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Fade
12-08-2009, 11:05 AM
Egypt says clearing mines to develop north coast
08 Dec 2009 11:26:41 GMT
Source: *******


* Demined land to be set aside for tourism, energy, farming

* Project to take 5-6 years to complete, costs $250 million

By Dina Zayed CAIRO, Dec 8 (*******) - Egypt has stepped up efforts to clear millions of World War Two mines from prime north coast land in a $250 million demining project to ready the area for tourism, energy and agriculture investments, an official said.

Egypt says Allied and Axis armies left behind 20 percent of the world's remaining landmines and explosive war remnants around El Alamein, site of a decisive World War Two battle.


"This project opens a huge wide open gate to the future," said Fathy El Shazly, the Director of the Executive Secretariat for Demining and Development of the Northwest Coast.

"Our project is, par excellence, a demining for development project." The area slated for demining stretches along Egypt's Mediterranean coast from El Alamein toward the Libyan border.

The overall development of the area is estimated to cost $10 billion, a government report on the demining project said.

With most of its roughly 77 million people crammed into a strip of land along the Nile valley and in its fertile Delta, Egypt wants to develop other areas such as the northern coast.Article continued at http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/GEE5B502D.htm

~thread title altered slightly to reflect content.

martinexsquaddie
12-08-2009, 11:16 AM
to be fair the British and germans should be paying for that.
instead we a messing about clearing mines in the falklands :)
although we have to do that to live up to treaty obligations its not a priority no pressure on land anywhere soon and all the filed are well marked and fenced.

rgjbloke
12-08-2009, 03:57 PM
Not that I have ever been to that part of the world because I haven't but I'm a little surprised that they were never cleared at some stage in the past? The second world war has been over for 60 odd years.

Britishhawk
12-08-2009, 03:59 PM
Not that I have ever been to that part of the world because I haven't but I'm a little surprised that they were never cleared at some stage in the past? The second world war has been over for 60 odd years.

My Grandad was there in 47' & 48' clearing mines and tank wrecks from the deserts, been going on for a long time.

Evolv5
12-09-2009, 11:06 AM
Good news.
I hope no-one gets injured in the process.

Sada
12-09-2009, 11:48 AM
In the same region there was some project to connect the El Qattar depression with the Mediterranean sea and flooding it, they said the weather change would be fantastic for the better in the place, and getting in the process electric power. Really, having like a little mediterranean gulf stuck in the dessert sounds fantastic, I donīt know if thereīs currently anybody working in it.

Panchito12
12-13-2009, 05:45 AM
Great training for the Combat Engineer units.

Steak-Sauce
12-13-2009, 06:20 AM
My Grandad was there in 47' & 48' clearing mines and tank wrecks from the deserts, been going on for a long time.

Well, that was more or less right after the war - but millions of mines still in the ground after more than 60 years..

tercio67
12-13-2009, 06:33 AM
Not that I have ever been to that part of the world because I haven't but I'm a little surprised that they were never cleared at some stage in the past? The second world war has been over for 60 odd years.

The minefields were originaly marked with wooden stakes.
Stakes that were used for camp- and cookingfires olmost directly after there was nobody around to prevent it.
Some of these minefields were hastily laid, and equaly hasty surveyed.
Objects burried shallowly in a sandy environment have a tendency to "walk" over time.

All this combined with not immediately clearing them after WW II, these areas were not considered economicaly important at the time, makes for a difficult and dangerous job today.

doctor rizz
12-16-2009, 09:10 AM
good luck to them. I wonder how many of them still actually explode. 60+ years and still good.

Connaught Ranger
12-16-2009, 09:38 AM
good luck to them. I wonder how many of them still actually explode. 60+ years and still good.Looking at how much Ww1 stuff goes bang each year in Belgium and France, and WW2 items as well then items like mines, shells, grenades in a relatively dry climate like the Egyptian desert will function as good as the day they were put down if not better as the explosive content would be highly susceptible to going off through age.

Connaught Ranger.:)