How munitions identification software helps GICHD improve global arms compliance

App InnovationNon-Profit

Munitions identification software was developed by Transparity with Fenix Insight for the Geneva International Centre for Humanitarian Demining (GICHD) to help stockpile managers determine which munitions breach the Convention on Cluster Munitions, overcoming inconsistent markings and scattered reference data.

The team built the Cluster Munition Identification Tool (CMID), a searchable, graphics-led database designed for field use that guides users to the correct codes and classifications; the project reflects our App Innovation expertise. The tool is now available via GICHD and is used internationally to support treaty implementation.

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Quickly identify banned munitions with a simple database
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Searchable graphics ensure accurate field classification worldwide
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Global adoption supports safer stockpiles and treaty compliance
“I needed a software company to produce a robust and easily deployed tool to put the information in the hands of stockpile managers and explosive ordnance disposal operators. Transparity came up with this functional and intuitive tool, which could be understood by people with minimal technical background. We minimized the use of text and put a good deal of thought into the symbols since it will be used extensively by non-English speakers. It only takes a couple of minutes to download but incorporates a great deal of technical data.“
Colin King
Fenix Insights

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The Challenge

When the Convention on Cluster Munitions (CCM) – an international treaty that addresses the humanitarian consequences and unacceptable harm to civilians caused by cluster munitions – came into effect on 1st August 2010 it gave a categorical prohibition on types of munitions and a framework for action. The Convention prohibits all use, production, transfer and stockpiling of cluster munitions. However, a problem in implementing it was that managers of stockpiles simply didn’t know which of their munitions were in breach of the CCM.

Armed forces often accumulate varied stocks of munitions from different nations and manufacturers. These are frequently difficult to identify because, at first sight, they can be indistinguishable from other weapons, and information to decipher their markings was unavailable or hard to understand.

The Solution

In response to this problem, GICHD contacted Fenix Insight, an Explosive Ordnance Disposal consultancy involved in the disassembly of landmines and cluster bombs throughout the world.

Having worked together previously on similar projects, Fenix Insight turned to Transparity to build Cluster Munition Identification Tool (CMID).

Fenix Insight’s Co-Director, Colin King is a weapons expert who has defused bombs in the Gulf, the Balkans and the Falklands, and trained teams to do the same thing in Afghanistan. He said, “It may sound ridiculous that armies don’t even know what’s in their munitions stockpiles, but many of these weapons systems look very similar. As a technical advisor to the Oslo Process which initiated the Convention, I soon realised that a number of nations would require assistance to identify and dispose of their cluster munitions stockpiles.“

The CMID shows stockpile managers and administrators where to look for the markings and codes, enabling them to identify the contents of the munitions, and if they are banned by the Convention. Such information is otherwise spread between old handbooks, manuals, or even lost.

The easily accessible and searchable database includes graphic navigation and identification of cluster munitions based on weapon category. The software was developed to be simple and intuitive enough to be used in real-world conditions and an additional overview shows types and combinations of explosive submunitions that can be carried by such cluster munitions.

The Outcome

The CMID tool is available on the GICHD website and is in use by nations around the world in support of the Convention on Cluster Munitions.

 

Safety

About GICHD

A cluster munition is a type of air-dropped or ground-launched explosive weapon that ejects smaller submunitions. Commonly, this is a cluster bomb that releases many small bomblets over a wide area, posing risks to civilians both during attacks and afterwards. Vast numbers of these unexploded munitions inevitably remain behind long after a conflict has ended, often hidden in vegetation and are prone to go off if accidentally disturbed.

Formed in 1998, the Geneva International Centre for Humanitarian Demining (GICHD) works to eliminate these cluster munitions, mines and other explosive remnants of war.

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