In 2003, in the immediate aftermath of the invasion of Iraq by coalition forces, Dr Jean-Baptiste Richardier, Director-General, Handicap International, witnessed first-hand what cluster munitions can do to a person. He was taken to one of the main hospitals in Baghdad where more than 300 Iraqi victims of these weapons were lying in the basement. victims were being attended to by their families, many helplessly waiting for their likely death, Richardier recalls. When they don't kill immediately, duster munitions project tiny fragments of metal that penetrate the body everywhere. The misery of the victims is unthinkable, their ultimate death happens under enormous suffering. And the suffering doesn't stop with cessation of hostilities. Cluster munitions are weapons that scatter smaller bomblets designed to kill or maim on impact. When these submunitions rail to go off, they simply lie on the ground or are buried waiting to be walked on or picked sometimes years later. The likelihood of stumbling across one of these bomblets is far greater in countries such as Afghanistan, the Lao People's Democratic Republic, Lebanon and Serbia where they have been extensively deployed during conflicts. Indeed, in Lebanon, where around four million cluster munitions were dropped during the final few days of the 2006 war, an estimated one million still remained unexploded. To make matters worse, weapons' manufacturers often use attractive colours for their products, a fact lamented by Peter Herby, head of the arras unit, at the International Committee of the Red Cross: Children often pick them up, he says. They are attractive and they are dangerous. Every year thousands of people become victims of mines and so-called explosive remnants of war (ERWs); people like the fisherman in southern Lebanon who pulled up a cluster bomblet in his fishing net. As photojournalist John Rodsted reports: It blew off both his hands and injured his face so badly that he lost his eyesight; or Serbian soldier Branislav Kapetanovic, who lost all four limbs when a bomblet exploded as he approached it during a munitions clearing operation. The full extent of the misery caused by landmines and ERWs is difficult to evaluate due to the paucity of data, but according to Katleen Maes, 5426 casualties caused by such devices were reported to Handicap International in 2007, a number Maes thinks probably underestimates the true scale of the problem. Cluster munitions are particularly pernicious because, as Richardier points out, unlike landmines, they often inflict damage to the eyes and brain. This has serious implications for long-term rehabilitation. Countries need to establish a chain of rehabilitation that can cope with all these demands. It's much more complicated than just offering prostheses, Richardier says. And of course, the effects of cluster munitions ate not limited to physical trauma. Victims often require years of support to adjust to their new circumstances. most important thing is to provide psychological support and rehabilitation while the injuries are being treated, says Kapetanovic. This is a view echoed by Kevin Bryant, who worked for 25 years as a bomb disposal officer for the British Army, and lost a leg clearing mines in Lebanon. Even though I had accepted the risk as part of my job, I went through a very difficult psychological period, he says. Five years after the event, I still have down days. All too often these inevitable psychological problems are exacerbated when victims seek to reintegrate into society. The experience Firoz Alizada in Afghanistan is typical. Having lost both his legs after stepping on a landmine in 1996, Alizada struggled back to health and, determined to do something with his life, applied to study at the university in Kabul. He was rejected because of his disability. He faced similar discrimination when he applied to become a civil servant. …