Project Masam has announced that its demining teams have now located and destroyed a total of 513,090 explosive devices in Yemen’s liberated areas since the project’s launch in mid-2018.
This cumulative figure includes 6,852 anti-personnel mines, 147,151 anti-tank mines, 350,812 items of unexploded ordnance (UXO), and 8,275 improvised explosive devices (IEDs). Over this period, clearance operations have covered more than 70,043,308 square metres of land.
Since the escalation of the conflict between Yemen’s pro-government forces and Houthi militias in 2014, vast areas of the country have been heavily contaminated with landmines, UXO, and other remnants of war. Strategic regions in particular have been severely affected, with estimates suggesting that the Houthis have planted between one and two million mines across the country.
During the most recent reporting week, spanning 30 August to 5 September 2025, Project Masam’s deminers removed a total of 767 explosive devices. These included eight anti-personnel mines, 30 anti-tank mines, 726 items of unexploded ordnance, and three improvised explosive devices. In the same period, teams cleared 300,292 square metres of land.
This followed the week from 23 to 29 August 2025, in which Project Masam teams cleared 242,492 square metres and removed 968 explosive devices. That week’s activities included the clearance of four anti-personnel mines, 32 anti-tank mines, 925 items of UXO, and seven IEDs.
Project Masam continues to prioritise its humanitarian mission of clearing land in civilian areas (including villages, roads, schools, and essential infrastructure) to enable safer movement for communities and humanitarian personnel alike.
It is estimated that up to five million Yemenis have been displaced since the beginning of the war, with many driven from their homes due to the widespread presence of landmines and explosive remnants of war.
In recent weeks, seasonal sand and dust storms have heightened the risks facing displaced communities. These storms, which have affected more than 21,000 families across 73 displacement sites, significantly reduce visibility and increase the likelihood of accidental encounters with landmines, especially in areas where clearance efforts are still ongoing.
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