A deminer in protective gear scanning a field for an article about Croatia landmine free clearance efforts

Croatia is officially declared free of landmines after three decades of clearance

After more than 30 years of painstaking work, Croatia has achieved something that once seemed almost impossible: every square kilometer of its territory has been cleared of landmines left behind by the 1991–1995 C.E. Homeland War. The declaration, announced in 2024 C.E., marks the end of one of Europe’s most extensive post-conflict demining efforts and opens land long locked away from farming, forestry, and daily life.

At a glance

  • Croatia landmine free: Croatian authorities formally declared the country’s entire territory cleared of landmines in 2024 C.E., ending a demining effort that began in the mid-1990s C.E.
  • Scale of the work: Over the course of three decades, deminers cleared more than 2,000 square kilometers of contaminated land — an area roughly the size of Luxembourg — and destroyed hundreds of thousands of mines and unexploded ordnance.
  • Human cost of clearance: The process was long and dangerous; Croatia’s demining teams suffered casualties over the years, a reminder that clearing the debris of war is itself a form of continued sacrifice.

What the war left behind

The International Campaign to Ban Landmines has documented Croatia’s contamination as among the most complex in Europe. When the fighting ended in 1995 C.E., an estimated one million mines had been laid across the country — in forests, fields, river valleys, and along former front lines that cut through civilian communities.

Entire villages found themselves surrounded by marked danger zones. Farmers couldn’t work their fields. Children couldn’t play in the woods. Tourism in some of Croatia’s most beautiful regions was stunted for years. The mines didn’t just threaten lives; they froze land in place, holding back economic recovery and psychological healing for communities already shattered by conflict.

How the clearance happened

Croatia established the Croatian Mine Action Centre (CTRO) to coordinate the national effort, working alongside international organizations, NGOs, and specialized demining companies. The work was methodical and slow by necessity — deminers move through contaminated zones inch by inch, using metal detectors, demining machines, and trained dogs.

Funding came from both Croatian government budgets and international donors, including the European Union. Technology improved over the decades, with remote-sensing tools and better protective equipment making the job marginally safer. But no technology eliminates the risk entirely.

Croatia also became a contributor to global demining efforts, sharing its hard-won expertise with other mine-affected countries — a quiet but significant form of international solidarity that rarely makes headlines.

What cleared land means for people

The return of safe land is not a small thing. In the regions most affected by the war — Slavonia, the Krajina, parts of Dalmatia — cleared land means farmers can grow crops again, foresters can manage timber, and tourism can expand into areas of genuine natural beauty that have been off-limits for a generation. For many communities, the declaration is also symbolic: a formal closing of a chapter that has defined daily life for 30 years.

Mine Action Review, which tracks demining progress globally, noted Croatia’s achievement as a model for how a country can systematically recover contaminated territory over time, combining political will, sustained funding, and technical expertise.

That model matters because dozens of countries remain heavily contaminated. The UN Mine Action Service estimates that landmines and explosive remnants of war still affect more than 60 countries worldwide. Croatia’s completion doesn’t end the global problem — but it does demonstrate that the problem can be solved.

The work that remains

Even with the formal declaration, authorities acknowledge that absolute certainty is nearly impossible. Mines shift over time with soil movement and flooding, and isolated devices can remain undetected despite thorough surveys. Croatia’s demining infrastructure will remain active for monitoring and response rather than full clearance. The declaration is a genuine and meaningful milestone — but it comes with the honest caveat that post-conflict landscapes carry long memories.

What Croatia has accomplished still stands as one of the most complete national demining efforts in history. The land, for the first time in a generation, belongs fully to the people who live on it.

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For more on this story, see: Croatia declared free of landmines after 31 years

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