Norwegian People’s Aid sends Cambodian mine-sniffing dogs to Bosnia

Norwegian People’s Aid is deploying two Cambodia-trained mine detection dogs to support clearance operations in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Two mine detection dogs were flown from Cambodia to Bosnia and Herzegovina on 3 February. The transfer was confirmed by Cambodian Mine Action Center.

CMAC director-general Heng Ratana said the dogs were send by Norwegian People’s Aid for clearance operations in Bosnia. He said the move shows Cambodia’s shift from importing to exporting mine-detection dogs.

Norwegian People’s Aid has collaborated with CMAC since 1992. The partnership has supported mine and explosive ordnance clearance work in Cambodia for decades.

CMAC began using mine-detection dogs in the 1990s, using dogs sourced from several countries. It started breeding and training its own mine-detection dogs domestically in 2002.

About Alexander Vittrup

Journalist Alexander Christian Vittrup was employed at ScandAsia Magazine and Website for six months from August 2025 until January 2026. Circumstances beyond our control made it possible for us to keep him here also during the six months from February 2026 until July 2026 - making it a full year here.

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