Working together for the safety and recovery of communities
18.12.2025
At Demine Ukraine Forum 2025, the Center for Humanitarian Demining, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and the World Food Program (WFP) signed a memorandum that strengthens joint work on the restoration of communities affected by GNP.
The document specifically creates a framework for cooperation within the framework of the program «Restoration of livelihoods and revival of rural communities affected by mines and explosive objects of war» («Demining Program»). Its main goal — is to overcome the consequences of war on food security, focusing on cleaning up contaminated areas and supporting small agricultural producers and households.
Within the framework of the memorandum, the parties agreed jointly:
- support the planning and coordination of the implementation of humanitarian demining and agricultural land rehabilitation measures;
- promote the safe return of agricultural land of small producers and households after clearance to productive use;
- strengthen coherence between humanitarian demining and food security efforts;
- promote institutional development, exchange of experience and establishment of operational guidelines for effective planning of humanitarian demining activities;
- to investigate models of comprehensive support for farmers.
The Centre provides data on safe agricultural land, identifies priority areas with partners and ensures coherence of actions. FAO and WFP collect data on the beneficiaries of the Demining Program, provide technical assessments and non-technical land surveys through the involvement of partner organizations and provide the results of these works, implement agricultural support for farmers, promote the use of local resources, and popularize the compensation program among land users.
This agreement reinforces the interaction between the Humanitarian Demining Centre, FAO and WFP to return agricultural land more effectively to cultivation, support farmers and restore food security in war-affected communities.