ "Ukraine: Banned Landmines Harm Civilians". Human Rights Watch. 2023-01-31. Retrieved 2023-02-01.
  32. ^ a b Putzbach, Robert (2022-10-24). "Russischer Kriegsblogger War Gonzo im Minenfeld verletzt". FAZ.NET (in German). ISSN 0174-4909. Retrieved 2023-06-06.
  33. ^ Hsu, Jeremy (2018-12-28). "Drones Used to Find Toylike "Butterfly" Land Mines". Scientific American.
  34. ^ McGrath, Rae (1998). Landmines: Legacy of Conflict: A Manual for Development Workers. DIANE. pp. 39–40. ISBN 978-0-7881-3280-3.
  35. ^ Einsele, Lukas (2004-03-15). "One Step Beyond – Mines – Afghanistan – PFM-1". One Step Beyond. Retrieved 2023-09-14.

External links edit

mine, russian, ПФМ, Противопехотная, Фугасная, Мина, anti, infantry, high, explosive, mine, scatterable, high, explosive, anti, personnel, land, mine, soviet, russian, production, also, known, green, parrot, butterfly, mine, mines, deployed, from, mortars, hel. PFM 1 Russian PFM 1 Protivopehotnaya Fugasnaya Mina 1 lit Anti infantry high explosive mine is a scatterable high explosive anti personnel land mine of Soviet and Russian production 1 It is also known as a Green Parrot or Butterfly Mine 1 The mines can be deployed from mortars helicopters and aeroplanes in large numbers they glide to the ground without exploding and will explode later upon contact 2 A PFM 1 training mine distinguishable from the live version by the presence of the Cyrillic letter U short for uchebnyj uchebnyy for training PFM 1 schematic Contents 1 Design 2 Action 3 Disposal 4 Compliance with the Ottawa Convention 5 Military use 5 1 Afghanistan 5 2 Ukraine 6 Similar weapons 7 Specifications PFM 1 amp PFM 1S 8 See also 9 Notes 10 External linksDesign editThe mine consists of a polyethylene plastic container containing 37 g 1 3 oz of VS 6D or VS 60D liquid explosive 1 3 The two wings of the PFM 1 allow it to glide after being released in the air then spin stabilizing it and slowing its descent similar to maple seeds 4 1 The thick wing contains the liquid explosive 4 The two wings together are 120 mm 4 7 in long 5 The plastic body can be produced in a variety of colours for best camouflage As existing stocks were in European green rather than sand coloured the first examples used in 1980s Afghanistan were green and easily visible This led to their name green parrots 4 The shape and bright colour is attractive to children inspiring claims that they were deliberately designed to look like a toy 6 7 The mine comes in two variants PFM 1 and PFM 1S The only difference between the two variants is that the PFM 1S comes with a self destruct mechanism with a nominal self destruct time for 85 of all mines of 40 hours 8 The self destruct mechanism is designed to activate after 1 40 hours depending on ambient temperature 9 The PFM 1S self destruct mechanism is not very reliable and is likely to leave mines in an armed or sensitive state 3 with mines known to continue to randomly self destruct for weeks after deployment 8 The mines cannot be laid manually and must be laid only using minelaying systems such as remote mining machine UMZ portable mining kit PKM mortar and those present on multiple rocket launchers helicopters VSM 1 mine system or airplanes 1 10 The remote minelaying systems can only use cluster munition containing PFM 1 mines The cassettes that contain the PFM 1 mines are KSF 1 72 PFM 1 KSF 1S 64 PFM 1S or KSF 1S 0 5 36 PFM 1 and 36 PFM 1S 11 12 Because the mine is so light it can be carried in waterways and move downstream after heavy rains or melting snow The PFM 1 mines are notorious for attaining good camouflage in the conditions of dense foliage snow or sand 1 Action editThe mine is stored with a pin restraining a detonating plunger Once the arming pin is removed the plunger is slowly forced forward by a spring until it contacts the detonator at which point it is armed 13 Deformation of the soft plastic skin of the mine forces the arming plunger to strike the detonator detonating the mine 13 Because the body of the mine is a single cumulative pressure primer it is extremely dangerous to handle the mine The Imperial War Museum states that A pressure in excess of 5kg would activate the mine 1 Holding it between the thumb and forefinger may be enough to make it explode 10 The charge is usually nonlethal although sufficient to maim 10 Disposal editThe PFM 1 S mines can be disposed by destruction or activation by mechanical or explosive means they cannot be disarmed The mines are generally disposed of in situ to prevent unintended initiation while moving If the mine has to be moved it is done so with an implement that is at least 3 meters long made of soft materials for example plastic to prevent injury in the event the mine detonates in transit The disposal technician should ideally wear suitable personal protective equipment PPE including gloves and a helmet with a ballistic visor of at least 8 10 mm of PMMA 11 If the mine is to be destroyed mechanically then they