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The Times of India
The Times of India
World
TOI World Desk

Meet Hana Khider: The woman leading an all-female team clearing ISIS landmines in Iraq where one wrong move means death

In northern Iraq, Hana Khider walks through ruined buildings and empty fields searching for hidden explosives left behind by ISIS. The Yazidi deminer leads an all-female team clearing landmines and booby traps from villages destroyed during the war. Every mission carries enormous risk, as even a single mistake can trigger a deadly explosion.

Khider’s work was recently featured in Into the Fire, a short documentary shared by the The Nobel Prize and produced with Grain Media. The film is part of a five-part series showing how Nobel Peace Prize-linked efforts continue to affect lives years later.

Hana Khider’s landmine-clearing mission was born from tragedy

Khider belongs to Iraq’s Yazidi minority, a community that suffered devastating violence during ISIS’s assault on Sinjar and nearby regions in 2014. Thousands of Yazidis were killed, displaced or kidnapped as ISIS fighters captured villages across northern Iraq. Even after the militant group lost territorial control, the danger did not disappear.

Explosives hidden inside homes, schools, farmland and roads continued to threaten families attempting to return. For many communities, rebuilding could not begin until the mines were removed.

That is where Khider and her team stepped in.

The documentary shows Khider and her colleagues carefully scanning the ground with metal detectors while moving through damaged neighbourhoods. The women inspect collapsed buildings, dusty pathways and empty fields where explosives may still be buried beneath the surface.

Many of the devices are improvised explosive traps deliberately planted by ISIS fighters. Others include landmines or hidden ammunition left behind during fighting. The work requires extreme patience and precision because one wrong movement could be fatal.

In the film, Khider speaks about how life changed after ISIS entered the region. She recalls once caring for a peaceful garden before war transformed her surroundings into a deadly landscape filled with explosives.

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