EU Provides €3 Million to UNMAS for Mine Action in Sudan
Summary
The European Commission's Service for Foreign Policy Instruments (FPI) has provided €3 million in funding to the United Nations Mine Action Service (UNMAS) in Sudan for an 18-month project titled 'Rebuilding Sudan: Mine Action for Recovery.' The project will conduct systematic survey and clearance of explosive ordnance from residential areas, key roads, markets, and critical infrastructure in Khartoum and other accessible urban areas receiving large numbers of returnees. An estimated 700,000 conflict-affected civilians are expected to benefit directly from improved safety and access, with more than one million people reached indirectly through safer movement, humanitarian operations, and resumption of essential services.
“The €3 million contribution will support the implementation of the 18-month project "Rebuilding Sudan: Mine Action for Recovery."”
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What changed
The European Union, through its Service for Foreign Policy Instruments (FPI), has allocated €3 million to UNMAS to support explosive ordnance survey and clearance activities across accessible urban and peri-urban areas of Sudan, with a focus on Khartoum. The 18-month 'Rebuilding Sudan' project also includes explosive ordnance risk education and capacity-strengthening for local and national partners.
Affected parties include humanitarian organizations, reconstruction actors, and displaced populations seeking to return to contaminated areas. Mine action operators and NGOs should note this additional funding stream and coordinate with UNMAS for complementary programming in health, education, food security, and water and sanitation sectors that depend on clearance of key routes and infrastructure.
Archived snapshot
Apr 28, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
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European Union Funds Mine Action Programme to Support Recovery and Safe Returns in Sudan
27.04.2026 Sudan Press and information team of the Delegation to SUDAN The United Nations Mine Action Service (UNMAS) in Sudan has received new funding from the European Commission’s Service for Foreign Policy Instruments (FPI) to support mine action activities aimed at improving civilian safety, humanitarian access, and early recovery in conflict-affected areas of Sudan.
The United Nations Mine Action Service (UNMAS) in Sudan has received new funding from the European Commission’s Service for Foreign Policy Instruments (FPI) to support mine action activities aimed at improving civilian safety, humanitarian access, and early recovery in conflict-affected areas of Sudan.
The €3 million contribution will support the implementation of the 18-month project “Rebuilding Sudan: Mine Action for Recovery.” This project will focus on addressing widespread explosive ordnance contamination in accessible urban and peri-urban areas receiving large numbers of returnees, including the capital city of Khartoum.
Since the outbreak of renewed conflict in April 2023, explosive ordnance contamination has expanded significantly across residential neighborhoods, public infrastructure, and key supply routes, posing a severe threat to civilians and aid actors alike. As displacement patterns evolve and recovery efforts begin, mine action has become a critical precondition for safe return, reconstruction, and the restoration of basic services.
“Explosive ordnance remains a deadly threat for families seeking to return home in Sudan,” said Kazumi Ogawa, UNMAS Director. “With EU support, UNMAS will clear priority areas and help create the conditions for safe returns and recovery.”
Through this FPI-funded action, UNMAS will conduct systematic survey and clearance of explosive ordnance from residential areas, key roads, markets, and critical infrastructure, including schools, health facilities, and public service facilities. The project will also deliver explosive ordnance risk education (EORE) to at-risk populations, while strengthening local and national capacities through training, coordination, and technical support to the mine action and other sectors.
An estimated 700,000 conflict-affected civilians are expected to benefit directly from improved safety and access, with more than one million people reached indirectly through safer movement, humanitarian operations, and the resumption of essential services across multiple sectors, including health, education, food security, and water and sanitation.
The action complements ongoing EU humanitarian support in Sudan by focusing on more systematic, area-based clearance that supports early recovery and reconstruction. Together, these efforts aim to reduce the risk of accidents, enable the safe return of displaced populations, and lay the groundwork for longer-term stabilization and peacebuilding.
“Mine action saves lives and is a cornerstone for recovery amid a conflict that, for more than three years, has claimed thousands of lives and caused immense hardship for the Sudanese people,” said Peter M. Wagner, Head of FPI. “Addressing explosive ordnance contamination is an urgent priority. It protects civilians, enables safer movement, and supports the restoration of basic services for communities’’.
UNMAS will implement the project in close coordination with national authorities, humanitarian and recovery partners, and the wider mine action community, ensuring a conflict- and gender-sensitive approach that prioritizes the safety and needs of the most vulnerable populations.
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