should be driven on by the tracks of an armoured vehicle or impacted with a load weighing at least 60 kg Otherwise the technician must dispose of the mine with at least 200 grams of explosive at least 4 5m away 11 The requirement to use soft materials is due to secondary fragments that may be generated as a result of the mine exploding if the mine is placed on a hard or metallic surface such as asphalt or steel it could generate secondary fragmentation and potentially wound the disposal technician or people around them As it is almost impossible to tell the PFM 1 and PFM 1S versions apart care should be taken when approaching them as the mine s self destruction mechanism may actuate Compliance with the Ottawa Convention editIn 2017 the government of Belarus announced that it had destroyed its stockpiles of PFM 1 mines 14 The last 78 PFM 1 mines held by Belarus were destroyed as the highlight of the closing ceremony marking the elimination of their landmine stock 14 Ukraine stated that its stockpile of PFM 1 mines in 1999 was 6 000 000 units 15 In a November 2008 presentation Ukraine indicated that it had destroyed 101 088 PFM 1 mines per the convention in 1999 Following the agreement between the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine and NATO Support and Procurement Agency NSPA formerly known as NAMSO on 1 September 2012 a three way agreement between Ukraine NSPA and the EU was signed which figurated that the EU would provide 3 689 million euros for the destruction of 3 3 million mines 15 16 In 2013 the NSPA provided assistance in destruction of 300 000 mines 15 In 2014 following the outbreak of war with Russia Ukrainian representatives did not attend in person but submitted a document to the Mine Ban Treaty Third Review Conference stating that it had destroyed 568 248 mines since the ratification with an additional 576 mines in 2014 leaving its stockpile at 5 434 672 mines 17 After failing to meet the Ottawa Treaty deadline of November 2018 on the destruction of its anti personnel mines Ukraine requested the deadline be extended to 1 June 2021 later asking for further extension on 8 June 2020 18 19 In 2019 67 236 mines were destroyed Amid continuing conflict in the Donbas region in 2020 Ukraine refused to destroy any PFM 1 mines failed verification In 2021 Ukraine s PFM 1 stockpile was reported at 3 363 828 mines 20 21 Russia as well as the United States China and several other countries is not a signatory of the Ottawa Treaty the Anti Personnel Mine Ban Convention 22 23 Military use editAfghanistan edit nbsp Butterfly mines OMAR Mine Museum 2008 PFM 1 was used during the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan allegedly resulting in a high number of casualties among children from the mine being mistaken for a toy due to its shape and coloring 24 Ukraine edit The Ukrainian government alleged that the Russian Federation deployed PFM 1 mines during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine 25 26 27 At the start of the invasion in March 2022 Deutsche Welle found no evidence to support the accusation 28 In June Human Rights Watch HRW reported that Russia had used at least seven types of antipersonnel mines in at least four regions of Ukraine Donetsk Kharkiv Kyiv and Sumy but could not ascertain PFM 1 use in its briefing 29 30 In summer 2022 HRW found no credible information about Ukraine using any anti personnel mines 29 30 but said in January 2023 that its team saw physical evidence of PFM antipersonnel mine use in seven of the nine areas around Izyum in Kharkiv Oblast and urged the Ukrainian government to investigate possible PFM use by its forces 31 In Russian controlled Donetsk many PFM 1 were widely dispersed and Russian and local sources accused the Ukrainian army of being responsible for their deployment 27 There have been reported casualties the most prominent of which was the Russian influencer Semfira Sulejmanova 32 Another Russian influencer Semyon Pegov reportedly had his leg injured and was hospitalized as a result of these mines 32 Similar weapons editThe PFM 1 is very similar to the BLU 43 landmine used by the US Army in Operation Igloo White in Laos during the Vietnam War 33 5 According to a U S military document the Soviet military created PFM 1 after reverse engineering BLU 43 12 Specifications PFM 1 amp PFM 1S editDimensions 119 mm 64 mm 20 mm 4 69 in 2 52 in 0 79 in 11 Activation pressure 5 1 25 5 kgf 50 250 N 11 13 Weight 11 Mine 75 g 2 6 oz Charge 37 g 1 3 oz of VS 6D or VS 60D liquid explosive 34 35 KSF 1 cassette 9 2 kg 20 lb Shelf life 10 years 11 13 Temperature range 40 to 50 C 40 to 122 F Fuze MVDM VGM 572 MVVDM VGMM 572 Self destruct time PKM 1S 8 1 40 hours 85 nominal self destruction within 40 hours 9 11 13 See also editOttawa Treaty Organization for Mine Clearance and Afghan Rehabilitation Atrocity propaganda Soviet Afghan War PMN mine BLU 43 DragontoothNotes edit a b c d e f g PFM 1 anti personnel