No More Landmines

No More Landmines (also known as The No More Landmines Trust) was a United Kingdom-based humanitarian landmine relief charity. The charity focused on landmine and unexploded ordnance removal, mine risk education programmes, and rehabilitation of survivors of landmine injuries. No More Landmines was established in May 2005 as the UK administrator of the United Nations Association Adopt-A-Minefield campaign, which has cleared over 21 million square metres of affected land since 1999. The charity closed in 2015, according to the Charities Commission.

No More Landmines
Charity
IndustryLandmine clearance
FoundedMay, 2005
Headquarters,
United Kingdom
Area served
Global
WebsiteNo More Landmines

Countries of operation

  • Afghanistan
  • Angola
  • Bosnia-Herzegovina
  • Cambodia
  • Colombia
  • Croatia
  • Iraq
  • Mozambique
  • Laos
  • Vietnam

Fundraising events

In March 2007, the charity launched the Dangerous Grounds Project; featuring free running in London's South Bank. By December 2007, the website, donated by UK2, had received 85,000 video views.[1]

In London on November 1, 2007, The No More Landmines Trust in conjunction with Canadian sculptor Blake Ward opened a temporary exhibition named Fragments, comprising sculptures inspired by landmine victims.[2]

Notes

  1. "Dangerous Ground - charity site of the month". 2007-12-07. Retrieved 2009-01-27.
  2. "Art inspired by landmine victims". BBC news. 2007-11-01. Retrieved 2008-03-11.
gollark: Do you know what "arbitrary" means?
gollark: Sense of community: any team activity ever.Making friends: any team activity ever.Educating people: school, somewhat.Discipline: don't know, probably can be figured out.
gollark: You can do those WITHOUT forcing people to spend time in the military, via optional things?
gollark: As vaguely bad as school is, I prefer it over an environment where you are expected to blindly follow orders, have no privacy/free time/etc, and do physical activity lots.
gollark: I don't think you know what "physically able" means.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.