Introduction
Just outside the village of Goran in northern Iraq, the agricultural lands of Qazikhan - a farming area in Kirkuk governorate's Shwan district - are seeing farmers return to fields untouched for decades. This Kurdish agricultural community quietly demonstrates how clearing land mines does more than remove dangers - it restores the local farming lifestyle.
Before 1988, these fields sustained generations of local families through wheat and barley cultivation and livestock grazing. This changed when the former Iraqi government converted the farmland into a heavily mined defensive line. The transformation forced farming families to abandon their fields, leaving behind their livelihoods and long-established farming traditions.
The mines claimed multiple victims among farmers who risked working their land to support their families. Throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, the contaminated fields created an impossible situation for local farmers, either abandon their primary source of income or risk their lives trying to cultivate dangerous land. These risks led to tragic consequences for many families in the community, including that of Siwa Mohammed’s.