mine Green Parrot British drill training example Imperial War Museum Retrieved 2022 02 27 Russia using controversial butterfly mines in Ukraine says MOD Forces News YouTube 10 August 2022 a b Explosive Ordnance Guide for Ukraine Second Edition PDF Report 2nd ed Geneva International Centre for Humanitarian Demining 2022 08 03 p 15 Archived PDF from the original on 2023 09 14 Retrieved 14 Sep 2023 a b c McGrath Rae 1998 Landmines Legacy of Conflict A Manual for Development Workers DIANE pp 39 40 ISBN 0 7881 3280 6 a b Hambling David 2022 03 10 Russia Accused Of Using Air Dropped Butterfly Mines To Block Ukrainian Evacuation Route Forbes Retrieved 2022 03 11 Braithwaite Rodric 2011 Afgantsy the Russians in Afghanistan 1979 89 Oxford University Press pp 234 235 ISBN 9780199832668 Soviet Toys of Death The New York Times 10 December 1985 Retrieved 11 March 2019 a b c Landmine APERS PFM 1 Birdmine Bullet Picker www bulletpicker com Retrieved 2023 09 14 a b Yu G Veremeev N Iliev Engineering ammunition Soviet army Anti personnel mine PFM 1S PFM 1 tewton narod ru Archived from the original on 2008 12 25 a b c Cauderay Gerald C 1993 Anti Personnel Mines PDF International Review of the Red Cross 33 295 273 287 doi 10 1017 S0020860400080530 S2CID 31512388 Retrieved 2022 02 27 a b c d e f g h Inzhenernye Boepripasy Rukovodstvo po materialnoj chasti i primeneniyu in Russian 5th ed g Moskva Voennoe izdatelstvo ministerstva oborony SSSR 1987 pp 4 8 a b INSTANT OBSTACLES RUSSIAN REMOTELY DELIVERED MINES PDF January 1996 a b c d e PFM Design PDF apminebanconvention org a b The Republic of Belarus has fully fulfilled its international obligations under the 2003 Ottawa Convention 2017 04 05 Archived from the original on 23 August 2020 Retrieved 2022 02 28 a b c Commission Implementing Decision on the Annual Action Programme 2013 in favour of Ukraine PDF 2013 Retrieved 2022 07 31 Yu Yakymenko 2021 UKRAINE 30 YEARS ON THE EUROPEAN PATH Zapovit Publishing House p 336 ISBN 978 966 2050 27 1 Mine Ban Treaty Third Review Conference Maputo Mozambique PDF 18 June 2014 Retrieved 8 August 2022 Decisions on the request submitted by Ukraine for an extension of the deadline for completing the destruction of anti personnel mines in accordance with Article 5 of the Convention PDF AP Mine Ban Convention 28 November 2018 Archived from the original PDF on 8 August 2022 Retrieved 8 August 2022 REQUEST FOR AN EXTENTION OF THE DEADLINE FOR COMPLETING THE DESTRUCTION OF ANTI PERSONNEL MINES IN ACCORDANCE WITH ARTICLE 5 OF THE CONVENTION EXECUTIVE SUMMARY PDF AP Mine Ban Convention 8 June 2020 Archived PDF from the original on 8 August 2022 Retrieved 8 August 2022 Convention on the Prohibition of the Use Stockpiling Production and Transfer of Anti Personnel Mines and on Their Destruction PDF AP Mine Ban Convention 1 April 2021 Archived PDF from the original on 28 July 2022 Retrieved 8 August 2022 KONVECIYa O ZAPREShENII PRIMENENIYa NAKOPLENIYa ZAPASOV PROIZVODSTVA I PEREDAChI PROTIVOPEHOTNYH MIN I OB IH UNIChTOZhENII PDF AP Mine Ban Convention 1 April 2020 Archived PDF from the original on 28 July 2022 Retrieved 8 August 2022 Status of the Convention on the Prohibition of the Use Stockpiling Production and Transfer of Anti Personnel Mines and on Their Destruction Treaties Database of the United Nations Office for Disarmament Affairs Retrieved 2020 10 21 Treaty Status ICBL Archived from the original on 14 September 2016 Retrieved 21 September 2016 Tanner Stephen Afghanistan A Military History In Kharkiv region the Russian invaders are using internationally banned butterfly mines Russia likely using indiscriminate mines that kids mistake for toys U K Newsweek 2022 08 08 Retrieved 2022 08 08 a b Knox Brady 19 August 2022 US approves 89 million to help Ukraine clear land mines Washington Examiner Is Russia using butterfly mines in Ukraine Deutsche Welle a b Young Pariesa 17 August 2022 What do we know about petal mines scattered in the streets of Donetsk France 24 Retrieved 26 October 2022 a b Background Briefing on Landmine Use in Ukraine Human Rights Watch 15 June 2022 Retrieved 26 October 2022 Ukraine Banned Landmines Harm Civilians Human Rights Watch 2023 01 31 Retrieved 2023 02 01 a b Putzbach Robert 2022 10 24 Russischer Kriegsblogger War Gonzo im Minenfeld verletzt FAZ NET in German ISSN 0174 4909 Retrieved 2023 06 06 Hsu Jeremy 2018 12 28 Drones Used to Find Toylike Butterfly Land Mines Scientific American McGrath Rae 1998 Landmines Legacy of Conflict A Manual for Development Workers DIANE pp 39 40 ISBN 978 0 7881 3280 3 Einsele Lukas 2004 03 15 One Step Beyond Mines Afghanistan PFM 1 One Step Beyond Retrieved 2023 09 14 External links edithttp www one step beyond de en countries afghanistan mines afghanistan mine pfm 1 html Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title PFM 1 mine amp oldid 1220546352, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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